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Iran executions surged in 2022 to ‘spread fear’ – report

Campaign groups say the number of executions in Iran is set to rise by 75% in 2022, with at least 582 people executed as authorities try to “instill fear” among protesters.

The number was the highest since 2015, according to Norway-based Iran Human Rights (IHR) and France’s Together Against the Death Penalty (ECPM).

Their report is based on both official announcements and sources inside Iran.

Most of those executed were convicted of murder or drug charges, but two protesters were hanged in December.

Mohsin Shikari, 22, and Majdar Reza Rahnward, 23, were found guilty of vague national security charges of “enmity against God” after what the report said were “show trials” based on confessions obtained through torture.

Two more protesters were hanged earlier this year, while dozens have reportedly been sentenced to death or sentenced to death.

Protests erupted across the Islamic Republic after the death in custody of Mehsa Amini, a 22-year-old Kurdish woman who was detained by morality police in Tehran in September for “improperly” wearing a hijab.

IHR and ECPM’s annual report on the death penalty in Iran says only 71 of the executions they recorded last year were announced by official sources.

The rest were “unannounced” or “secret” executions that were reported by sources including eyewitnesses, family members, lawyers and people working for prisons or the judiciary, it adds.

According to the report, 288 (49%) of those put to death were convicted of murder, which was the highest number in 15 years. They included 13 women and three people who allegedly committed crimes when they were children.

Another 256 people (44%), including three women, were executed after being convicted of drug-related charges, up from 126 in 2021 and 10 times higher than the figure for 2020.

The report warns that the significant reduction in the number of drug-related executions that came as a result of a 2017 amendment to the Anti-Narcotics Law “has now been completely reversed in practice” and laments the “lack of reaction” from the United Nations.

The report also draws what it calls an “insidious link” between surges in executions and anti-government unrest, with one coinciding with the start of protests by teachers in May and another beginning a month after the death of Mahsa Amini.

“The international reactions to the death sentences against protesters have made it difficult for the Islamic Republic to proceed with their executions,” says Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam, IHR’s director.

“To compensate, and in order to spread fear among people, the authorities have intensified the execution for non-political charges. These are the low-cost victims of the Islamic Republic’s execution machine.”

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