Three women - Sharifeh Mohammadi, Pakhshan Azizi, and Varisheh Moradi - face imminent execution in Iran as reports emerge of a sharp rise in sexual abuse and repression inside prisons. Testimonies obtained by The Media Line describe detained women, including young protesters, being subjected to sexual assault, violent interrogation, and threats, often without formal charges. Former detainees recount rape, beatings, solitary confinement, and psychological torture, with victims warned that filing complaints could worsen their sentences.
Despite a temporary ceasefire in the broader conflict, authorities have intensified crackdowns nationwide. Internet shutdowns, mass arrests, enforced disappearances, and public executions have increased, with human rights groups warning that the true number of executions may be far higher than reported. Ethnic minorities, protesters, and political activists are said to be disproportionately targeted, and some detainees have allegedly been forced into televised confessions.
Activists say the human rights situation has deteriorated further since the start of the war, creating what observers describe as an atmosphere of fear sustained by propaganda, securitized prosecutions, and restricted communications. Religious minorities and Kurdish prisoners are reportedly at heightened risk, while families of detainees struggle to obtain information about their loved ones' conditions.
International concern has grown over women sentenced to death, though Iranian authorities deny issuing some of the reported sentences. Human rights advocates warn that confirmed death sentences and worsening prison conditions place many political prisoners, particularly women and minority activists, in immediate danger.


