In a gleaming compound built from scratch on an Albanian hillside, thousands of Iranians dedicate their waking hours to toppling the regime in Tehran 3,000 kilometres away.
"I think this year will be very decisive," says Zohreh Akhiani, the 56-year-old mayor of "Ashraf 3", a mini-city of some 2,800 exiled Iranians from the opposition movement the People's Mojahedin Organization of
Iran (PMOI).
The dissidents hope an onslaught of crises in their homeland will aid their cause, from increasingly harsh US
sanctions to recent anti-government
protests and the new coronavirus, which has infected top officials.