Iran executed nearly 1,500 since 2022 protests began – rights group
Execution
At least 1,425 people have been executed in Iran since Mahsa Amini’s death in custody sparked a nationwide protest movement in September 2022, a new report by Norway-based Iran Human Rights Organization said.
Nearly twice as many executions were carried out in the two years following the outbreak of the protests compared to the same period before, according to the Monday report.
The most significant increase was for alleged drug-related crimes, the report added, for which capital punishment jumped 163% from 302 cases to 796.
“The death penalty is the Islamic Republic’s most crucial tool for instilling fear in society, aiming to stifle dissent and preventing future protests," IHR Director Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam was quoted as saying.
"Drug-related offenders, often denied fair trials by Revolutionary Courts, are the regime’s expendable victims in this relentless cycle of repression."
Iran conducted the most executions of any country in the world besides China last year, Amnesty International said in a report in May, adding that nearly 75% of all executions worldwide in 2023 outside China were in Iran.
Foreign ministers from the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, Canada and New Zealand condemned the uptick in death sentences in a joint statement on Monday.
“The recent surge in executions that have largely occurred without fair trials has been shocking, and we urge the Iranian government to cease its human rights violations now.”
Other harsh sentences like flogging have also been handed down in greater numbers according to another rights group.
Over 100 sentences of flogging have been issued in relation to the protests, the U.S.-based Abdorrahman Boroumand Center for Iran's Human Rights said in a report on Monday, with at least two being conducted on women.
"These inhumane sentences are being carried out despite Article 5 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights - an agreement that Iran has both accepted and ratified -which states, 'No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment'," the rights group said in a statement.
An American man arrested for a suspected assassination attempt on Donald Trump on Sunday wrote in a self-published book last year that Iran had a right to kill the former US president after he pulled out of the Iran nuclear deal.
“I must take part of the blame for the retarded child that we elected for our next president that ended up being brain-less,” wrote Ryan Wesley Routh, a Hawaii resident who said he had voted for Trump in 2016.
“But I am man enough to say that I misjudged and made a terrible mistake and Iran I apologize. You are free to assassinate Trump as well as me for that error in judgment and the dismantling of the deal”, he added, according to screenshots carried by media outlets.
No copies of the book were readily accessible or available for purchase as of Monday.
The nuclear deal or Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) was an agreement among Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council and Germany spearheaded by Trump’s predecessor Barack Obama in 2015.
The Trump administration’s unilaterally withdrawal effectively scuppered the deal.
“I would like to celebrate the amazing work of John Kerry that very humbly and humanly handled the Iran deal which elated me and the whole of the world,” Routh wrote in his book, referring to the U.S. Secretary of State at the time.
U.S. authorities are scrutinizing Routh’s digital footprint in the wake of his arrest, including his book “Ukraine's Unwinnable War: The Fatal Flaw of Democracy, World Abandonment and the Global Citizen—Taiwan, Afghanistan, North Korea and the End of Humanity.”
Praise for Iranians
In his book which rambles and abounds in grammatical errors, Routh praises Iranians for protesting against their rulers’ “brutality”, in an apparent reference to a popular uprising following the death of a young woman in the custody of Iranian morality police in 2022.
“As I look at them they are exactly the same as citizens of the US and other civilians around the globe that protest injustice and it is a wonderful and honorable thing to see those standing up for their fellowman and unjust abuse,” Routh wrote. “I want to be there in the streets with the Iranians with banners and posters and screaming for justice. I would also like to be protesting in those streets against US sanctions.”
Routh was quoted in a New York Times article in 2023 saying he wanted to recruit ex-Afghan soldiers from Iran and Pakistan and move them to Ukraine.
The immediate reaction on social media to President Masoud Pezeshkian’s belated press conference on Monday was mixed, highlighting the deep divide within Iranian society.
Some netizens have viewed the two-and-a-half-hour press conference as a breath of fresh air in Iranian politics. They found Pezeshkian to be more honest and straightforward compared to his predecessor, Ebrahim Raisi, and Saeed Jalili, who narrowly lost to Pezeshkian in the July elections.
