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Iran Conflict 2026
26JUN

Iran's hunger strike hits 126 weeks

2 min read
13:31UTC

The exiled opposition NCRI reported the anti-execution prison hunger strike had reached its 126th week across 57 Iranian prisons, counts Iran does not publish.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Opposition group NCRI reports a prison hunger strike in its 126th week, counts Iran does not publish.

While the IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps) fired missiles abroad, the exiled opposition NCRI (National Council of Resistance of Iran) reported that an anti-execution prison hunger strike had reached its 126th week across 57 prisons 1. The NCRI is an opposition group, its counts are not independently verified, and Iran does not publish them 2.

Independent monitors recorded the wider trend earlier. Iran Human Rights, a Norway-based monitor, documented 134 executions in the Iranian month of Khordad, 31 of them during the week the 16 June agreement was signed . Iran is firing ballistic missiles at US bases and, its opponents say, executing prisoners at home in the same week.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

An exiled Iranian opposition group called the NCRI, which stands for the National Council of Resistance of Iran, reported in late June 2026 that Iranian prisoners had been on hunger strike for 126 consecutive weeks, refusing food to protest the country's execution rate. According to the NCRI, the strike was under way simultaneously across 57 different Iranian prisons. The NCRI is an organisation based outside Iran that opposes the Iranian government. Because it is not a neutral independent body and Iran does not publish prison statistics, the NCRI's figures cannot be verified by outside observers. A separate monitoring group called Iran Human Rights, based in Norway and generally regarded as more methodologically careful, has documented 134 executions during the Iranian calendar month of Khordad, which ran from late May to late June 2026. That includes 31 executions in the specific week when the US-Iran ceasefire agreement was signed. Iran's executions and its war-time diplomacy have been running on entirely separate tracks.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Iran Human Rights' documented 31 executions during the MOU signing week provides verifiable evidence that Tehran treats domestic repression and external diplomacy as entirely separate policy tracks, which any future human rights conditions on sanctions relief will need to address explicitly.

  • Risk

    If the hunger strike expands or produces prisoner deaths covered by international media, it could generate pressure on Doha-based mediators Qatar and Pakistan to raise human rights conditions that would complicate the current shuttle format's focus on Hormuz governance.

First Reported In

Update #141 · Iran hits two US bases; Trump pulls back

NCRI· 30 Jun 2026
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This Event
Iran's hunger strike hits 126 weeks
The figures come from an opposition group and are not independently verified, but they sit alongside a documented surge in executions during the truce.
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