Victims recount Iran's use of mock executions as torture
Shadows of an Iranian policeman and a noose are seen on the ground before the execution of Iranian killer Bijeh in Pakdasht, south of Tehran
While Iran is notorious for its high execution rate, a frequently overlooked aspect is the harrowing accounts of "mock executions" used as a method of torture against prisoners, including minors.
Sedigheh Vasmaghi, an Islamic scholar and religious researcher, has criticized Iran's use of archaic legal terms to issue death sentences for protesters.
In a recent audio statement, she said, "The lives of thousands in the Islamic Republic are threatened by terms like 'moharebeh' (waging war against God) and 'ifsad fil-arz' (corruption on earth), which are irrelevant in today's world."
Vasmaghi, who was released from Tehran’s notorious Evin Prison in April, described how the Iranian judiciary exploits vague charges to suppress dissent and protect the government’s interests.
"Thousands have been executed or sentenced to death under the guise of implementing Shia jurisprudence and Islamic law. However, the current usage of these terms and the practices of the Islamic Republic have no historical basis in Islam," she noted.
Amnesty International reported in April that 853 people were executed in Iran in 2023, marking a record high in the last eight years.
File photo of a public execution in Iran
She further criticized the Iranian judiciary's exploitation of vague charges like “propaganda against the system” and “gathering and conspiring against national security”, used to suppress dissent and protect the government's interests.
After being imprisoned in Tehran’s notorious Evin Prison, Vasmaghi's health severely deteriorated, resulting in her release. She lost her sight and suffered life-threatening heart issues due to the harsh conditions of her imprisonment.
Her arrest in March was for criticizing Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, whom she labeled a dictator, and for condemning the compulsory hijab laws.
Before her release, Vasmaghi wrote to the United Nations Fact-Finding Mission and international human rights organizations detailing the personal abuses and systemic oppression she faced in Iran, particularly targeting women.
In her appeal, Vasmaghi stressed the need to liberate Iranian women from oppressive hijab laws, stating that religious women are not required to cover their hair under Islamic Sharia according to her research.
"Many Iranian women have opposed the mandatory hijab law for decades," she noted, adding that she had removed her headscarf in protest against the oppression of women.
The mandatory hijab has been a focal point in the Women, Life, Freedom movement, which gained momentum after the death of Mahsa Amini in the custody of Iran’s morality police in 2022.
Vasmaghi’s arrest on March 16 occurred while attending the funeral of 16-year-old Armita Geravand, also killed by hijab-enforcement agents in Tehran.
President Masoud Pezeshkian faces criticism for appointing 73-year-old 'reformist' politician Mohammad-Reza Aref as his vice president, despite his promise to form a "young" cabinet.
Pezeshkian announced the appointmentshortly after his endorsement by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei at a ceremony on Sunday. The appointment came as a surprise to many who expected economist Ali Tayebnia’s appointment as VP.
Tayebnia, who played a prominent role in Pezeshkian’s campaign, welcomed Aref’s appointment and stressed that he was not ready to assume the position “for personal reasons”. Given the serious economic situation Iran faces, many expected that the experienced economist would play a pivotal role in the new administration.
Critics say Aref’s appointment is against the promises made by Mohammad-Javad Zarif who Pezeshkian appointed as the head of a “Strategic Council” to vet candidates for cabinet positions. Zarif had stressed that the complex procedure used by the Council’s various committees would ensure a younger and more diverse cabinet.
Pezeshkian meeting economist Tayyebnia after his election victory.
“It was expected that to fulfill his promises the honorable President would present an agile and energetic person from among those [politically] aligned with him. Appointing Aref, who is three years older than Pezeshkian, despite his [good] personality, does not convey a good message. Hopefully, a young and motivated cabinet will be presented,” former lawmaker Hamid Rasaei, a hardliner, tweeted.
“By choosing Aref, Pezeshkian showed that not only he doesn’t care about [the views of the establishment’s] critics and protesters, but is even indifferent to the opinion of those who voted for him,” reformist Shargh daily’s Hoda Hashemi who called Aref “the most passive political figure” during the crises of the past few years posted on X.
