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Erfan Shakourzadeh

Iranian aerospace researcher, 29, executed at Qezel Hesar prison on 11 May 2026.

Last refreshed: 11 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

Why execute a 29-year-old aerospace researcher at the peak of Hormuz diplomacy?

Timeline for Erfan Shakourzadeh

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Common Questions
Who was Erfan Shakourzadeh and why was he executed?
Erfan Shakourzadeh was a 29-year-old Iranian aerospace researcher executed at Qezel Hesar Prison in Karaj on 11 May 2026. He had been convicted on security-related charges that human rights organisations characterised as politically motivated.Source: Iran Human Rights
What is Qezel Hesar Prison in Iran?
Qezel Hesar is one of Iran's largest prisons, located in Karaj west of Tehran. It holds political and security detainees as well as criminal inmates and has been documented by rights groups as overcrowded and holding a significant number of individuals convicted on security charges.
How many researchers or academics has Iran executed since 2022?
Iran has carried out numerous executions of individuals on security charges since the 2022 Mahsa Amini uprising, a pattern Amnesty International has documented as systematic. Shakourzadeh's case is notable for his youth and aerospace background, though precise counts of technical-professional executions are not publicly verified.Source: Amnesty International
Why did Iran execute Shakourzadeh during the Hormuz crisis?
Rights monitors and analysts argued the timing, during the peak of Hormuz diplomatic pressure and the MOU deadline, suggested the execution served as a domestic-resolve signal. Iran has a documented pattern of high-profile executions during periods of acute external pressure.Source: Iran Human Rights

Background

Erfan Shakourzadeh was executed at Qezel Hesar Prison in Karaj on 11 May 2026, aged 29. He was an aerospace researcher who had been detained by Iranian security services on charges that human rights organisations characterised as politically motivated. His execution came during an acute phase of the Iran conflict, when Iranian authorities were simultaneously running parallel judicial proceedings against others on moharebeh charges with alleged Israel connections. Rights monitors noted the speed of his case through the court system and the absence of credible open-source evidence linking him to the charges brought.

Qezel Hesar is one of Iran's largest and most overcrowded prisons, located in the industrial suburb of Karaj west of Tehran. It holds a significant population of political and security detainees alongside criminal inmates. Iran has carried out a series of executions since the 2022 Mahsa Amini uprising of individuals convicted on security-related charges, a pattern human rights bodies including Amnesty International have documented as systematic. Shakourzadeh's status as an aerospace researcher made his case notable among international scientific and academic communities tracking Iran's treatment of technical professionals.

The timing of his execution, simultaneous with the Hormuz escalation and international diplomacy around the 14-point MOU, attracted particular scrutiny. Critics argued the execution was intended to signal domestic resolve at a moment when the Iranian government was under external pressure to negotiate. His case illustrates the intersection of Iran's internal judicial repression with its external conflict posture: high-profile executions of young technical professionals serve both domestic deterrence and international signalling functions.