Iran publicly carries out second protest-related execution

Iran has publicly executed a second man who was arrested during unrest linked with the country’s ongoing protests.

The judiciary’s news website announced early on  Monday that Majidreza Rahnavard, who was convicted of killing two members of security forces, was executed in an unidentified public location in Mashhad while a group of people looked on.

It published several images of the public execution, showing a man, whose hands were tied, hanged by the neck from a crane. Masked security forces were shown cordoning off the area, with a crowd of dozens watching behind barricades.

Iran executed the first detainee linked with the protests, a 23-year-old named Mohsen Shekari, on Thursday for allegedly attacking and wounding a member of the Basij paramilitary force with a long knife in central Tehran.

Like the case of Shekari, Monday’s execution aimed to show the speed with which the Iranian judiciary is advancing cases related to the protests, as Rahnavard was executed less than a month after his arrest.

The judiciary claimed Rahnavard carried out a “terrorist” act against two Basij members on November 17. He was reportedly arrested two days later for “waging war against God”.

State television carried footage that showed a man standing over and stabbing a man who had fallen to the ground next to a parked motorcycle.

Another man charges the assailant and is also stabbed before the attacker flees. The judiciary said the assailant was Rahnavard, who was alleged to have also injured another four people while fleeing.

After the execution, Gholamali Sadeghi, the judiciary chief of the northeastern Razavi Khorasan, thanked police, security and judiciary officials for carrying out the sentence as soon as possible, and for “answering public demands for establishing order and security and dealing with rioters and law-breakers”.

Appearing on state television late on Saturday, judiciary spokesman Masoud Setayeshi defended Shekari’s execution on Thursday.

Anyone who uses a “cold or warm weapon with the intent of harming the life, possessions or family of people or to terrorise them” could be convicted of moharebeh – or “waging war against God” – which carries the death penalty, he warned.

Iran’s protests began in mid-September after the death of Mahsa Amini, a young woman who was arrested by the country’s morality police for allegedly not adhering to a mandatory dress code.

Foreign-based human rights organisations have said more than 450 people have been killed during the protests, which is higher than the death toll of 200 provided by Iran, which denies its security forces fire on protesters.

Rights groups have warned more people arrested in connection with the protests could be executed soon. (AlJazeera)

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