Report: Iran Conducts Another Public Execution as Regime Rocked by Protests
By Parisa Hafezi
DUBAI (Reuters)—The Islamic Republic on Monday hanged a man in public who state media said had been convicted of killing two members of the security forces, the second execution in less than a week of people involved in protests against Iran’s ruling theocracy.
Nationwide unrest erupted three months ago after the death while in detention of 22-year-old Kurdish Iranian woman Mahsa Amini, who was arrested by morality police enforcing the Islamic Republic’s mandatory dress code laws.
The demonstrations have turned into a popular revolt by furious Iranians from all layers of society, posing one of the worst legitimacy challenges to the Shi’ite clerical elite since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
“Majid Reza Rahnavard was hanged in public in (the holy Shi’ite city of) Mashhad this morning … He was sentenced to death for ‘waging war against God’ after stabbing to death two members of the security forces,” the judiciary’s Mizan news agency reported.
Mizan published pictures of the execution at dawn, showing Rahnavard hanging from a construction crane, with his hands and feet bound and his head covered with a black bag.
The semi-official Fars news agency said Rahnavard killed two members of the Basij volunteer force and wounded four others. The Basij force, affiliated with the elite Revolutionary Guards, has been at the forefront of the state crackdown on protests.
Calling for added protests across the country, activists on social media criticised the execution of the 23-year-old Rahnavard as “a criminal act” by the clerical rulers to deter dissent.
“They called Rahnavard’s family at 7 a.m. (local time) and told them to go to the Behesht-e Reza cemetery. ‘We executed your child and buried him,’ they said,” widely followed activist account 1500Tasvir posted on Twitter.
The contents of the post could not be verified by Reuters.
On Thursday, Iran hanged Mohsen Shekari, who had been convicted of injuring a security guard with a knife and blocking a street in Tehran, the first such execution after thousands of arrests over the unrest, drawing a chorus of Western condemnation and sanctions.
Rights groups have said Shekari was tortured and forced to confess. Molavi Abdolhamid, an outspoken Sunni Muslim cleric in the Shi’ite-ruled Islamic Republic, has said the death sentence of Shekari violated sharia (Islamic law), his website said.
State media published a video of a man, which it identified as Rahnavard, stabbing another man who fell against a parked
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