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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
5APR

30 women held in Vakilabad 'Peace Ward'

2 min read
19:51UTC

Iran HRM documented at least 30 women detained over the 2025-26 protests in the basement 'Peace Ward' of Mashhad's Vakilabad Prison, several facing capital moharebeh charges.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Iran's wartime judicial repression has a documented gendered edge: 30 women held on capital charges in a basement ward.

Iran HRM, the diaspora rights monitor Iran Human Rights Monitor, documented at least 30 women detained over the 2025-26 protests in a basement ward of Vakilabad Prison in Mashhad, north-eastern Iran, in a report dated Thursday 28 May 1. Several face moharebeh charges, the offence of "enmity against God", which carries the death penalty. The monitor described the ward, named the "Peace Ward", as a cramped, unventilated basement.

The detentions add a gendered dimension to the wartime repression already tallied by Amnesty . The same capital charge that reaches international attention through individual cases is being applied to a documented group of women at once. Holding 30 women on enmity-against-God charges in degraded basement conditions points to systematic use of the country's harshest charge against protesters during the conflict, and it raises the prospect of mass capital exposure rather than a handful of headline sentences.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Moharebeh is a charge under Iranian law meaning 'enmity against God'. It carries the death penalty and is typically applied in cases where the state claims a person took up arms against the Islamic Republic. Since the 2026 conflict began, prosecutors have used it against protest detainees, people accused of helping foreign intelligence services, and, as documented here, women arrested during demonstrations. Vakilabad Prison's 'Peace Ward' is in a basement with no ventilation, according to Iran HRM's report. At least 30 women held there face potential execution on a charge designed for armed insurgents, applied to protest participants. Iran HRM is a diaspora-based monitoring organisation; it cannot independently verify prison conditions through direct access.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The documented application of moharebeh to women protest detainees in wartime gives international human rights bodies grounds to pursue Iran under the Convention Against Torture, regardless of the ongoing military conflict.

First Reported In

Update #113 · Trump signs nothing as a Hellfire hits a hull

Iran International· 31 May 2026
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This Event
30 women held in Vakilabad 'Peace Ward'
A gendered dimension to wartime judicial repression: women protest detainees held in degraded conditions face the same capital charges as named individual cases, documenting a pattern rather than isolated sentencing.
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