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Iran Conflict 2026
13MAY

Iran: three secret hangings, 11-13 May

3 min read
12:29UTC

Hengaw documented three secret executions between 11 and 13 May: aerospace researcher Shakourzadeh at Qezel Hesar, Baloch detainee Abduljalil Shahbakhsh at Zahedan 55 days after arrest, and political prisoner Ehsan Afrashteh at Urmia on espionage charges.

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Key takeaway

Hengaw recorded three secret Iran hangings between 11 and 13 May, including Baloch detainee Shahbakhsh.

Hengaw, the Norway-based Kurdish human rights monitor, documented three secret executions across 11-13 May 2026: aerospace researcher Shakourzadeh at Qezel Hesar on 11 May , Baloch detainee Abduljalil Shahbakhsh at Zahedan on 12 May (55 days after his arrest), and political prisoner Ehsan Afrashteh at Urmia on 13 May on espionage charges 1. Three in two days exceeds the 13 secret political executions Hengaw documented across the prior six weeks. The wartime espionage-charge pipeline has compressed from roughly one execution per week to one every 16 hours, even as the Norway-based monitor's reporting cadence has not kept up.

Iran's wartime espionage charge sequence runs from arrest through Revolutionary Court conviction to secret execution at a non-Tehran prison, with families notified after the fact. The IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps) provides the charging framework: the wartime moharebeh ("enmity against God") variant treats domestic dissent in occupied or contested geography as constructively in service of the Israeli operational map, collapsing the evidentiary threshold that pre-war espionage cases required. Najmeh Amini, charged in Mashhad on 9 May for a 2022-era social media post , was the first case under this framing the briefing tracked.

Shahbakhsh's 55-day arrest-to-execution interval matches the window observed in the Bakrzadeh and Karimpour cases , suggesting the Revolutionary Court system is now processing wartime moharebeh files on a fortnightly cadence. The Baloch-Kurdish profile of the new cluster indicates ethnic-minority political prisoners are being processed faster than ethnic-Persian cases. Hengaw's wartime register now exceeds 30 documented secret political executions, the threshold beyond which UN special procedures have historically opened formal investigations.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran has been secretly executing political prisoners during the war. "Secret" here means the family is only told after the execution: they have no warning, no chance to say goodbye, and often no confirmation of where the body is. Hengaw is a human rights monitoring group based in Norway that tracks what happens to people arrested in Kurdish and Baloch regions of Iran. Between 11 and 13 May, they documented three such executions across roughly 36 hours: an aerospace researcher, a Baloch man arrested 55 days earlier, and a political prisoner on espionage charges. By comparison, in the six weeks before this cluster, Hengaw had documented 13 such cases, roughly one every three days. Three executions across roughly 36 hours compresses the rate from one per week to one every 12 hours. International human rights bodies like the United Nations have previously begun formal investigations when secret political executions from a single country pass 30 documented cases, which Iran has now exceeded.

First Reported In

Update #96 · Hegseth: no AUMF needed. Trump flies east

Hengaw· 13 May 2026
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Different Perspectives
International human rights monitors (NetBlocks, IHR, Hengaw)
International human rights monitors (NetBlocks, IHR, Hengaw)
NetBlocks recorded 1,704 cumulative hours of near-total internet blackout for roughly 90 million Iranians on Day 74, while IHR documented ongoing executions under emergency provisions. These organisations are the only active monitoring windows into a civilian population cut off from the global internet for 71 consecutive days.
UK / France coalition
UK / France coalition
The Royal Navy confirmed HMS Dragon's Hormuz deployment on its own website on 11 May, converting a press-reported presence into declared force posture; UK and French defence ministers hosted a coalition meeting the same day. Britain and France are now the only named contributors to a Hormuz escort mission all five allies Trump originally asked had declined.
Saudi Aramco / Gulf producers
Saudi Aramco / Gulf producers
Saudi Aramco CEO Amin Nasser warned on 11 May that a Hormuz closure could remove 100 million barrels of weekly supply from global markets (roughly 15 million barrels per day for a week), a figure that dwarfs any OPEC+ swing capacity. The warning functions as both a price-floor signal and a public pressure on Washington to protect transit.
Beijing / Chinese Government
Beijing / Chinese Government
China has not publicly acknowledged the four Hong Kong-registered entities designated on 11 May or extended MOFCOM's Blocking Rules cover to HK-domiciled firms. Xi Jinping hosts Trump on 14–15 May having already de-risked state-bank balance sheets via NFRA's quiet loan halt, entering the summit partially compliant before any negotiation.
Tehran / Iranian Government
Tehran / Iranian Government
Foreign Minister Araghchi described Iran's 10-point counter-proposal as 'reasonable and responsible' via spokesman Baqaei on 11 May, and widened the mediator pool by meeting Turkish, Egyptian, and Dutch counterparts in a single day. Tehran is buying procedural runway while Trump's verbal rejection went unmatched by any written US counter.
Trump White House
Trump White House
Trump called the ceasefire 'on massive life support' and dismissed Iran's 10-point counter-proposal as 'a piece of garbage' on 11 May, while departing for Beijing two days later with no signed Iran instrument to show Congress. The verbal maximum and the paper void coexist: the administration is running a legal pressure campaign through Treasury while the president free-lances the rhetoric.