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Iran Hangs Seven More in Execution 'Spree,' Rights Group Says


FILE - A person in Nicosia, Cyprus, checks a mobile phone on Dec. 8, 2022, displaying a tweet about the hanging by Iranian authorities of Mohsen Shekari. Executions in Iran have been proceeding at a rapid clip in 2023, activists report.
FILE - A person in Nicosia, Cyprus, checks a mobile phone on Dec. 8, 2022, displaying a tweet about the hanging by Iranian authorities of Mohsen Shekari. Executions in Iran have been proceeding at a rapid clip in 2023, activists report.

Iran executed seven men Wednesday in two prisons outside Tehran on drug and rape charges, a rights group said, accelerating what activists describe as a hanging spree over the past two weeks.

The United Nations had warned on Tuesday of a "frighteningly" high number of executions in the country after a rare execution on Monday of two men on blasphemy charges.

Three men were executed on drug-related charges in Ghezal Hesar prison in the city of Karaj outside Tehran, said Iran Human Rights (IHR), a Norway-based NGO.

It added that four other men were hanged on rape charges in Rajai Shahr prison, also in Karaj.

The judiciary's Mizan Online website confirmed the three executions on drug charges, saying the convicts were members of a cocaine distribution cartel. There has been no official confirmation so far of the four executions on rape charges.

IHR said the latest hangings meant Iran had conducted at least 64 executions in the last 12 days alone.

"The killing machine of the government is accelerating — its goal is to intimidate the people, and its victims are the weakest people in society," said IHR director Mahmood Amiry Moghaddam.

IHR posted footage that it said showed families of the three men executed on drug charges protesting outside Ghezel Hesar prison in a last-ditch bid to stop the hangings.

Gunfire was audible in the video, and IHR said police used tear gas and batons to disperse the protest. One family member was hospitalized with severe injuries after being beaten, it added.

'Silence dissent'

Campaigners accuse Iran of using the death penalty to intimidate the public following weeks of protests that erupted in September last year. The protests were touched off by the death in custody of Mahsa Amini after she was arrested for allegedly violating Iran's dress rules for women.

At least 582 people were executed in Iran last year, the highest number of executions in the country since 2015 and well above the 333 recorded in 2021, IHR and Paris-based Together Against the Death Penalty said in a joint report in April.

But the pace of executions has been even more intense in 2023, with IHR now counting at least 218 executions so far this year.

On Tuesday, U.N. human rights chief Volker Turk cautioned that Iran is on an "abominable" track record this year with an average of more than 10 people being put to death each week.

Iran executed two people on Monday in a rare case of conviction for desecrating the Quran and insulting the Prophet Muhammad, prompting U.S. condemnation and an outcry from human rights groups.

Mizan Online said the three executed on drug charges were "members of the Panjak gang, the largest cocaine distribution cartel, which was one of the main drug cartels in the country."

The New York-based Center for Human Rights in Iran said the supreme court had confirmed death sentences against three men over the alleged killing of a Basij militiaman during protests in Isfahan in November.

It described the executions as a "killing spree" to "silence dissent."

Rights groups have warned that members of ethnic minorities — in particular the Baluch minority, who unlike most Iranians are mostly Sunni Muslim — have been disproportionately targeted by the current wave of executions.

Iran executes more people a year than any other nation except China, according to human rights groups including Amnesty International.

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