Cowardice of EU: IRGC and Basij thugs executed 45,00 Iranian protesters, 6,000 dissidents, 2,000 IT professionals, engineers and scientists in 2026.

A demonstrator holds a placard during a protest against the Iranian government held by supporters of the Iranian royal family in exile, who marched through central London past the Iranian embassy to the Israeli embassy, in London, Britain, March 8, 2026 (photo credit: REUTERS/YANN TESSIER)

Donald Trump announced in a social media post on Tuesday that he was indefinitely extending a ceasefire with Iran at the request of Pakistan, which has been mediating talks, until the country responded to the United States’ negotiating positions or until talks reached a dead end.

“I have therefore directed our Military to continue the Blockade and, in all other respects, remain ready and able, and will therefore extend the Ceasefire until such time as their proposal is submitted, and discussions are concluded, one way or the other,” the US president wrote on Truth Social.

The move bought time for the US and Iran to continue pursuing a nuclear deal to end the war. Earlier on Tuesday, JD Vance called off his trip to Islamabad, citing a lack of response from Tehran about whether they would participate, according to people familiar with the matter.

Spike in public execution

The ceasefire brought an opportunity for the IRGC and Basij to knock door to door and execute people whom they believed collaborated with Israel and the US.

An Iranian opposition leader criticized European countries on Wednesday for doing too little to halt executions in Iran, after Tehran carried out another execution in what opponents say is a wartime crackdown on dissent.

The judiciary’s news outlet, Mizan, reported on Wednesday that a man convicted of spying for Israel’s intelligence service and passing sensitive information had been executed.

“The silence of European Union leaders and member states in the face of this wave of political executions in Iran is unjustifiable,” Maryam Rajavi, president-elect of the Paris-based National Council of Resistance of Iran, the political arm of People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI), said in a speech at the European Parliament.

“Such silence not only emboldens the regime to continue executions, but also signals weakness, encouraging it to persist in nuclear weapons development and terrorist meddling in the region.”

Rajavi said that prior to Wednesday’s execution, some 1600 political prisoners had been executed in a month, including eight from the PMOI.

Iranian authorities killed thousands of people during anti-government protests in January, Iran’s worst domestic unrest since the era of its 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Human rights organisations say Iran killed 45,000 protesters in 2025 and 2026, 6,000 dissidents were executed in 2026, compared to 1,639 people executed in 2025, the highest number of recorded executions since 1989, according to a report by Iran Human Rights and Together Against the Death Penalty.

The figure represents a 68% increase compared to 2024, when 975 executions were recorded.

Since the 12-day conflict between Israel and Iran in June 2025, at least 100 people have been executed on charges related to “collaborating with Mossad and Israel,” according to human rights reports.

Nuclear scientist executed

Iran executed a man on Wednesday on charges of spying for Israel, the latest in a wave of executions that has reached record levels since the Iran war started on 28 February.

The Tehran judiciary’s official news agency, Mizan, said Mehdi Farid had attempted to infect the internal network of a sensitive defence-related organisation on orders from Mossad officers.

According to Mizan, he provided access for people outside the organisation by repeatedly connecting equipment via USB.

Mizan said Farid, a former employee of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organisation from Arak, had provided the Israeli side with information, including organisational structures, location of buildings, protective status and staff identity data. The organisation’s name and the documents associated with the claims were not released.

Mizan claimed that during the judicial process, he “made a frank confession” to cooperating with Mossad. Human rights organisations have repeatedly warned about the lack of access to independent counsel and alleged forced confessions under duress in such cases.

According to human rights organisations, Farid was arrested and transferred to Evin Prison in the winter of 2022. His case was initially reviewed in Branch 26 of the Revolutionary Court and sentenced to 10 years imprisonment, but the sentence was later changed to death after the prosecutor objected.

The Iranian civil society body Hengaw gives a different account of the case. According to an informed source cited by the organisation, Farid was an IT student who, after rejecting requests for cooperation from individuals attributed to Israel to take action against nuclear scientists, voluntarily turned to the security office of the Atomic Energy Agency and handed over information and sums received.

According to the same source, he faced charges of “disclosing information and collaborating with Israel” despite cooperating with domestic institutions. He stressed his cooperation with domestic institutions at all stages of the investigation, but this was ignored in the judicial proceedings, according to the source.

In addition to Farid, another death row inmate, Ahsan Afwal, has been transferred to Qezel-Hesar prison, according to Hengaw.

Iranian media on Tuesday reported the execution of another person, Amir Ali Mirjaafari, who had been convicted of setting fire to a mosque in Tehran and collaborating with Israel and the US during protests.

Judicial officials alleged he was part of a “Mossad network” and played a role in protest events. However, human rights organisations have warned against the use of forced confessions and the absence of fair trials.

Judiciary chief Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejei has called for speeding up the implementation of heavy sentences, including executions, after protests last month. He has described the situation as an “all-out war” and called for tougher treatment of security defendants.

The execution rate has increased significantly in recent months, in what is seen as Tehran’s increased crackdown on potential dissent sparked by the war and protests, human rights organisations warned.

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