
An Iranian commander’s distraught daughter has revealed that ruthless regime leaders are slaughtering their own children — as she sobbed that her father has ordered her to go out and kill innocent civilians.
The woman broke down as she detailed the horrors of the Islamic Republic’s deadly crackdown on protesters in a gut-wrenching interview with Persian media outlet Manato TV on Thursday.
“They are killing their own children, suppressing them,” she said of the regime’s commanders.

The daughter, who said she has been beaten in the past for being involved in anti-regime protests, fears she could be next for speaking out about her father’s brutality.
“I have witnessed the crimes that my own father has committed,” she said, describing him as one of the violent “elements of the repressive force.”
“I hate him. We do not want this,” she continued.
“If I could, I would be the first person to kill him.”
As the bloodshed continues across the country, she said commanders have also been ordering their own children to go out and murder anti-regime demonstrators.
“Giving them batons, electric batons, guns, to go and kill fellow citizens,” she said, adding that her father has ordered her “to kill.”
She insisted too that the cowardly regime leaders behind the current bloodshed would be the first to flee, saying many already had fake passports and cash stashed away for a quick escape abroad.
“My father has hidden suitcases and suitcases of dollars in the house. He keeps calling me to come,” she said.
“If anything happens, you know these will be the first ones who run away.”

Elsewhere, she vowed to give up information on the atrocities and “dirty deeds” inflicted by her father and fellow regime leaders.
“My father might kill me. Maybe they might find out,” the daughter said.
“I’ll tell you who these people are, what dirty deeds they did. They started at home raping their children. Do you know what pain we have seen from these hard-hearted fathers?”
“I am very scared and stressed,” she added.
The haunting account came as the US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency on Friday put the death toll, which only continues to rise, at 2,797.
President Trump, who pledged earlier this week that “help is on its way” for the protesters, threatened to intervene if the killings continue and warned Tehran there would be “grave consequences” if there was further bloodshed.

The ruthless slaughter tied to the anti-regime protests, which began Dec. 28. over Iran’s ailing economy and have since morphed into the most significant challenge to the government in years, have since showed signs of receding, according to a rights group and some residents.
Iran’s police chief was quoted by the state-owned Press TV as saying calm had been restored across the country.
But sources previously told The Post that was only the case because residents were now being held hostage in their home by the heavily armed security forces commandeering the streets.
Troubling accounts of violence on the ground have only continued to trickle out after a communications blackout was lifted earlier this week.
The full extent of the crackdown against the protesters has yet to be independently verified due to the blackout.
Despite claims the violence was easing, there were still indications of unrest in some areas across the country as of Friday.
A female nurse was killed by direct gunfire from government forces during protests in Karaj, west of Tehran, the Iranian-Kurdish rights group Hengaw said.
Rioters also set fire to a local education office in Falavarjan County, in central Isfahan Province, according to the state-affiliated Tasnim news outlet.
Trump, for his part, is said to be keeping all options on the table.
Additional offensive and defensive capabilities from the US are expected to arrive in the region soon — but the exact makeup and timing of their arrival wasn’t immediately clear.