Majid Karimi
Kurdish writer detained in Tehran by intelligence forces on 19 May 2026, documented by Hengaw.
Last refreshed: 19 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Why is Iran detaining Kurdish writers while simultaneously negotiating a ceasefire with the United States?
Timeline for Majid Karimi
Detained in Tehran after intelligence raid on home on 19 May
Iran Conflict 2026: Hengaw: Kurdish bodies denied, writer detained- Who is Majid Karimi and why was he arrested in Iran?
- Majid Karimi is a Kurdish writer detained in Tehran on 19 May 2026 after an intelligence raid on his home. Hengaw documented the arrest as part of ongoing targeting of Kurdish civil society figures.Source: Hengaw
- What is Hengaw and what has it documented in Iran?
- Hengaw is a Norway-based Kurdish human rights organisation that monitors arrests, executions and repression of Kurds in Iran. It documented Karimi's detention and the denial of bodies to families of executed Kurdish prisoners in May 2026.Source: Hengaw
- Is Iran targeting Kurdish civil society during the conflict?
- Yes. Hengaw has documented a pattern of detentions of writers and lawyers alongside executions of Kurdish political prisoners during the Iran conflict period, with Majid Karimi's case being the most recent example from 19 May 2026.Source: Hengaw
Background
Majid Karimi is a Kurdish writer who was detained in Tehran on 19 May 2026 when intelligence forces raided his home. His detention was documented by Hengaw, the Kurdish human rights organisation based in Norway that monitors arrests and executions of Kurdish political prisoners inside Iran. Karimi's case is part of a wider pattern of targeting writers, lawyers and civil society figures that Hengaw has documented throughout the Iran-conflict period.
The timing places the detention during the same 48-hour period in which Hengaw also documented that the families of two secretly executed Kurdish prisoners, Naser Bakrzadeh and Mehrab Abdollahzadeh, were denied the return of their bodies. The clustering of these actions in a single news cycle reflects the Iranian security apparatus's sustained pressure on Kurdish civil society alongside the ongoing conflict with the United States and Israel.
Kurds represent roughly 10 per cent of Iran's population and are concentrated in the western provinces. Kurdish cultural and political expression has historically been tightly restricted. Karimi's detention, as a writer rather than an armed activist, falls within a recurring pattern of criminalising Kurdish intellectual and literary work.