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European Tech Sovereignty
27MAY

Hengaw: Kurdish bodies denied, writer detained

3 min read
15:19UTC

Hengaw documented on 18-19 May that Iranian authorities have denied the families of secretly executed Kurdish prisoners Naser Bakrzadeh and Mehrab Abdollahzadeh their bodies, and detained Kurdish writer Majid Karimi in Tehran after an intelligence raid on his home.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Withholding the bodies turns documented executions into administrative disappearances.

Hengaw, the Norway-registered Kurdish human rights monitor, documented on 18-19 May 2026 that Iranian authorities had denied the families of two secretly executed Kurdish prisoners, Naser Bakrzadeh and Mehrab Abdollahzadeh, the right to receive their bodies. Hengaw also reported that Kurdish writer Majid Karimi was detained in Tehran on 19 May after an intelligence raid on his home 1.

The Karimi detention extends a targeting pattern Hengaw has been mapping in real time. Shiraz lawyer Bahar Sahraeian was arrested on 17 May while performing her professional legal duties , and four Kurdish residents had been picked up across northwestern Iran on 16 May with a fifth detained in Urmia on 15 May . Writers, lawyers and Kurdish civic professionals are the population the monitor's wartime tracking now repeatedly catches in security raids, separate from the broader execution caseload Hengaw has documented since in mid-May.

Hengaw's body-denial reporting adds a new procedural element to the wartime execution pipeline. Iran's espionage-charge prosecutions of Kurdish detainees, which Hengaw has been logging across multiple provinces, has so far run through sentencing, secret execution and family notification. Withholding the bodies removes the last public-facing waypoint of that process; families cannot conduct funerary rites, cannot independently confirm cause of death, and cannot challenge the official record. The administrative withdrawal of the corpse converts a documented execution into a disappearance, and the documentation Hengaw publishes from Sulaymaniyah is, for now, the only external record that the two men were executed at all.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran executed two Kurdish prisoners Naser Bakrzadeh and Mehrab Abdollahzadeh and then refused to return their bodies to their families. This is a documented practice: when Iran executes people on security or espionage charges, families often have no right to the body. The denial prevents the family from holding a public funeral that could become a protest. Separately, Majid Karimi, a Kurdish writer, was arrested in Tehran after intelligence officers raided his home. He is the latest in a documented pattern of Iran targeting writers and lawyers during the war a form of suppression that runs quietly alongside the military conflict.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Three structural conditions explain the wartime intensification of Kurdish execution and detention.

First, Iran's intelligence services have classified Kurdish cultural activity as inherently dual-use since the KDPI's 2022 armed-campaign revival. Writers, journalists and lawyers in Kurdish-majority provinces operate under a standing presumption of intelligence links that wartime espionage charges formalise.

Second, the wartime execution pipeline Hengaw has tracked since April runs on existing judicial infrastructure, specifically Revolutionary Courts and intelligence-ministry facilities, that does not require new legislation or supreme-leader authorisation for each case. Iran's Chief Justice Mohseni-Ejei issued standing acceleration orders for death sentences in May 2026, meaning each case advances without individual review.

Third, body-denial to families is a legally available tool under Iranian security law; it requires only the prosecutor's decision and does not generate the international visibility that a public burial would. It is the lowest-cost available method of preventing a martyrdom narrative.

Escalation

The body-denial and writer-arrest pattern represents a sustained domestic escalation against Kurdish civil society that has continued uninterrupted through every phase of the military conflict and ceasefire periods. It does not respond to diplomatic progress.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The systematic body-denial practice prevents accountability mechanisms from forming: without documented burials, families cannot pursue legal claims and international bodies cannot construct confirmed execution records.

    Immediate · 0.82
  • Risk

    Sustained cultural-figure targeting during wartime creates a cohort of imprisoned and executed writers and lawyers whose cases will generate prolonged accountability demands after any ceasefire, complicating normalisation.

    Medium term · 0.7
  • Precedent

    The wartime extension of the espionage-charge execution pipeline to Kurdish cultural figures establishes a template that can be applied to other minority communities after the conflict ends without requiring new legal authority.

    Long term · 0.65
First Reported In

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