Iran Stages Public Executions
August 21, 2007, 10:52 am![]() |
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By Andrew L. Jaffee
The Islamist regime in Iran is sending a clear message to its political opponents: shut up or die. About 30 Iranians have been hanged in public in the past 30 days. According to the Guardian, this “spectacle” of repression and violence was held at a “location, near many office blocks and the Australian and Japanese embassies, [which] meant [the hangings] were seen by many middle-class Iranians who would not normally witness such events:”
Iran has hanged up to 30 people in the past month amid a clampdown prompted by alleged US-backed plots to topple the regime, The Observer can reveal.
Many executions have been carried out in public in an apparent bid to create a climate of intimidation while sending out uncompromising signals to the West. Opposition sources say at least three of the dead were political activists, contradicting government insistence that it is targeting ‘thugs’ and dangerous criminals. The executions have coincided with a crackdown on student activists and academics accused of trying to foment a ’soft revolution’ with US support.
The most high-profile recent executions involved Majid Kavousifar, 28, and his nephew, Hossein Kavousifar, 24, hanged for the murder of a hardline judge, Hassan Moghaddas, a man notorious for jailing political dissidents. They were hanged from cranes and hoisted high above one of Tehran’s busiest thoroughfares.
The spectacle, the first public executions in Tehran for five years, took place outside the judiciary department headquarters where Moghaddas was murdered. But the location, near many office blocks and the Australian and Japanese embassies, meant they were seen by many middle-class Iranians who would not normally witness such events.
Related: Iran, Human Rights






