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Iran Conflict 2026
30JUN

Monitors report a Tehran death sentence

2 min read
15:13UTC

Opposition monitors say Iran's Revolutionary Court sentenced Arghavan Fallahi, 25, to death on 1 July, with her lawyer given six years, as the state stages a six-nation funeral abroad.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

By opposition accounts, Iran handed a young woman a death sentence during the week of Khamenei's funeral.

Arghavan Fallahi, a 25-year-old woman linked to the People's Mojahedin Organisation of Iran (PMOI/MEK), was sentenced to death on 1 July by Branch 15 of Tehran's Revolutionary Court under Judge Abolqasem Salavati, according to the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) and allied opposition monitors 1. The same monitors report that her lawyer, Elham Zeraatpisheh, received six years in Shiraz and a travel ban. Both accounts come from an avowedly anti-government network and have not been independently verified by wire services or Iranian state media.

The NCRI is the Paris-based political wing of the PMOI, an Iranian opposition group in exile, and it reports on executions and political prosecutions that Tehran does not publicly confirm. Salavati has spent a decade as the judge Western governments name in their sanctions listings for precisely this kind of death-penalty and political ruling. By the NCRI's account, the sentence lands in the same week Iran choreographs a six-nation funeral abroad to show it still commands respect.

Iran Human Rights, a Norway-based monitor, counted at least 134 executions in the Iranian month of Khordad, including a cluster around the June memorandum signing , a total it later revised up to 140 . Those figures, too, come from monitors rather than Iranian courts. By opposition accounts the state projects legitimacy abroad this week while accelerating repression at home behind the mourning.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

A Revolutionary Court in Tehran has sentenced a 25-year-old woman, Arghavan Fallahi, to death. She is linked to the PMOI/MEK, an Iranian opposition group in exile. Her lawyer, who represented her at trial, was separately sentenced to six years in prison and banned from travelling, simply for doing her job. This report comes from the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), the political wing of the same opposition group Fallahi is linked to. That does not make it false, but it means the claim has not yet been confirmed by an independent source, so readers should treat it as reported rather than settled.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Iran's moharebeh ('enmity against God') and similar national-security statutes give Revolutionary Court branches broad discretion to impose death sentences without the evidentiary standards of ordinary criminal law, a structure unchanged since the courts were created after the 1979 revolution.

Branch 15's presiding judge, Abolqasem Salavati, has built a documented record of issuing death and long-prison sentences in political cases and is already under Western sanctions for it, which removes any institutional check that judge assignment might otherwise provide.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    Sentencing a defendant's own lawyer alongside her continues a documented pattern, seen already with Nasrin Sotoudeh, of using prosecution to deter legal representation itself in political cases.

  • Risk

    Because the report is single-sourced to an opposition group Tehran designates as a terrorist organisation, the case risks going unresolved and unconfirmed the way several individual NCRI reports have in the past.

First Reported In

Update #146 · Iran's new leader wounded, not just hiding

National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI)· 5 Jul 2026
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