Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
2JUN

Hengaw documents Bevara, Mamousi in Iran arrests

3 min read
09:04UTC

Sabah Bevara was 'violently arrested' in Piranshahr on 17 May; Abbas Mamousi was detained in Dehloran on 16 May and transferred to Ilam Central Prison, the Norway-based monitor Hengaw documented.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Kurdish detentions continue across northwestern Iran on a tempo set inside Iran's wartime judicial pipeline, not the diplomatic calendar.

Hengaw, the Norway-based Kurdish human rights monitor, documented two further detentions on 16-17 May. Sabah Bevara was "violently arrested" by intelligence forces in Piranshahr, a Kurdish-majority town in West Azerbaijan, on Sunday 17 May. Abbas Mamousi was arrested in Dehloran, in western Ilam province, on 16 May and transferred to Ilam Central Prison 1. Both cases extend the cluster Hengaw recorded across Bukan, Piranshahr, Shirvan, Ilam and Urmia between 13 and 16 May .

Piranshahr sits in the Kurdish-majority strip along Iran's border with Iraqi Kurdistan, where Iranian intelligence has historically run the densest detention operations against suspected cross-border activists. Dehloran, several hundred kilometres south in Ilam, opens a second arrest geography inside the same week, with Ilam Central Prison receiving its first named transfer from the May cluster. The named-prison detail matters because Hengaw's chain-of-custody documentation is the evidentiary base most international monitors rely on for later legal action.

Hengaw also documented seven executions across five prisons on 13 May, with Gorgan appearing in the execution geography for the first time , and the secret executions of Shahbakhsh and Afrashteh across 12-13 May . The Bevara and Mamousi files arrive in that same pipeline while Araghchi sits in Delhi and Trump posts storm imagery on Truth Social. The wartime judicial apparatus is not pausing for the diplomatic window; it is filling new prison records as the international cameras point elsewhere.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Hengaw is a human rights organisation based in Norway that monitors arrests and executions in Iran, particularly in the Kurdish regions in the northwest of the country. On 16-17 May it documented two further arrests: Sabah Bevara was violently arrested by intelligence agents in a Kurdish town called Piranshahr, near the border with Iraq; Abbas Mamousi was arrested in Dehloran in Ilam province and taken to Ilam Central Prison. Both arrests continue a series Hengaw has been tracking across several towns in northwestern Iran since 13 May. In wartime Iran, arrests on vague national security grounds can lead to capital charges; Hengaw's documentation is designed to preserve the evidence chain needed for later legal action at international human rights bodies.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Iran's wartime judicial apparatus operates on an institutional inertia that predates and outlasts any diplomatic cycle. The Ministry of Intelligence (MOIS) and the IRGC Intelligence Organisation maintain parallel detention networks in Kurdish provinces that run on their own operational calendar, not the calendar of the Araghchi-Jaishankar bilateral or the BRICS deadlock in Delhi.

The specific Piranshahr geography is structurally significant: the town sits on the main road connecting Iranian Kurdish territory to Iraqi Kurdistan, which Iran's intelligence services treat as a cross-border activist corridor.

Wartime threat inflation, the standard pattern documented by the UN Special Rapporteur from 2009 onwards, allows MOIS to reclassify civil society contacts, journalists, and civic activists as espionage suspects under the 'moharebeh and Israel' charging pattern Hengaw documented in a Mashhad case in May . The charging pattern converts a political detention into a capital case.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Each Ilam Central Prison intake from the May cluster creates a documented chain-of-custody record that the UN Special Rapporteur's office and IHRDC can use for international accountability proceedings regardless of how the broader conflict resolves.

  • Risk

    The 'moharebeh and Israel' charging pattern documented in Mashhad on 9 May (ID:3209) can convert a political detention into a capital case within the wartime judicial pipeline, placing Bevara and Mamousi at elevated risk compared to pre-war detentions.

First Reported In

Update #100 · Tehran prints the toll book; Delhi joins the queue

Hengaw· 17 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Lloyd's of London war-risk underwriters
Lloyd's of London war-risk underwriters
Lloyd's kept its Hormuz war-risk designation unchanged at $10-14 million per voyage even as Brent spiked 7%, holding the split from futures that has run since late May. Underwriters require a Security Council resolution or government certification, not a presidential phone call.
Gulf Cooperation Council states
Gulf Cooperation Council states
Gulf states, having written to the IMO rejecting Iran's Hormuz transit authority, watched a fresh missile exchange land on Kuwaiti soil. Riyadh and Abu Dhabi remain caught between US security guarantees and Iranian fire, with no Gulf state co-belligerent except Kuwait.
China
China
Beijing stayed out of the diplomatic rupture, sending no envoy and offering no public position on the suspended talks. China keeps its bilateral energy corridor with Tehran while declining the exposure of a mediating role Trump barred it from anyway.
Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait's air defences engaged two Iranian ballistic missiles aimed at US forces late on 31 May, the second interception in days after invoking Article 51. Repeated strikes test whether Kuwait's politics can sustain hosting US forces as a de facto co-belligerent.
Lebanon and Hezbollah
Lebanon and Hezbollah
Lebanon announced a partial ceasefire under which Hezbollah pledged to stop attacking Israel, the concrete output of Trump's call. Beirut heads to Washington on 3 June with Israeli forces still inside the south, testing whether the truce survives contact.
Israel under Netanyahu
Israel under Netanyahu
Netanyahu stood down the planned Beirut operation under Trump's pressure but kept his ground advance running toward the Zaharani river, the deepest incursion in 25 years, and disputed Trump's claim that troops had turned around. Israel signalled the halt is tactical, not a wind-down.