
What did they do to us? Just a year and a half ago, we caused an earthquake because of a Mehsa, and in the last two months alone, bloodthirsty Islamic monsters hanged 127 young people of the country, and we are silent.
According to human rights groups, the Iranian regime has executed more than 127 people, including women and children, since the attacks by Hamas on October 7.
According to data collected by the Iranian Human Rights Organization (IHR) and the Norwegian-based Hangau organization, since the start of the war between Israel and Hamas, executions by Zahhak and his gang have increased alarmingly.
Confirming a dramatic increase in executions since the October 7 attacks, the group said the bloodthirsty Islamic regime executed seven people within 24 hours on Wednesday last week.
The execution republic uses the global preoccupation with the war in Gaza as a cover to take revenge on the opposition and kill people without due process.
Mahmoud Amiri Moghadam, head of the Iran Human Rights Organization, said: Since the start of the war, there has been less international focus on the human rights situation in Iran and there has been no significant reaction to the significant increase in executions. The organization announced that the number of executions in October and November has doubled compared to August and September last year.
Among the people who were killed in the last two months, a 17-year-old child named Hamidreza Azari can be mentioned.
Azari was executed in Sabzevar Prison after his “forced confession” for the crime of murder, and the state media falsely announced his age as 18 when reporting his death.
Jaladan also executed 22-year-old Milad Zahrond, the eighth protester associated with the Women, Life, Freedom movement, for participating in nationwide anti-regime demonstrations that began across Iran last year after the death of Mehsa Amini. Among those who were executed, a Kurdish woman was killed in prison only because she did not observe the hijab.
The execution regime has not responded to the request of the United Nations to confirm the number of executions it has carried out since October 7 and does not publish official statistics on the number of people killed in the country.
Moin Khazaeli, an active human rights lawyer of the Legal Counseling and Education Center, said: “In at least 95% of the cases, the defendants lacked representation and a lawyer was not available to support them.
“In most of the cases that were in the hands of the Revolutionary Court, the defendants did not even have access to the cases and did not even know what they were charged with.”
Activists and protesters who spoke to the Observer said that the repression of regime critics and those belonging to minority groups is increasing sharply, especially in Sistan and Baluchistan and the Kurdistan Region.
https://theguardian.com/global-development/2023/dec/02/iran-using-gaza-conflict-as-cover-to-step-up-executions-of-protesters

You must be logged in to post a comment.