Attorney Mohammad Najafi Sentenced to 3 Years and Additional Penalties

HRANA – Mohammad Najafi, an attorney imprisoned in Evin Prison, has been sentenced by the Tehran Revolutionary Court to three years in prison and additional penalties in connection with a case opened against him during his imprisonment.

This verdict was communicated to Mr. Najafi’s lawyers on November 19, 2025, by Branch 26 of the Tehran Revolutionary Court, presided over by Judge Iman Afshari. Under the ruling, he has been sentenced to one year in prison for “propaganda against the regime,” and two years in prison plus a 50-million-toman fine for “spreading falsehoods.” Additionally, as part of his supplementary punishment, this political prisoner has been barred from membership in political and social groups and prohibited from leaving the country for two years.

The ruling cites, among other examples, the publication of an audio file titled “Tasmim-e Kobra,” addressed to the Supreme Leader, as grounds for the charges brought against him.

The court session addressing Mr. Najafi’s charges was held on November 5, 2025, in Branch 26 of the Tehran Revolutionary Court; he did not attend the hearing.

Earlier this year, Branch 1 of the High Disciplinary Court for Judges issued a ruling permanently disbarring Mr. Najafi from practicing law.

Mohammad Najafi was transferred from Arak Prison to Evin Prison in April 2023. In 2019, he was released from prison in connection with a previous case, but four days later he was arrested again over another conviction and returned to Arak Prison.

Multiple cases have been opened against this attorney over the years, and he is currently serving his sentences in Evin Prison.

The longest sentence issued against this imprisoned lawyer relates to the charge of “collaboration with a hostile government through interviews with foreign media.” He was sentenced to 10 years in prison, which was later reduced to four years and six months.

In several separate cases, Mr. Najafi has faced fourteen charges and has been sentenced to more than 24 years in prison, with no consolidation of sentences carried out to date. At least six cases have been opened against him during his imprisonment. The “publication of audio files from Arak Prison” was cited as the grounds for one of these cases. Another case, opened following a complaint by the head of Arak Prison, resulted in a four-month prison sentence for Mr. Najafi.

Throughout his imprisonment, despite suffering from various health conditions, this attorney has consistently been denied specialized medical treatment and transfer to a hospital.

Kambiz Teimouri-Moghaddam, a Baha’i زitizen, Arrested

HRANA – Kambiz Teimouri-Moghaddam, a Baha’i citizen residing in Gorgan, has been arrested by security forces. Officers searched his home and confiscated several personal belongings. His place of business has also been sealed.

Based on information received by HRANA, the arrest of this Baha’i citizen took place yesterday morning at Mr. Teimouri-Moghaddam’s residence. During the search, agents confiscated a number of his personal items, including electronic devices, books, and documents, and they also sealed his business. The arrest occurred despite the fact that Mr. Teimouri-Moghaddam suffers from high blood pressure and requires medical care, which has heightened the concerns of his family and those close to him.

As of the time of this report, no information is available regarding the reasons for his arrest, his place of detention, or the charges against him.

Kambiz Teimouri-Moghaddam is the son of Rouhollah Teimouri-Moghaddam and a Baha’i citizen residing in Gorgan.

Over the past decade, the Iranian Bahá’í community has been disproportionately targeted by Iran’s security forces and judiciary—more than any other minority group. In the past three years, an average of 72 percent of the reports on religious rights violations collected by HRANA have documented the Iranian regime’s repression of the Bahá’í community.

Nirvana Torbati-Nejad Sentenced to 6 Months in Prison

HRANA – Nirvana Torbati-Nejad, a resident of Gorgan, has been sentenced to six months of custodial imprisonment by Branch 1 of the Revolutionary Court in this city.

This verdict was issued on November 25 by Branch 1 of the Gorgan Revolutionary Court and was delivered yesterday to Ramazan Haji-Mashhadi, Ms. Torbati-Nejad’s defense attorney. According to the ruling, Ms. Torbati-Nejad has been sentenced to six months of custodial imprisonment on the charge of ‘propaganda against the regime.’

Some time earlier, this citizen had also been summoned by the IRGC Intelligence and interrogated for several hours.

In a separate case, this political defendant had previously been prosecuted on charges of ‘membership in groups opposed to the regime with the intent to disrupt national security,’ and ‘assembly and collusion to commit crimes against internal security.’ She had been sentenced by the court to ten months in prison and a two-million-toman fine. She was ultimately acquitted of the charges at the appeals stage.