“The mountain gave birth to a mouse,” Reza Khanaki, an entrepreneur strongly critical of the new president, tweeted, drawing on an old Persian proverb. “The outcome of [all the talk about] giving priority to the younger generation, employing new people, …, and listening to people was the appointment of Aref as VP.”
“I have the feeling that Khamenei recommended Aref’s [appointment] as vice president but Pezeshkian tried to hide this by inviting Khatami to the presidential office and public announcement of the meeting,” expatriate dissident journalist and politician Mojtaba Vahedi speculated in a tweet. Former President Mohammad Khatami visited Pezeshkian Friday night, ahead of the news about Aref's appointment.
Vahedi contends that Pezeshkian’s ascendance to the presidency was according to Khamenei’s plan and was meant to “complete his dictatorship and reveal the formality of all government forces including the parliament.”
'Reformist' politicians and media have generally welcomed Aref’s appointment.
Speaking to Khabar Online news website, 'reformist' politician and former Mayor of Tehran Gholamhossein Karbaschi welcomed Pezeshkian’s choice. He argued that Aref’s experience as vice president, his seniority in relation to other cabinet members, and his good relations with both reformists and conservatives make him a good choice for the position.
Unlike in the case of cabinet ministers, Pezeshkian who will be officially inaugurated at the Parliament on Tuesday does not need the Parliament’s approval to appoint his VP and deputies.
Pezeshkian is expected to present his cabinet to the Parliament after his inauguration or later this week for a vote of confidence.
He stressed on Friday that he would discuss his nominees with Khamenei for “final consultation and coordination...total understanding and agreement” when the list of proposed cabinet members is completed.
Zarif said Saturdaythat at least eight candidates were proposed to the President for most ministerial positions and that investigation of candidates for presidential deputies had not begun yet.
Pezeshkian’s predecessors were also required to discuss their candidates for ministerial positions with Khamenei and get his approval, particularly for several ‘sensitive positions’ including the ministries of intelligence, foreign affairs, Islamic guidance, defense, and interior, before the cabinet was presented to the Parliament.
Pezeshkian is the first Iranian president to inform the public of such a step in the formation of the cabinet. His supporters praise him for being transparent but some among the opposition are accusing him of trying to cast the blame for the possible shortcomings of his government on Khamenei in the future by highlighting his involvement in the selection process.
“Apparently, the shortcomings of Pezeshkian’s government are to be protected from criticism and protest by hiding behind the Supreme Leader,” one of the supporters of the ultra-hardliner Saeed Jalili alleged in a tweet.
Iran has established anti-abortion centers in 250 cities, preventing 4,700 abortions, according to a Health Ministry official.
In an interview with the Iranian Labor News Agency (ILNA) on Saturday, Saber Jabbari-Farouji, head of Iran’s Health Ministry's Population Youth Department, disclosed that the centers are part of the "Nafas" intervention group.
The group operates in locations frequently visited by pregnant women contemplating abortion and collaborates with the likes of pregnancy diagnosis labs, gynecologists' offices, midwives, general practitioners, and the national health network, including hospitals, to deter a woman considering an abortion.
Supported by the IRGC's Basij organization, it is believed that around 60 percent of women reportedly reconsidering after the interventions.
“In some instances, the mother may not disclose her intention to abort. Instead, the child's father, relatives, or even neighbors might inform us," Jabbari-Farouji said.
"These groups then establish an emotional connection with the mother, investigating the issues she faces. Based on these identified problems, they advise her against terminating the pregnancy."
Observers have likened the Nafas group centers, dubbed “anti-abortion patrols,” to Iran’s hijab enforcement units. In March 2021, the Iranian parliament passed a law banning public health services from offering family planning, including contraceptives, vasectomies, and tubectomies, except when a woman's health is at risk.
