Amnesty International documented snipers positioned on rooftops firing into crowds during the January 2026 crackdown, deliberately targeting heads and torsos. In detention facilities, torture and sexual violence were reported against arrested protesters. The targeting pattern — heads and upper bodies rather than legs or warning shots — indicates orders to kill, not to disperse.
The method has precedent in Iran's own recent history. During the November 2019 protests, Amnesty International documented similar sniper deployments; security forces fired live ammunition into crowds, killing an estimated 1,500 according to Reuters. After Mahsa Amini's death in morality police custody in 2022, the UN Human Rights Council's independent fact-finding mission documented live fire against unarmed demonstrators. In January 2026, these methods were deployed simultaneously across multiple cities, with a complete internet blackout preventing real-time documentation and mass detention infrastructure already operational.
Sexual violence as a tool of political repression in Iranian detention is not new. Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and the UN Special Rapporteur on Iran have each documented its use, from the post-2009 Green Movement arrests through the 2022 Amini protest detentions. The January 2026 reports indicate the practice continued as the scale of arrests expanded into the tens of thousands.
The EU designated the IRGC as a terrorist organisation after this evidence emerged — a step Brussels had resisted for years despite sustained US pressure. For the interim council now governing Iran , the evidence creates a structural contradiction: the security forces that carried out the January massacres are the same forces the council requires to maintain domestic order during the current military crisis. President Pezeshkian apologised for the crackdown. The IRGC commanders who issued the kill orders are either dead — struck in the same US-Israeli operation that killed Khamenei (ID:470) — or still in command.