Nirvana Torbati-Nejad was arrested by security forces at her workplace on September 10, 2023, and was released on October 5, 2023 on bail.

Execution of Four Prisoners in Yazd Prison

HRANA – At dawn today, Tuesday, December 2, the death sentences of four prisoners who had previously been convicted on drug-related charges were carried out in Yazd Prison.

These prisoners , one of whom was an Afghan national, were executed today, HRANA has confirmed the identity of one of them as Mahmoud Abdollahi.

According to information received by HRANA, the prisoners had earlier been arrested on drug-related charges and subsequently sentenced to death by the Revolutionary Court.

Further details, including confirmation of the identities of the three remaining prisoners, are still being investigated by HRANA.

As of the time of this report, the executions have not been announced by prison authorities or other official bodies.

From the beginning of this year until the end of November, 2025, the Iranian regime has executed 1,594 people, marking an unprecedented increase compared to previous years.

Fifteen Executions Reported Across Iran’s Prisons in Just Three Days

HRANA- Amid an unprecedented surge in executions in Iran’s prisons, fifteen additional executions have been reported over the past three days by HRANA and other human rights organizations.

Sunday, November 30
According to Haal Vsh, a prisoner named Mansour Jalali, a father of three, was executed in Kerman Prison on drug-related charges.

Monday, December 1
According to HRANA, on this day:

Nourkhoda Karami was executed in Qom Prison on drug-related charges;
Javad Souri was executed in Shahr-e Kord Prison on a murder charge;
Seyed Ali Hajipour was executed in Taybad Prison on drug-related charges;
Tayeb Minaei was executed in Ahvaz Prison on a murder charge;
Parsa Abdi and an Afghan national were executed in Bandar Abbas Prison on drug-related charges.

HRANA also reported the execution of two prisoners in Tabriz Prison on drug-related charges. Further details, including their identities, are still being investigated.

Tuesday, December 2
According to HRANA, three prisoners were executed in Dastgerd Prison in Isfahan. HRANA has confirmed the identity of one of them, Shahab Mokhtari, whose death sentence was carried out at dawn today. Mokhtari had been arrested earlier on drug-related charges and later sentenced to death by the Revolutionary Court.

HRANA also reported the execution of a prisoner named Sultan Morad Nasiri in Esfarayen Prison. Several years ago, he had been arrested in Kerman Province on drug-related charges and sentenced to death by the Revolutionary Court.

According to Mizan, the death sentence of a prisoner was carried out in public in Semnan. The head of the Semnan Provincial Judiciary stated that the prisoner had strangled his wife to death in 2020 and subsequently staged the scene to conceal the crime.

The NGO Iran Human Rights also reported the execution of a 27-year-old prisoner named Abbas Mozaffarzadeh, from Malard, on drug-related charges in Qom Prison.

Except for the public execution in Semnan, none of the other executions have been announced by prison authorities or other official bodies.

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Parisa Kamali Ardakani Reaches Seventh Day of Hunger Strike in Yazd Prison

HRANA – Parisa Kamali Ardakani, a political prisoner held in Yazd Prison, is now on the seventh day of her hunger strike. She began the strike in protest against the authorities’ refusal to consolidate her sentences.

A source familiar with the Kamali family confirmed the news to HRANA, saying: “Ms. Kamali submitted a request for the consolidation of her sentences a long time ago, but prison authorities did not process it. For this reason, on November 24 she began a hunger strike. In response to her protest, prison officials transferred her to a solitary cell and cut off her contact with her family. She remained in solitary confinement until November 29 and was then returned to the ward. Due to suffering from toxic thyroid disease, Ms. Kamali is currently in poor physical condition.”

Parisa Kamali was arrested on April 29, 2024, in Isfahan and transferred to Dolatabad Prison in the same city. She was later sentenced by Branch 1 of the Isfahan Revolutionary Court, presided over by Judge Tavakoli, to a total of seven years and nine months in prison, two years of exile on the charge of “destruction of public property,” and to imprisonment on charges of ‘insulting the Supreme Leader’ and ‘membership in anti-regime groups.’

She was transferred from Dolatabad Prison in Isfahan to Yazd Prison in 2025. Parisa Kamali Ardakani, aged approximately 39, is from Abadan, married, and a geography student.