In a joint statement, they said that in the past decade, Iran has intensified efforts to limit women’s fundamental rights, particularly in reproductive autonomy saying the trend "reflects a broader pattern of increasing restrictions on women’s rights". Just recently, the UN branded Iran's policy towards women and girls "gender apartheid".
"Under the guise of addressing declining population growth, the government has introduced discriminatory legislation that severely limits access to essential sexual and reproductive healthcare and family planning services. These measures criminalize healthcare providers and strip women of bodily autonomy, perpetuating systemic discrimination,” the joint statement read.
Abortion in Iran is largely prohibited, with only a few exceptions. Following the Family Protection and Youth Population Law enacted in 2020, abortions require official permits.
According to Article 56 of the Family Protection and Youth Population Law, unauthorized abortions are punishable by fines, imprisonment, and revocation of medical licenses with the coroner’s office responsible for filing cases for those seeking abortions. However, underground abortions are common in Iran as women lack free access to contraception and means of escaping unwanted pregnancy.
Back in 2022, Saleh Ghasemi, head of the Center for Strategic Research on Population, said that "only three percent of abortions [in Iran] are legal, and two percent of abortions are spontaneous." He also said that only four percent of abortions happen due to what he called "illegitimate relations".
The ban on abortion in Iran has made women go to illegal and often unsafe centers to terminate their pregnancies, causing the death of many women and sometimes causing lifetime complications.
Jabbari-Farouji further stated that the main reasons for seeking abortions include unwillingness to have more children, economic hardships, and untimely pregnancies. He noted that 30 percent of abortion permit applicants cited economic hardships as their reason.
Iran has been grappling with inflation exceeding 40 percent annually over the past five years, alongside low wages and a devaluing national currency.
Despite these economic challenges, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei prioritizes increasing the population, viewing it as essential for the Islamic Republic’s position as a leading Shia country in the Muslim world. Khamenei’s emphasis has led to increased coercive measures against contraception and abortion.
Shortly after Turkey began exporting electricity to Iraq this week, Iran ceased its deliveries to its neighbor due to an increasingly worsening domestic power deficit.
The National Iraqi News Agency cited an official source on July 23, reporting that the country’s Diyala province experienced a massive power outage due to the cessation of Iranian electricity deliveries from both transmission lines for unknown reasons. The report suggests that Iran has stopped supplying 250 megawatts (MW) of electricity, while the region requires 900 MW due to rising temperatures.
The two transmission lines from Iran to Diyala have a combined transmission capacity of 550 MW. However, until July 20, Iran had only been delivering 250 MW to Diyala due to an intensified domestic deficit.
According to Iran's Ministry of Energy statistics archive, the country’s net electricity exports have drastically decreased from 2012 to 2022, indicating a substantial reduction in the surplus of electricity available for export. The country imported about three terawatt-hours (TWh) of electricity from Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan while exporting 4 TWh in 2022, with the majority going to Iraq. This puts Iran’s net electricity export at 1 TWh, which is eight times less than the 2012 level.
Iran's Ministry of Energy halted public access to its statistics in June 2023. However, some Iranian officials have stated that the country’s electricity trade balance has been zero since last summer, meaning that the Islamic Republic has been exporting electricity equal to its imports. It now appears that Iran's summer electricity deficit has reached a point where it cannot sustain its exports at the same level as its imports.
Meanwhile, Turkey's Energy Minister announced on July 22 the commencement of exporting 300 MW of electricity to Iraq. Additionally, since March 2024, Baghdad has begun importing electricity from Jordan. The country is also negotiating deals with Saudi Arabia and Oman to import electricity, though these agreements have not yet been finalized.
In 2023, Turkey launched 2,800 MW of solar and wind power plants. According to the latest statistics from Turkey's Energy Market Regulatory Authority, it added 3,500 MW of new solar and wind farms, as well as 600 MW of hydroelectric capacity, to its power generation during January-May 2024.
Turkey's growth in renewable electricity generation capacity in the first four months of 2024 exceeds more than twice the total electricity generation growth of Iran from all types of power plants over the past year. The country plans to add 7,000 MW of renewables this year.
