Iranian authorities have acknowledged that at least three protesters who were jailed after the countries disputed presidential elections in June, were beaten to death in prison. A military court announced that 12 prison officials had been charged with murder and other crimes. Opposition leaders say at least 73 people are known to have been killed in the unrest. The government has given varying totals, from 17 to 30. More protests are taking place as tens of thousands of mourners arrived in Iran’s holy city of Qom for the funeral of the most senior dissident cleric. Iranian authorities have barred foreign media from covering the processions for Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri. Reports are emerging that police have clashed with reformist protesters. Read more here
NEWS
Iran: protests at funeral of prominent dissident
Iranian authorities have acknowledged that at least three protesters who were jailed after the countries disputed presidential elections in June, were beaten to death in prison. A military court announced that 12 prison officials had been charged with murder and other crimes. Opposition leaders say at least 73 people are known to have been killed […]
21 Dec 09
READ MORE
-
Left speechless: how trauma is leaving children in Gaza unable to communicate
The psychological toll of living in a warzone is causing young people to lose their ability to speak
-
The silence around sexual assault in India’s universities
Rape victims on campuses are being urged to keep quiet, with people's reputations prioritised over stopping sexual violence
-
Tunisia’s Spring is over
President Kais Saied's rule is becoming increasingly authoritarian
-
The week in free expression: 19–25 April 2025
Index rounds up of some of the key stories covering censorship and free expression from the past seven days