Jafar Panahi Sentenced to Imprisonment and Other Penalties

HRANA – Jafar Panahi, film director and screenwriter, has been sentenced by Branch 26 of the Tehran Revolutionary Court to one year in prison, two years of a travel ban, and additional penalties.

Mostafa Nili, Mr. Panahi’s defense attorney, wrote in a post on this matter: “Branch 26 of the Tehran Revolutionary Court has, in absentia, sentenced Mr. Panahi to one year in prison, two years of a travel ban, and a ban on membership in political and social groups, on the charge of propaganda against the regime.”
According to the attorney, “We will take the necessary steps to appeal this ruling within the legal deadline.”

Jafar Panahi has previously faced arrest and judicial actions due to his activities.

Jafar Panahi, aged 65, is an Iranian film director and screenwriter.

Monthly Report – November 2025: Human Rights Situation in Iran

HRANA- This report provides a summary of numerous human rights violations in Iran during November 2025. An unprecedented surge in executions, a rise in the arrests of citizens for expressing opinion and belief, and the extraction of forced confessions from detainees and prisoners were among the most significant human rights violations of the past month.

Executions

In November, 308 individuals were hanged in Iranian prisons, mostly on drug-related and murder charges. This brought the number of executions this year to an unprecedented 1,594.
Among those executed were seven women. The gender of another 52 individuals remains unknown, reflecting the Iranian regime’s lack of transparency in releasing information.
Two executions were carried out in public, and seven of those executed were Afghan nationals.
The charges against 161 of those executed were murder, and 137 were related to drugs. Five individuals were executed on charges of rape, and the charges for another five remain unknown.

HRANA has also reported the issuance of nine death sentences on charges of murder. Two of those sentenced to death are women. Also, the death sentences of Masoud Jamaei, Alireza Mardasi, and Farshad Etemadifar, political prisoners held in Sheiban Prison in Ahvaz, were upheld by the Supreme Court.

Freedom of Thought and Expression

In the past month, the Iranian regime’s security agencies arrested 73 individuals for expressing their opinions and beliefs. In eleven of these arrests, security forces did not present an arrest warrant. The most prominent example was the detention of fourteen individuals for protest-related activities such as writing protest slogans. These citizens were subjected to forced confessions and accused of having connections abroad. Four people were summoned by security agencies, and eleven others were summoned by judicial authorities. The homes of seven citizens were searched by security forces.

This month, 16 individuals were also tried for expressing their opinions and beliefs. A total of 25 people were sentenced to 905 months of imprisonment. In addition, the Iranian judiciary issued a sentence of 159 lashes. The sentence of 38 lashes against Atash (Zahra) Shakarami, on the charge of “spreading falsehoods,” was also carried out. She is the aunt of Nika Shakarami, one of those killed during the 2022 nationwide protests.

Prisoners’ Rights

The rights of prisoners, especially political and ideological prisoners, are being violated in various ways. In this month alone, 21 cases of denial of adequate medical care for political and ideological prisoners, including Zeinab Jalalian, the only female political prisoner in Iran sentenced to life imprisonment, 25 cases of transferring prisoners to solitary confinement, and 5 cases of prolonged solitary confinement were recorded.
HRANA reported 67 cases of detainees being held in a state of uncertainty, 40 cases in which families of detainees were not informed of their status after their arrest, and 15 cases of forced confessions.
Due to harsh prison conditions, five cases of prisoner suicide, three deaths caused by illness, and ten hunger strikes were documented.
Additionally, six cases of denial of visitation rights and 20 cases of denial of access to legal counsel were recorded.

prisoners rights

Kolbars and Fuel Carriers

Each week, a number of citizens fall victim to the unregulated shootings carried out by military and law-enforcement forces. This month, these shootings claimed the lives of eight citizens and injured five others. Four fuel carriers (sookhtbar) were among those killed, and two fuel carriers and one kolbar were among the injured.
Additionally, due to the explosion of a landmine left over from the Iran–Iraq war, a 40-year-old kolbar named Ebrahim Abdollahi was maimed in the border areas of Nowsud.

Workers’ Rights

In November, 116 labor protests and nine labor strikes were reported, and two labor activists were arrested.
Workplace incidents also claimed the lives of 44 workers and injured 96 others. In addition, a firefighter in Sanandaj attempted self-immolation.
HRANA’s reports this month documented wage arrears affecting 7,886 workers.