Others have noted that when confronted with challenging questions, such as the future of Iran’s relations with the West, Pezeshkian seemed evasive and spoke in vague terms. He often toned down his more assertive statements to avoid controversy or offending critics.
For example, his lengthy response on whether he was open to meeting with the current or a future US president did not offer a clear rejection or acceptance.
Nevertheless, Pezeshkian did go into the offensive mode in a few instances including when he came under attack by the reporter of the ultra-hardline Kayhan newspaper for employing “seditionists” in his government.
Ahmad, a 52-year-old resident of Ekbatan, a middle-class neighborhood in west Tehran, watched the press conference like many other Iranians. “Overall, I was quite pleased,” he said.
“He doesn’t seem to like stirring up trouble with the rest of the world. This alone is enough for those who voted for him to be content even if that doesn’t make their lives any easier now,” Ahmad told Iran International.
“All they would be hearing today if Jalili had been elected would be ‘the enemy’ and ‘enemies’,” he added.
To those who actively boycotted the elections, and refer to themselves as ‘barandaz’ (proponents of regime change), Pezeshkian’s press conference was only another “regime circus”.
His answers, they argued, only reinforced the view that he is merely a puppet of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. They suggested that his statements were dictated, indicating that no significant change should be expected in Iran's troubled society.
“All Pezeshkian says is that ‘the system should not be messed with”! In other words, one must be a servant and obedient to Khamenei and move forward when he agrees,” expatriate political commentator Ali Afshari who called Pezeshkian a “nobody” tweeted.
“He has come to say that society should forget about transforming the system and resisting tyranny, and be content with uncertain economic promises,” he wrote.
Hardliners and ultra-hardliners were also displeased with several of Pezeshkian’s statements, including his remarks that “We have no enmity with the US,” and “We don’t intend to export our Revolution.” His insistence on resolving issues with the Financial Action Taskforce (FATF) and pursuing peace with all non-hostile nations also provoked criticism.
They were also infuriated when a female journalist openly told Pezeshkian that she had to make several detours on her way to the press conference to avoid detention by the morality police for not adhering to hijab regulations.
“Do they still harass [women]?” Pezeshkian asked her. “They weren’t supposed to do it anymore. We will follow up on this so they won’t harass you anymore,” he said good-humoredly when he received an affirmative response. His remarks drew applause from some of those present.
As he often does, Pezeshkian spoke in a modest tone throughout the press conference, often disregarding standard protocols. He made a few gaffes, such as referring to Russia as the Soviet Union while discussing the Ukraine War, and included several jokes to elicit laughter from the audience.
As usual, he also recited verses from the Quran and sections from the sermons of the first Shia imam, Imam Ali, in Arabic when responding to some questions. This practice has been criticized by some Iranians as being overly performative and not suited to presidential discourse.
The stage for the press conference to which around 300 domestic and international media representatives and photojournalists had been invited was very different from similar events in the past.
The president sat at a desk in front of a large background banner with the image of the iconic, snow-clad Mount Damavand and the sun rising from behind it in its center and the images of the current Supreme Leader and the founder of the Islamic Republic, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini on either side at the top.
“I pledge my life to make my promises come true,” it read on one side of the banner. This is a quotation from Imam Ali whose shrine in Iraq Pezeshkian visited last week. Under it, two slogans were printed in large letters: “Reforming Governance” and “Returning to the People”.
The United Kingdom introduced fresh trade sanctions against Iran targeting its defense industry on Monday, a week after accusing Iran of delivering ballistic missiles to Russia.
The new measures aim to cut off financing and delivery to Iran of material deemed to have military uses.
“These measures will disrupt Iran’s production and supply of unmanned aerial vehicles and missiles, and further increase the pressure on Iran’s defense industry,” the UK government said in a statement.
But with potential costs to Iran estimated at below £10 million annually according to the statement, the economic impact on Tehran may prove minimal.
The UK has advocated for allowing Ukraine to use Western long-range missiles inside Russia and British naval forces have been deployed to the Red Sea for nearly a year to guard commercial shipping against attacks from the Iran-backed Houthi group in Yemen.
