Iran's Secret Executions: Daily Killings Amid Internet Blackout

Rights groups report Iran conducting near-daily prisoner executions in secrecy with families silenced. 24 killed in March alone amid widespread internet restrictions.
Human rights organizations and sources connected to the families of deceased prisoners are raising alarming concerns about Iran's execution practices, which they describe as occurring on a near-daily basis while shrouded in secrecy and institutional opacity. The troubling pattern has emerged amid reports of increased prisoner executions in Iran, with documented cases showing authorities withholding the bodies of executed individuals from their grieving families. This systematic approach to capital punishment represents a significant escalation in the country's use of the death penalty and has drawn international scrutiny from multiple advocacy organizations dedicated to monitoring human rights violations.
According to testimonies from individuals connected to the families of executed prisoners, the Iranian state has implemented a coordinated strategy to suppress information about these executions and prevent families from publicly discussing their losses. Many relatives learn of their loved ones' deaths only after the executions have already been carried out, leaving them with minimal time to prepare or seek legal intervention. In numerous documented instances, families have reportedly experienced harassment, intimidation, and explicit pressure from state authorities not to share details about the executions or speak to media outlets about the personal and emotional devastation caused by these state-sanctioned killings.
The reported surge in capital punishment in Iran appears to coincide with broader internet restrictions implemented across the country. An internet blackout has made it increasingly difficult for families, journalists, and rights organizations to communicate information about these executions to the international community. This combination of factors—secret executions, family silencing, and restricted internet access—creates an environment where accountability becomes nearly impossible and transparency disappears entirely.


