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Iran Conflict 2026
21MAY

Hengaw documents Shiraz lawyer detention mid-duty

3 min read
09:55UTC

Hengaw documented the detention of Shiraz lawyer Bahar Sahraeian at 22:05 on Sunday 17 May while she was performing legal duties, marking renewed pressure on Iran's defence bar.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Detaining lawyer Bahar Sahraeian mid-duty in Shiraz removes another appellate channel for January protest detainees facing execution.

Hengaw, the Norway-based Kurdish human rights monitor, documented the detention of lawyer Bahar Sahraeian at 22:05 on Sunday 17 May while she was performing legal duties in Shiraz. A 22:05 detention catches a lawyer in working hours under Iran's calendar, where post-9pm court business is routine for defence counsel handling political files in Fars province. The detention sits inside a documented escalation against Iranian defence lawyers and rights defenders. Hengaw separately recorded two further detentions on 16-17 May: Sabah Bevara, 'violently arrested' by intelligence forces in Piranshahr, and a second case in Sanandaj. Those followed the human rights monitor's 4 May confirmation that Iran has sentenced at least 30 detainees from the January 2026 protests to death and secretly executed 13 of them . The pattern targets the legal infrastructure that would normally channel families through court appeals; remove the lawyers, and the death-penalty pipeline runs unopposed. Shiraz, the provincial capital of Fars, has been the venue for two of the most contested capital cases of the post-January protest wave, including the April 2026 execution of Sasan Azadvar at Dastgerd Prison . Sahraeian's case profile from her bar association registration covers political-prisoner appellate work, which means her detention removes a known appellate channel rather than a routine general practitioner. Iran's bar associations have lost their independent licensing authority under sequential 2022-2024 statutes that subordinated lawyer registration to the judiciary itself; a lawyer detained while performing court duties cannot expect bar-association representation in custody. That structural fact is what makes detention while-on-duty a more aggressive enforcement signal than detention at home. The state is signalling to other defence counsel in Shiraz that representing protest detainees carries direct custodial risk during, not after, the work itself.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

In Iran, lawyers who defend people accused of national security crimes are increasingly being arrested themselves. Bahar Sahraeian, a lawyer in Shiraz, was detained at 10 pm on 17 May while she was on duty performing legal work. The Kurdish human rights organisation Hengaw documented the case. This matters because when lawyers cannot safely defend clients, political detainees have no meaningful access to justice. It is a sign that Iran's government is using the war as cover to further suppress internal dissent, the classic pattern of wartime authoritarian tightening.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Systematic detention of defence lawyers will accelerate the collapse of Iran's formal legal-aid infrastructure for political cases, leaving detainees with no representation and reducing the international community's ability to monitor case outcomes.

  • Precedent

    Criminalising legal representation during wartime, through security legislation rather than emergency decrees, becomes a model other authoritarian governments can adopt with lower political cost than formal suspension of the right to counsel.

First Reported In

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Hengaw· 18 May 2026
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Different Perspectives
Turkey (Shakarab consideration)
Turkey (Shakarab consideration)
Ankara serves as one of two Western-adjacent Iran back-channels while Turkish national Gholamreza Khani Shakarab faces imminent execution on espionage charges in Iran. President Erdogan cannot deflect the domestic political crisis that a Turkish execution would trigger, which would force suspension of the mediating role.
Germany (Bundestag gap)
Germany (Bundestag gap)
Belgium, Germany, Australia, and France committed Hormuz coalition hardware on 18 May. Germany's Bundestag authorisation for the coalition deployment remains pending, creating a constitutional gap between the commitment announced and the parliamentary mandate required to operationalise it.
IEA and oil market analysts
IEA and oil market analysts
The IEA's $106 May Brent projection met the market in one session on 20 May as Brent fell 5.16% on diplomatic optimism. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley's two-layer premium framework holds: the kinetic component compressed; the structural insurance component tied to Lloyd's ROE remains unresolved.
Hengaw
Hengaw
Documented the dual Kurdish execution at Naqadeh on 21 May, the two Iraqi-national espionage executions on 20 May, and Gholamreza Khani Shakarab's imminent execution risk. The 24-hour cluster covers two executions at one facility, the first foreign-national espionage executions, and a Turkish national whose death would suspend Ankara's mediation.
Lloyd's of London
Lloyd's of London
Hull rates stand at 110-125% of vessel value on the secondary market; the Joint War Committee has conditioned cover reopening on written ROE from the coalition or PGSA. The Majlis rial bill makes any compliant ROE structurally impossible to draft while the PGSA's yuan portal remains its operational mechanism.
United Kingdom and France (Northwood coalition)
United Kingdom and France (Northwood coalition)
The 26-nation coalition paper requires Lloyd's to see written rules of engagement before Hormuz war-risk cover reopens. The Majlis rial bill adds a second governance incompatibility on top of the unpublished PGSA fee schedule; coalition ROE cannot mention rial without conceding Iranian sovereignty over the strait.