The United States and top European allies the UK, France and Germany hit Iran’s state carrier Iran Air with sanctions last week for ballistic missile deliveries to Russia – accusations Iran denies.
Speaking at his first press conference since becoming president in July, Iran’s new president Masoud Pezeshkian denied any transfers had occurred during his tenure.
“I won’t comment on the past or whether any missile exchanges have taken place, but since we have come into office, we have not delivered any,” Pezeshkian said on Monday.
Pezeshkian said the resolution of the standoff over Iran’s disputed nuclear program could ease sanctions and help alleviate the country’s economic woes.
G7 statement
The fresh Western sanctions come as a blow to Pezeshkian’s campaign promises to seek better relations with Europe.
G7 governments vowed to introduce more punitive measures against Iran last week, condemning Tehran’s alleged delivery of missiles to Russia.
"Iran must immediately cease all support to Russia's illegal and unjustifiable war against Ukraine and halt such transfers of ballistic missiles, UAVs, and related technology," G7 foreign ministers said in a joint statement on Saturday.
"We remain steadfast in our commitment to hold Iran to account for its unacceptable support for Russia's illegal war in Ukraine”.
In his first press conference since his election, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian denied on Monday that Tehran has supplied hypersonic missiles to Yemen's Houthi rebels or short-range ballistic missiles to Russia.
His comments come as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed retaliation, accusing the Houthis of escalating their attacks beyond Yemen’s borders. Western countries have also strongly condemned Iran's reported delivery of ballistic missiles to Russia to be used against Ukraine.
Pezeshkian rejected allegations that Tehran had provided hypersonic missiles to Yemen’s Houthi rebels. A day earlier, the Houthis claimed responsibility for firing a missile at Israel, which they described as hypersonic. Netanyahu responded by warning that Israel would impose a "heavy price" on the Houthis, who have controlled northern Yemen for years but are now expanding their operations far beyond the country's borders.
"It takes a person a week to travel to Yemen from Iran. How could this missile have gotten there? We don't have such missiles to provide to Yemen," Pezeshkian told reporters.
Despite Pezeshkian's denial, Iran last year showcased what it said was its first domestically made hypersonic missile, the Fattah. The growing influence of the Houthis, fueled by Iranian backing, has been a cornerstone of Tehran's regional strategy, as the group has continued to disrupt global trade routes in the Red Sea and Bab al-Mandeb Strait under the pretext of blockading Israel.
Iran’s support for the Houthis, alongside other proxy groups across the region, aligns with its long-standing foreign policy goals of opposing Israel and destabilizing Western-aligned governments. Yemen’s strategic location has given Iran a foothold in a region critical to international shipping, amplifying its leverage in the conflict.
Pezeshkian, in response to a question from a Japanese media outlet regarding the Islamic Republic's missile deliveries to Russia, stated, "As for the relationship between the Islamic Republic and Russia, I can say with certainty that since we took office, we have not provided them with anything."
He claimed ignorance about missile deliveries to Russia during Ebrahim Raisi's administration and prior governments. However he said, "We have and will continue to have relations with Russia."
Pezeshkian added, "However, our stance in all wars is that no country should invade another country’s territory."
Regarding his visit to Moscow, attendance at the BRICS summit, and relations with Russia, he said that the Islamic Republic’s ties with Russia and China have been "very good" and that this trajectory would continue.
He remarked, "It’s not the case that if we negotiate, trade, and make peace with the world, we will forget our friends."
He added, "Russia is our neighbor, and we have strong economic relations, which these meetings can help implement the vision that Ebrahim Raisi had."
Ties with China
In response to a question from a Chinese reporter about relations between Beijing and Tehran, he said, "Our strongest ties are with China and Russia." He also praised China’s efforts to mediate between the Islamic Republic and Saudi Arabia.
The president promised, "We will have a fully aligned and strategic partnership with China, and we will work to implement the agreements and increase cooperation in future relations."
Responding to a question from an Associated Press reporter about the Islamic Republic's production of 60% enriched uranium and his government’s plan to address the International Atomic Energy Agency’s concerns, Pezeshkian stated, "We are addressing our technical and scientific needs and are not pursuing nuclear weapons."