Unions and professional guilds also held 100 protest gatherings. Another tragic case was the self-immolation and death of Ahmad Baladi, a 20-year-old student from Ahvaz, in protest against the municipality’s demolition of his family’s kiosk.
HRANA also reported the sealing of 18 commercial establishments, including cafés and traditional eateries.
Additionally, the Iranian judiciary issued eight rulings against union and guild activists, amounting in total to 43 months of imprisonment, sixty months of exile, and four cases of deprivation of social rights.

Women’s Rights

In the past month, HRANA recorded the murders of nine women, including a report about a man in Urmia County who shot and killed his mother, his sister, and his wife’s mother. After the killings, the suspect took his own life in the presence of his young child.

For further statistical details on violence against women over the past twelve months, refer to the HRANA report published in November.

Children’s Rights

Cases of violations against children this month included the murder of two children, one case of a victim of physical violence and abuse, the suicide of a fourteen-year-old teenager in Gachsaran, and one case of sexual assault and abuse. The death of a thirteen-year-old child laborer in Isfahan was also reported.
Additionally, the death of one child and injuries to 104 others due to official negligence were recorded, along with two abandoned newborns.

Religious Minorities

In this month, Iranian courts sentenced four members of religious minorities to a total of 160 months of imprisonment, including the conviction of Shahram Fallah, a Baha’i citizen, to nine and a half years in prison and one year of exile by the Court of Appeal. Three sentences involving social deprivations and two travel bans were also issued against members of religious minorities.
The prison sentences of twelve members of religious minorities, including seven individuals from the Baha’i community and two Christian converts, were carried out. The homes of six members of religious minorities were also searched this month and six people were arrested.

Ethnic Rights

In November, the Iranian regime’s security forces arrested thirteen ethnic rights activists and carried out one home search. In ten of these cases, the forces did not present an arrest warrant.

Inhuman Punishment

In this month, Iranian courts issued a total of 527 lashes against eighteen individuals.
Additionally, in a violation of citizens’ privacy, at least 20 people, including seven actors, were arrested for consuming alcoholic beverages at a mixed-gender gathering.

 

Siblings Shokouh and Shahrouz Sadidi Arrested in Sabzevar

HRANA – Yesterday, November 30, Shahrouz Sadidi and Shokouh Sadidi, residents of Sabzevar, were arrested by agents of the Ministry of Intelligence in this city and transferred to an unknown location.

Shahram Sadidi, the brother of Shahrouz and Shokouh Sadidi, announced their arrest by posting on his social media pages. He stated that the arrests took place this morning, separately, by agents of the Sabzevar branch of the Ministry of Intelligence at their respective homes.

So far, no information has been obtained regarding the reasons for their arrest, their whereabouts, or the charges against them.

It should be noted that Shahram Sadidi has previously faced arrest and judicial actions due to his activities and is currently living outside Iran.

Arbitrary arrests, transferring detainees to undisclosed locations, and leaving families in the dark about the fate of their loved ones are routine practices of the Iranian regime’s security agencies, such as the Ministry of Intelligence and the IRGC Intelligence Unit. This pattern of behavior stands in clear violation of the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners, known as the Nelson Mandela Rules: “Every prisoner shall have the right, and shall be given the ability and means, to inform immediately his or her family, or any other person designated as a contact person, about his or her imprisonment, about his or her transfer to another institution and about any serious illness or injury. The sharing of prisoners’ personal information shall be subject to domestic legislation.”

Khorramabad: Younes Sagvand Sentenced to Imprisonment

HRANA – Younes Sagvand (Gholi Kiani), a resident of Sepiddasht in Lorestan Province, has been sentenced by Branch 2 of the Khorramabad Revolutionary Court to 10 months in prison and a fine.

Based on the ruling issued by Branch 2 of the Khorramabad Revolutionary Court and delivered to Mr. Sagvand on November 17, 2025, he was sentenced to 10 months in prison and a fine on the charge of ‘propaganda against the regime.’

This citizen had been arrested in March 2025 at his home by security forces and was released several days later from Khorramabad Prison after posting bail.

Younes Sagvand is an electrical engineering graduate, an employee of the Railway Company, and a resident of Sepiddasht.