In contrast, the Iranian government targeted the launch of 2,850 MW of solar and wind power plants last year but only achieved 2% of this goal. Most of Iran's newly launched power plants last year were steam and gas types with efficiencies of only 29% to 33%. This year, Iran faces a summer electricity deficit of 14,000 to 18,000 MW, equivalent to 20% to 25% of the country's electricity demand.
Iraq’s power plants also heavily rely on Iranian gas imports. The Iranian state, however, faces a significant gas deficit in winters and halts gas deliveries to its western neighbor. As a result, Iraq loses 4,000 to 5,000 MW of its electricity generation capacity in winters due to these interruptions.
Though Iraqrecently extended a gas import deal with Iran for the next five years, it has been striving to diversify its energy import sources, including importing gas from Turkmenistan through Iran.
Iraq has also set a goal to stop gas flaring by 2028 and achieve energy self-sufficiency by 2030. The country is working to reduce its heavy reliance on Iranian energy supplies, which are subject to sanctions that necessitate the US to issue waivers every four months.
Iranian authorities have accused four women of "armed rebellion", a sentence carrying the death penalty, as the country's execution spree continues.
The four women have been identified as Pakhshan Azizi, Sharifeh Mohammadi, Varisheh Moradi, and Nasim Gholami Simiyari.
While Azizi and Mohammadi have received a death sentence in recent weeks, the verdicts for Moradi and Simiyari are pending. However, given the armed rebellion charges they face, activists have warned that they could be at high risk of execution.
Article 287 of the Islamic Penal Code states that any group taking up arms against the Islamic Republic is considered a rebel and "its members shall be sentenced to death.”
Rights groups, activists, and Evin Prison inmates have condemned the authorities' actions, sparking widespread protests on social media and from human rights organizations against the Islamic Republic's harsh treatment of female activists.
Varisheh Moradi
Varisheh Moradi
Accordin to Iran International sources, the second court session for Varisheh Moradi on the charge of "armed rebellion" is scheduled for August 4 at Tehran’s Islamic Revolution Court, presided over by Judge Abolqasem Salavati.
This date was set without allowing her lawyers access to review her case. During her first court session on June 13, Salavati, infamously known as the "Judge of Death" for his severe human rights violations and death sentences on dubious charges, did not permit Moradi's lawyers to defend her.
Nasim Gholami Simiyari
Nasim Gholami Simiyari
On Saturday, a court session was held for Nasim Gholami Simiyari, a protester of Iran’s 2022 nationwide "Woman Life Freedom" uprising, on the charge of "armed rebellion" in a joint case.
The session took place at Branch 26 of the Tehran Revolutionary Court, presided over by Judge Iman Afshari, notorious for human rights violations. Afshari was sanctioned by the UK in 2022 for being "involved in the commission of serious human rights violations in Iran, namely being responsible for serious violations with respect to the right to a fair trial and the right to freedom of expression of political protesters."
Simiyari is currently detained at Tehran’s Evin prison and awaits a verdict. She was arrested on May 18, 2023, by IRGC intelligence agents in Tehran. Initially held in solitary confinement in Ward 1A, she was interrogated before being moved to the notorious Ward 2A and finally to the women's ward of Evin Prison on September 26, 2023.
After five months, she was charged with "assembly and collusion against national security," "propaganda against the regime," and "armed rebellion" in a joint case. US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) citing Gholami Simiyari’s friend reported that she endured psychological and physical torture, resulting in forced confessions recorded on camera under duress.
Pakhshan Azizi
Pakhshan Azizi
Political prisoner, Pakhshan Azizi was sentenced to death and an additional four years in prison on charges of "armed rebellion." The verdict was handed down by Judge Afshari of Branch 26 of the Tehran Revolutionary Court, with her lawyers being informed of the judgment on July 23.
On Saturday, Norway-based Iran Human Rights urged the International community to demand charges against Pakhshan and all others detained for their peaceful civil activities to be dropped.
