cross-posted from: https://scribe.disroot.org/post/9431107

“Several young men born in the second half of the 2000s are sitting beside me. They are under 20. They keep moving their necks up and down and from side to side. I ask them what they are doing. They say: ‘We are preparing our necks for the hangman’s noose’.”

This account by Soheil Arabi, a photoblogger who has been jailed several times since 2013 and who was recently released from one of Iran’s largest prisons, Ghezel Hesar, after two months, offers a disturbing glimpse into human rights violations in Iran during the current conflict.

Since Israel and the US attacked Iran on February 28, 2026, the world has been mostly focused on the war, Iran’s nuclear program, the blockage of the Strait of Hormuz and the future balance of power in the Middle East.

But inside the country, rights groups fear an increasingly deadly wave of repression, thanks to the ongoing war.

Iran already accounted for 80% of a global surge in executions during 2025, according to rights group Amnesty International. During 2025, “Iran executed at least 2,159 people, more than double its 2024 figure,” the group said.

The stories aboutexecutions make for grim reading. Gholamreza Khani Shakarab, 34, a former martial arts champion, was accused of working for Israel – he regularly travelled for sports contests – and he was hanged without ever getting to see his family again. Dual Swedish-Iranian national Kourosh Keyvani was arrested in 2025, during the first round of fighting between Israel and Iran, then hanged in March this year.

A 68-year-old woman Zahra Shahbaz Tabari was sentenced to death on charges of “armed rebellion.” Her first trial only lasted 10 minutes and she had no independent lawyer present. Although her verdict was overturned, she was found guilty again after a retrial in late May.

“Documented patterns such as killings, torture, enforced disappearances, mass arrests and political executions could amount to crimes against humanity if it is established that they were carried out in an organized manner and as part of a state policy,” Amnesty International’s Iran researcher Raha Bahreini told DW.

  • BrikoX@lemmy.zipM
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    5 days ago

    That is the dumbest headline on the timeline today.

    But inside the country, rights groups fear an increasingly deadly wave of repression, thanks to the ongoing war.

    Repression existed long before the war. War criminals killing children and starving them to death are not helping Iranians, they are just making IRGC more powerful as they are the only thing standing between them having a country and not having a country. So even those that oppose the repression will fight against the invaders first and foremost.

    • randomnameOP
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      5 days ago

      The Iranian government increases its repression using the war as pretext (not in the least as the ruling class fears new protests as soon as the war ends). An end to the regime in Tehran would help the Iranians.

  • freagle@lemmy.ml
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    5 days ago

    What a ridiculous opening paragraph. No one is stretching their necks in anticipation of being hanged. You can immediately file this under “conversations that never happened”. And to open with that paragraph? This is not journalism. This is propaganda masquerading as sympathy porn.