He continued, "We adhered to the framework of the JCPOA; they [the US] tore it apart. If they don't resume compliance, neither will we."
"We will continue within the framework of nuclear energy laws and agreements. If they uphold their commitments, we will do the same."
In response to another question, Pezeshkian said, "We don't seek conflict; we are not pursuing nuclear weapons, but we won't allow anyone to bully us."
Regarding recent efforts to resume and expand relations with Arab countries, particularly in the Persian Gulf region, such as Saudi Arabia, Pezeshkian stated: “I believe we are brothers, so why shouldn’t we visit each other? There should be no disagreements between us. I personally welcome any initiative that brings us closer together.”
He added, “We aim to strengthen our relations with Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, and all Islamic countries. We have invited the Saudi Crown Prince to visit us, and we are eager to meet.”
Foreign policy remains largely out of Pezeshkian's hands, with Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) maintaining firm control. Though Abbas Araghchi, a former diplomat, has been appointed as foreign minister, Tehran’s reliance on military proxies signals a continuation of its hardline stance.
In his remarks, Pezeshkian also discussed potential solutions for the country’s economic crisis. He suggested that resolving the nuclear issue and adhering to standards set by the international financial watchdog, FATF, could yield significant results. He also announced plans to send a letter to the Islamic Republic’s Expediency Council addressing nuclear sanctions and FATF compliance.
Iran’s new Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told state television that Tehran will fully back its ‘Resistance Front’ in the region by providing “unlimited support,” as Israel tries to fully defeat the Palestinian Hamas.
“The government’s policy is to provide unlimited support to the resistance. We will support the resistance front, which has established itself as a reality in the region. The regime [Israel] has so far failed to achieve its main goal of destroying Hamas,” Araghchi stated.
However, the foreign minister signaled that Tehran is reluctant to get directly involved in a wider conflict. According to Tasnim website affiliated with Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, he maintained that Iran would continue its support for the Resistance Front but “remains vigilant against traps that might be set to draw us into the conflict. We are monitoring regional developments with intelligence and awareness.”
Speaking about foreign policy, Araghchi highlighted relations with neighbors, in the absence of a real chance to resolve issues with West at this juncture. “We seek comprehensive and balanced diplomacy and aim to expand our communications. My colleagues are currently planning. When a head of state makes their first visit to a country, it signifies importance to us. The message of the President’s visit to Iraq was that our priority is first and foremost our neighbors.”
The foreign minister did not indicate any current discussions with the United States, noting that the Americans are in the midst of an election season. However, he announced that Iran is ready to engage in discussions with Europe "on the basis of equality."
“Europeans need to understand Iran’s concerns. If they have concerns, so do we. We have issues with Europe regarding sanctions and economic matters. Using failed tools is not the solution. Various sanctions were imposed on the nuclear program before, but they had to come to the negotiating table. It is clear that sanctions have failed,” Araghchi argued.
Despite the occasional denials by Iranian officials about the impact of sanctions, Iran’s economic crisis continues to deepen. Bread prices were more than doubled recently and politicians and experts warn of a much larger budget deficit in the coming fiscal year starting in March 2025.
Araghchi talked about the latest contentious issue of ballistic missile deliveries to Russia that have seriously alarmed the United States and its European allies, who have issued more targeted sanctions.
Araghchi appeared to be using the issue as a quid-pro-quo with Europe, not outright denying the accusation. “They are concerned about Iran exporting advanced weapons to Ukraine. If Europe is genuinely concerned, the solution is dignified dialogue. It is not reasonable to expect that their concerns will be addressed unilaterally. We are ready to engage in dialogue with Europe. Currently, establishing relations with Europe is not a priority for us,” the Iranian foreign minister stated.
Earlier this month, Western government began warning that Iran was delivering 200 short-range Fath-360 ballistic missiles to Russia for use in its war against Ukraine. Tehran earlier issued vague denials, but some lawmakers confirmed the news. Also, Iran's delivery of thousands of kamikaze drones to Russia since mid-2022 make the Western accusation more credible. The use of these drones against non-military targets are well documented and even Tehran, after some denials, has claimed that the weapons were delivered before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.