An unprecedented wave of executions against women is sweeping across Iran; in just one year, the execution of women has risen by 70%.
Over the past 11 months, more than 1,800 people have been executed — including 58 women and 22 political prisoners.
This terrifying escalation reflects the crisis and fear of a regime that, under pressure from public protests, has turned to executions as a tool of control.
Since the beginning of the Pezeshkian administration, the total number of executions has surpassed 2,600, with 79 women among the victims.
The execution of female political prisoners has become a means to silence the very women who have led recent waves of protests — women like Zahra Shahbaz Tabari, sentenced to death in a ten-minute online hearing without legal representation.
Today, families gather outside prisons, chanting “No to executions,” their voices echoing across the country.
Now, the world is watching; before it is too late, this cycle of death must be stopped.



















