Four hundred prominent American Iranian have written to President Joe Biden to take a clear stance regarding the human rights record of the new Iranian president Ebrahim Raisi.
In his first television interview, Iran's new president Ebrahim Raisi said he believes in negotiations with world power to resolve the nuclear issue and list sanctions on Iran.
It appears that Iran is not in a hurry to return to nuclear talks, as the new president seems not so much interested in resuming the nuclear talks with the United States and Europe.
Iranian human rights activist Lawdan Bazargan demands justice for 5,000 prisoners killed in Iran in 1988, in which the new president Ebrahim Raisi is also implicated.
Israel keeps warning about Iran's nuclear program and its aggressive regional policies, trying to influence the United States not to trust the Islamic Republic and make concessions.
During his inauguration, Iran's new president called for a diplomatic solution that wuld lift US sanctions, while Washington called on him to return to the Vienna talks.
As Iran's new president takes the helm, general mismanagement, widespread corruption, nepotism and outright incompetence are among major causes of crises in the Islamic Republic.
Two officers of Iranian Americans for Liberty, a US-based group, argue that there was no democratic election on June 18 when Ebrahim Raisi won Iran's presidential vote.
Iran's President-elect Ebrahim Raisi's office has contacted journalists asking them to share their ideas and criticism to the new administration, but many are skeptical.