Protest rapper Tomaj Salehi was abducted on Monday, September 13, by 12 repressors of the regime. The protest songs “Mouse Hole”, “Turkmenchay” and “Pomegranate” are very well known and have been highly noticed by the public. The lobbyists of the Islamic regime of Iran are warned to look for “mouse holes”.
Just when Tomaj Salehi was abducted by the regime, Farnaz Fassihi, a so-called New York Times reporter who had previously praised the abduction of Ruhollah Zam, wrote on Twitter: “Death threats in a song, video or tweets, are a crime.” Hossein Derakhshan also Tweeted: “Death thread in a song or otherwise is a crime. US law: A death threat in a rap song can be a criminal threat or a threat to the victim of a crime, even if the victim never hears the song.” “Death threats by reading a song or publish a video is a crime in all law-abiding countries,” retweeting Farnaz Fassihi’s tweet and wrote, Elahe Sharifpour-Hicks, the so-called “human rights activist.”
It is mentioned in the lyrics of The Mouse Hole song: “… Hack journalists, tabloid reporters, court singers, find a mouse hole
Officer, thug, mercenary, executioner, find a mouse hole
Useful idiots, appointed officials, reformists, find a mouse hole
Crooks, NIAC, look all around, grab all your dollars and buy a mouse hole …”