TEHRAN: Every week, Iranian political prisoners go on hunger strike to protest against the death penalty. Rights organisations say that the number of executions in the country has increased by over 20 per cent in the past year.
October 10 is the European and World Day against the Death Penalty. Its goal is to raise awareness about the death penalty and advocate for its abolishment.
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On October 9, the Norway-based NGO Iran Human Rights (IHR) launched a 24-hour live programme on social media to draw international attention to death sentences and executions in Iran as well as the weekly peaceful protests against the death penalty in Iranian prisons.
The programme began with the reading of a letter, which was written by Iranian Nobel Peace Prize winner Narges Mohammadi in the Iranian capital Tehran’s Evin prison and smuggled out.
Narges Mohammadi, who was imprisoned in part for her peaceful campaigning against the death penalty, co-initiated a weekly protest against executions 37 weeks ago. Every Tuesday, she and other political prisoners go on hunger strike. The campaign has spread across the country and is currently taking place in 22 jails, according to human rights organisations.
“We need the global support of human rights activists to end the executions in Iran,” wrote Narges Mohammadi in her letter. “Help us to stop the machinery of execution,” she appealed.
At least 811 people executed in a year
According to the Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), the number of executions in Iran increased by 23.06 per cent between October 10, 2023 and October 8, 2024 compared to the previous 12 months (October 2022 to October 2023). At least 811 people were executed during this period.
HRANA is an unofficial news agency that records and documents human rights violations in Iran with the support of activists inside and outside the country. It says that 186 more people were sentenced to death between October 10, 2023 and October 8, 2024. The Supreme Court upheld 59 of these death sentences.
According to Amnesty International, there were at least 1,153 executions recorded worldwide in 2023, the highest toll since 2015. Almost three-quarters were carried out in Iran, where the human rights organization said that at least 853 people had been executed.
“We also have a list with the names of 47 more individuals who were executed over the past 12 months,” said Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam, the director of IHR, in an interview with DW in May. “But we have yet to publish their names because have not been able to find a second independent source to confirm their execution.”
Not all families report executions to human rights organisations. Many remain silent out of fear of reprisals or shame.
Ethnic minorities disproportionately targeted
Human rights activists criticise the disproportionate use of the Iranian death penalty against the Kurdish minority in the west of Iran and the Baluchi minority in the southeast of the country, where there is widespread poverty.
While most of the Iranian population is made up of Shia Muslims, the majority of Kurds and Baluchis in Iran are Sunni. These ethnic and religious minorities, who live largely in economically disadvantaged regions of the country, have long complained of discrimination and systematic human rights violations.
“Of the recorded executions in Iran, at least 545 were unlawfully carried out for acts that should not result in the death penalty under international law, including drug-related offences, robbery and espionage,” found Amnesty International in its annual report.
“The executions disproportionately impacted Iran’s Baluchi ethnic minority,” it added. “The authorities executed at least 172 people – 166 men and six women – from the Baluchi minority, accounting for 20 per cent of all executions even though they make up around 5 per cent of Iran’s population.”
The total number of executions recorded by Amnesty International in 2023 does not include those that took place in China, where data on the use of the death penalty is classified as a state secret. The same applies to Vietnam and North Korea.
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“Available information indicates that each year thousands of people are executed and sentenced to death,” in China, it wrote.
After Iran, Saudi Arabia accounted for the largest number (172) of recorded executions.