Iran: 16 prisoners including a woman hanged in one day, two in public
National Council of Resistance of Iran/Monday, 18 July 2016
Thirty prisoners executed in less than a week in cities across the country
In a new wave of executions, the Iranian regime executed 30 prisoners in various cities from July 11 to 17. Sixteen were executed today, July 17, in Karaj and Birjand.
In Karaj, 11 prisoners including a woman were executed en masse in Ghezel Hessar Prison and another two were hanged in public in Mehrshahr district.
Two prisoners were executed in the Central Prison of Lakan, in Rasht (northern Iran) on July 16. Six prisoners were hanged on July 13, in Gohardasht Prison of Karaj. Five more prisoners were hanged on July 11, in the Central Prison of Arak (central Iran), and another prisoner was executed also on July 11, in the Prison of Maragheh (East Azerbaijan Province in northwest Iran) after enduring eight years in prison.
Beset by various crises, the Iranian regime is unable to respond to the most basic needs of the Iranian people, especially the deprived and low income strata. To confront growing public dissent and protests across the country, it has resorted to a new wave of executions. One year after the nuclear deal, these crimes reveal the claims of moderation in the clerical regime as hollow and expose the falsehood of promises of improvement under the mullahs’ rule. It was thus proved that appeasement of the mullahs’ medieval regime will not bring about change.
The Iranian Resistance calls on human rights organizations to condemn the rising number of executions in Iran and to immediately undertake measures to send the dossier of violations of human rights in Iran to the UN Security Council. All relations with the Iranian regime must be made conditional on an end to executions and an improvement of the human rights situation in Iran. July 17, 2016
Iran regime hangs 18 people over the weekend
Sunday, 17 July 2016/NCRI/Iran’s fundamentalist regime hanged 18 prisoners over the weekend, including two cases in public. A woman was among those hanged on Sunday. Eleven prisoners were hanged en masse in Qezelhesar Prison in Karaj, north-west of Tehran, on Sunday. Two of the prisoners were identified as Saeed Saberi and Moslem Bahrami. At least one of the 11 prisoners was a woman. Two men, identified only by their initials Q. J. and M. R., were hanged in public in Karaj on Sunday. The two men were hanged in a public square in the city’s Mehshahr District, the state-run Tasnim news agency reported on Sunday.
Another three men were hanged in prison in the city of Birjand, eastern Iran, on Sunday. They were identified as Mansour Zafarani, Yousef Barahoui and Qassem Delshad. They were accused of drugs-related charges.
Two prisoners, whose names were not given but who were said to be 40 and 49 years old, were hanged on Saturday in Lakan Prison in Rasht, northern Iran, according to the state broadcaster IRIB which quoted Ahmad Siavosh-Pour, the provincial head of the judiciary. They were accused of drugs-related charges.
Also it emerged over the weekend that five men were hanged on July 11 in the Central Prison of Arak, central Iran. They were identified as Masoud Taqi-Pour, Hassan Faraj-Pour, Mehdi Baqeri, Baqer Jalili and Hamid Haqvin. They too were accused of drugs-related charges.
The mullahs’ regime hanged nine prisoners collectively on July 13 in Gohardasht Prison in Karaj.
Three of the executed prisoners were identified as Seyyed Mohammad Taheri, Amir Khadem Rezaiyan and Saeid Ahmadi.
More than 270 Members of the European Parliament signed a joint statement on Iran last month, calling on the European Union to “condition” its relations with Tehran to an improvement of human rights.
The MEPs who were from all the EU Member States and from all political groups in the Parliament said they are concerned about the rising number of executions in Iran after Hassan Rouhani took office as President three years ago.
Amnesty International in its April 6 annual Death Penalty report covering the 2015 period wrote: “Iran put at least 977 people to death in 2015, compared to at least 743 the year before.”
“Iran alone accounted for 82% of all executions recorded” in the Middle East and North Africa, the human rights group said.
There have been more than 2,500 executions during Hassan Rouhani’s tenure as President. The United Nations Special Rapporteur on the human rights situation in Iran in March announced that the number of executions in Iran in 2015 was greater than any year in the last 25 years. Rouhani has explicitly endorsed the executions as examples of “God’s commandments” and “laws of the parliament that belong to the people.