“Pakhshan Azizi’s death sentence has no legal basis and was issued by the Islamic Republic’s non-independent judicial system at the behest of the security forces in order to suppress civil movement. The international community must react to her sentence in the strongest terms,” Iran Human Rights Director, Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam said in a statement.
Sixty female political prisoners at Tehran’s Evin Prison staged an overnight sit-in on Wednesday to protest against Azizi’s death sentence.
The Instagram accounts of Nobel Laureate Narges Mohammadi, Iranian civil rights activist Golrokh Iraee, and German-Iranian rights activist Nahid Taghavi jointly announced that Evin's women unanimously demand the annulment of the Iranian-Kurdish political prisoner's death sentence.
Sharifeh Mohammadi
Sharifeh Mohammadi
Labor activist Sharifeh Mohammadi was sentenced to death in early July on charges of "armed rebellion" by Judge Ahmad Darvish Goftar of Branch 1 of the Revolutionary Court of Rasht.
The Campaign to Defend Mohammadi stated on Instagram that the sentence is "based on the pretext of Mohammadi's membership in an independent, public, and legal labor organization a decade ago, demonstrating the baselessness of the verdict."
Rights groups and activists have been campaigning against Mohammadi’s death sentence since it was issued in July.
Last year, 834 prisoners were executed in Iran, including at least 22 women, marking the highest number since 2014, according to Iran Human Rights, making Iran the world's leading executioner of women.
This report highlights several cases, shedding light on the brutal reality faced by those caught in the grip of Iran's repressive tactics. The accounts reveal a systematic practice aimed at extracting forced confessions and instilling terror among detainees.
Victims, including political prisoners and protesters, recount harrowing experiences of being taken to the gallows, subjected to simulated shootings, or blindfolded with the belief they would be hanged, enduring profound psychological and physical torment.
In 2018, Abolfazl Chezani Sharahi, a juvenile offender charged with murder at the age of 14, was subjected to solitary confinement and endured the psychological torment of mock executions on four separate occasions. Ultimately, at the age of 19, he faced execution.
Iran remains one of the few countries that administer the death penalty for crimes committed during adolescence.
This is while updates to the country's Islamic Penal Code in 2013 allow judges to consider the mental capacity and maturity of young offenders when they are tried for crimes that warrant capital punishment for adults. Furthermore, in 2014, Iran’s Supreme Court ruled that all juvenile offenders on death row could apply for a retrial.
Additionally, Iran ratified the Convention on the Rights of the Child decades ago, which explicitly bans the execution of juvenile offenders.
Yalda Dehghani
Yalda Dehghani, a 25-year-old activist, was arrested in 2023 and subjected to mock executions with a handgun twice within an hour at the Rasht Intelligence Office in northern Iran.
This former political prisoner recounted to Iran International, "At the Intelligence Office, a sergeant grabbed me by my hair and dragged me across the floor to a small courtyard. He held me against the wall, turned on his phone's flashlight, pointed it at me, and said, 'I want to film you and hand over your body to your family. Say anything you think will ease their pain.' When I heard the gunshot, my face was against the wall, and I felt the blood spreading from the point of the bullet's impact on my body. I thought, my body is warm now, and it might take a few minutes for the pain to register."
She said it took her more than a minute to realize that the handgun was not loaded.
According to this former political prisoner, two hours later, they took her back to the small courtyard and threatened to kill her if she did not confess against herself and her friends.
Dehghani noted that it was close to dawn, and the officers were waiting for the call to prayer to finish so they could carry out her execution. She said, "This time, they placed the gun above my head, pressed it, and threatened me. With each press, I fell to the ground. I thought to myself, this time, they are waiting for the call to prayer; they will surely kill me. Suddenly, I heard the sound of the magazine. This time, I fell unconscious to the ground. I thought I was dead, but a few minutes later, I regained consciousness in the detention center."
Dehghani told Iran International that she was sexually assaulted several times by a sergeant in the Rasht police detention center.
