Naser Bakrzadeh
Iranian man executed on 2 May 2026 on charges of spying for Israel, reported by Hengaw.
Last refreshed: 11 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
How many people has Iran executed on Israel-spy charges during the 2026 conflict?
Timeline for Naser Bakrzadeh
Hengaw: Kurdish bodies denied, writer detained
Iran Conflict 2026Mentioned in: Hengaw documents secret execution of aerospace researcher
Iran Conflict 2026Executed by Iran on espionage charges as documented by Hengaw
Iran Conflict 2026: Hengaw: 56-prison hunger strike on 5 MayMentioned in: Hengaw counts 30 sentenced, 13 hanged
Iran Conflict 2026Mentioned in: Mashhad hangs Rasouli and Miri on 4 May
Iran Conflict 2026Who was Naser Bakrzadeh and why was he executed in Iran?
How many executions did Iran carry out in April 2026?
How was Naser Bakrzadeh's case reported outside Iran?
Background
Naser Bakrzadeh was executed in Iran on 2 May 2026 on charges of spying for Israel, according to the Kurdish human rights organisation Hengaw. He was among the two individuals executed on that date named in Hengaw's report, alongside Yaqoub Karimpour. Hengaw simultaneously revised its April 2026 execution tally to at least 26 executions, including 14 political prisoners, underscoring the scale of Iran's wartime use of the death penalty.
Iran has charged and executed numerous individuals on Israel-espionage grounds since the outbreak of the 2025-26 conflict. Human rights organisations including Hengaw and Iran Human Rights have documented these cases but note that trials are typically conducted in closed Revolutionary Courts with limited access to independent counsel, making it difficult to independently assess the evidence against those convicted.
Bakrzadeh's execution is part of a broader wartime pattern of Iran using espionage prosecutions to suppress dissent and signal deterrence against alleged Israeli intelligence operations inside the country. International human rights bodies have repeatedly called for a moratorium on executions in Iran, particularly in cases where confessions may have been obtained under duress.