When the world gets closer.

We help you see farther.

Sign up to our expressly international daily newsletter.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

You've reach your limit of free articles.

Get unlimited access to Worldcrunch

You can cancel anytime.

SUBSCRIBERS BENEFITS

Ad-free experience NEW

Exclusive international news coverage

Access to Worldcrunch archives

Monthly Access

30-day free trial, then $2.90 per month.

Annual Access BEST VALUE

$19.90 per year, save $14.90 compared to monthly billing.save $14.90.

Subscribe to Worldcrunch
Society

Iran's Use Of Death Penalty Has Doubled, Targeting Protesters And Ethnic Minorities

Without drawing attention to public executions like it did last year, the regime has quietly continued to mete out capital punishment: increasing both death sentences and the carrying out of executions, on pace in 2023 to double from the previous year.

Photo of clashes between ​Iranian police and protestors on Tehran's Keshavrz Boulevard on Sept. 2022

Iranian protestors on Tehran's Keshavrz Boulevard on Sept. 2022

Ahmad Rafat

The tribunals of the Islamic Republic of Iran have accelerated the churning out of their specialty: death sentences. The latest were issued in the southwestern city of Ahwaz for six members of the local Arab minority and suspected separatists.

The defendants, named as Ali Majdam, Muhammad Reza Muqaddam, Moin Khanfari, Habib Deris, Adnan Gheibshahi and Salem Musawi, had been charged with terrorist activities in the Khuzestan province, in the southwest of the country, in the years 2018-2020, and may have been members of an Arab separatist group, the Harakat al-nidhal.


The group's former leader, Habib Asiud, an Iranian-Swedish dual national, was detained by Iranian agents in Istanbul in late October 2020 and is now on trial in Iran. He is likely to face a similar sentence.

Increasing death sentences

Tehran's Revolutionary Court has also issued a death sentence to Jamshid Sharmahd, a German-Iranian national and long-term U.S. resident, kidnapped in Dubai in (late July) 2020. His daughter Ghazaleh told Kayhan-London from California that she feared his execution in coming days, recalling the similar fate of another kidnapped journalist Ruhollah Zam, executed in December 2020.

The courts have separately confirmed death sentences for 14 (male) protesters.

Zam, an online activist who lived in Paris, had been "invited" to Iraq where he too was caught (in October) 2019 and taken to Tehran.

The courts have separately confirmed death sentences for 14 (male) protesters held in the course of the mass demonstrations that erupted in mid-September 2022.

Photo of the Tehran cityscape, shot through a fence

Looking over Tehran, Iran

Nahid V

Doubling executions, minorities targeted

More recently, the country's Supreme Court suspended death sentences given to five men, ordering retrials, though a reconfirmation of their sentences by a second court is entirely plausible.

Many of the dead were from Iran's ethnic minorities.

None of these cases respected the due process of law or defendants' basic rights. They could not select a defense attorney, for example. Their self-incriminating statements — leading to convictions for possibly fictitious crimes — were obtained under duress or even tortures that included, as some have claimed, receiving electric shocks, being whipped with cables, raped or threatened with the rape of relatives. Their filmed confessions — a favorite concoction of the Islamic Republic — are anything but legal.

The Abdolrahman Borumand Foundation, an NGO based in Washington DC, and Amnesty International, estimated together in early March 2023 that 94 people were executed in Iran in the first two months of 2023. This roughly doubled the number of executions for the same period in 2022.

Their report observed that many of the dead were from Iran's ethnic minorities (such as the Arabs, Baluchis or Kurds). Another NGO, the Baloch Activists Campaign, believes at least 179 Baluch Iranians were executed in 2022, while Iran Human Rights has put the number of executions in Iran in the first 11 months of 2022 at over 500. The figure was 333 for the same period in 2021.

International condemnation

The Islamic Republic is keen to execute "unknown" opponents before their cases garner publicity and subsequent campaigns to have them pardoned or freed. This was evident in the hangings of Mohsen Shekari and Majidreza Rahnavard, two former protesters who were unknown before their sentences were reported.

The Islamic Republic's actions are not going entirely unnoticed. A February session of the UN Human Rights Council condemned its use of executions, and in contrast with the past, the motion voted by 52 countries was at the initiative of Latin American members that are usually neutral or complaisant toward Iran.

The Iranian Foreign Minister Hussein Amir Abdullahian was present at the vote. Another, albeit symbolic gesture made in protest at his government's despicable actions, was for numerous representatives to leave when Amir Abdollahian began to speak.

You've reached your limit of free articles.

To read the full story, start your free trial today.

Get unlimited access. Cancel anytime.

Exclusive coverage from the world's top sources, in English for the first time.

Insights from the widest range of perspectives, languages and countries.

Three Italian college students posed with Modigliani's fake head and the tools with which they made it.

Three college students pose with their sculpting tools and one of the fake Modigliani heads.

Emanuela Minucci

TURIN — Summer, 1984. Three sculptures are found in a canal in Livorno, Italy.

Experts and art critics Giulio Carlo Argan and Cesare Brandi agree that the sculptures are the work of famous Italian artist Amedeo Modigliani, who had written that he threw some sculptures that didn’t turn out as he'd wanted into the river.

But the sculptures were all fake. It was one of the greatest art hoaxes of all time. The prank of Modigliani’s False Heads is the story of three university students and an artist from Livorno who didn’t know each other, but all had the same idea: on the year of the centenary of Modigliani’s birth, as the city of Livorno dredged a nearby river to find the lost sculptures Modigliani had written about, defied the art world. It was courageous, and reckless.

Keep reading...Show less

You've reached your limit of free articles.

To read the full story, start your free trial today.

Get unlimited access. Cancel anytime.

Exclusive coverage from the world's top sources, in English for the first time.

Insights from the widest range of perspectives, languages and countries.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

You've reach your limit of free articles.

Get unlimited access to Worldcrunch

You can cancel anytime.

SUBSCRIBERS BENEFITS

Ad-free experience NEW

Exclusive international news coverage

Access to Worldcrunch archives

Monthly Access

30-day free trial, then $2.90 per month.

Annual Access BEST VALUE

$19.90 per year, save $14.90 compared to monthly billing.save $14.90.

Subscribe to Worldcrunch

The latest