Ashkan Soleimani
Ashkan Soleimani, a former political prisoner who was arrested during the 2022 protests, was subjected to mock executions by the authorities twice. Once with a handgun in the courtyard of the Rasht Intelligence Office and another time with a noose in Lakan Prison in the same city.
In an interview with Iran International, Soleimani recounted the night he was subjected to a mock execution with a handgun: "The commander of the forces that arrested me placed the muzzle of the handgun on my body and said, 'We will execute you here, and no one will know.'"
Soleimani mentioned that upon entering the political prisoners' ward in Lakan Prison, he heard numerous accounts from inmates about mock executions with a handgun. He told Iran International, "Prisoners were coerced into making forced confessions against themselves and their associates on the very first night of their arrest using this method."
One week before his mock execution with a noose, this political prisoner was transferred to solitary confinement in Lakan Prison.
He said, "On Saturday, they took me to solitary confinement and told me I would be executed on Thursday. I did everything I could to end my life. I even tried to cut my throat with the pen they had given me to write my will."
Soleimani recounted that on the night before his mock execution, a cleric was sent to his cell to read the Quran and talk about the afterlife.
He said, "They removed the blindfold, and someone started reciting the Quran. Suddenly, they placed the noose around my neck. Two people, one on my left and one on my right, shook the stool for 15 to 20 seconds. After a sudden jolt, they lifted my feet off the ground and said, 'The execution has been postponed.'"
Khaled Pirzadeh
Khaled Pirzadeh, a former bodybuilding champion and political prisoner arrested for his activism, told London’s Kayhan in January 2024 while he was on medical leave that he had been taken to the gallows twice, experiencing what he described as "terror sentences."“They put the noose around my neck twice. The terror of the death sentence. They did not show me any mercy out of their spite and tortured me to the brink of death. They would place my hands between the interrogation room's metal door and slam it shut,” Pirzadeh described his tortures.
Saman Seydi, a 26-year-old Iranian rap artist known as Saman Yasin, who was arrested during the anti-establishment protests in October 2022 and sentenced to death, endured the psychological torment of mock executions on two separate occasions.
Saman Seydi, better known as Saman Yasin
Ahmad Haeri, a political prisoner and Yasin’s cellmate, recounted Yasin’s harrowing experiences in a letter from prison obtained by Iran International. Haeri quoted Yasin’s chilling words about the mock executions:
"I felt the burning of the rope around my neck. The blood that seemed frozen in my body suddenly boiled, and I shouted and cursed at them, 'End it quickly...'"
"I was waiting every moment for the ground to give way beneath me and, thanks to the tied rope, for my neck to break and it all to end."
After learning that his execution was postponed, Yasin said, "It felt as if my legs had been cut off and I had been thrown to the ground."
The Hengaw Human Rights Organization, a Kurdish advocacy group, reported that Azizi published a letter detailing her repeated torture and mock hangings during detention.
"The interrogators have repeatedly hung me." She emphasized in the letter, "We may be insignificant to the central authority, but we receive the heaviest and most severe sentences."
The father of jailed Iranian protester Sahand Noor Mohammadzadeh, who was arrested outside his home in Tehran during the protests in October 2022 and subsequently sentenced to death two months later for allegedly attempting to break a highway guardrail and setting fire to a dustbin, disclosed that his son endured three mock executions.
A source close to Mohsen Ghiasi, who was arrested during the 2019 protests in Iran, told Iran Interntioainl about his mock executions.“Mohsen endured severe beatings and was instructed to write his will.” The source continued, “In the prison yard, a noose was placed around his neck. In his final moments, with his entire body trembling, he declared, ‘End it quickly.’ As Mohsen closed his eyes and awaited his death, he was informed that his execution had been postponed”.
Amnesty International reported in April that 853 people were executed in Iran in 2023, marking a record number in the past eight years. The organization highlighted that the government employs executions as a tool of political repression and warned that thousands more may face the same fate if the international community fails to intervene. According to the rights group Hengaw, at least 266 prisoners were executed across Iran in the first half of 2024, as the country's execution spree persists.