Two men have been hanged in Iran for killing a member of the security forces during nationwide protests against the government last year.
Mohammad Mahdi Karami and Seyed Mohammad Hosseini had appealed against their sentences, saying they had been tortured into making false confessions.
UK Foreign Secretary, James Cleverly, said the executions were “abhorrent”. The total number of protesters known to have been executed in the aftermath of the unrest was now four.
Demonstrations against the clerical establishment erupted in September following the death in custody of a woman detained by morality police for allegedly wearing her hijab, or headscarf, “improperly”.
Iran’s judicial news agency, Mizan, said the two men were the “main perpetrators” in the killing of paramilitary officer, Ruhollah Ajamian.
Prosecutors say he was stripped naked and killed by a group of mourners paying their respects to a recently killed protester.
The men were first sentenced to death in December 2022, but they launched appeals after saying they had been tortured.
Iran’s Supreme Court upheld the sentence on 3 January.
Human rights group, Amnesty International, denounced what it described as a “sham” trial and said Iranian authorities were seeking the death penalty for at least 26 others. The family of 22-year-old Mr Karami say they were not permitted to meet him before he was killed on Saturday. They had also pleaded with the judiciary to spare his life. “I beg you please, I ask you… to remove the death penalty from my son’s case,” his father said.
The UK’s James Cleverly urged the Iranian authorities to “end the violence against its own people”, while the EU said it was “appalled” by the use of the death penalty against protesters. — BBC