As a result of your question, all of my hair became grey, because it is very difficult. The Internet is being censored and monitored by the government, as are telephones—all communications. It is very tough to collect the information from people, but there are a lot of brave Iranian LGBTs who take a risk in order to send information out.
I remember several years ago in the city of Isfahan connecting an Iranian LGBT to Human Rights Watch. They had a 10- or 15-minute interview. He told me that just 10 minutes after the telephone call ended, he received a call from the intelligence service saying, “You had a conversation with Human Rights Watch and you have to come to explain.”
There is a lot of monitoring. People come up with....[Technical Difficulty—Editor] Thanks to the Internet and a lot of social apps such as Telegram and Viber and similar new platforms that people can use to communicate, they can send information. That is why the Iranian regime actively tries to block Twitter, Facebook, Telegram, and such apps in Iran, because it's very difficult for them to monitor them.