logo
Iran planning to execute 30,000 in repeat of horror 1988 ‘massacre' as part of desperate crackdown, insiders fear

Iran planning to execute 30,000 in repeat of horror 1988 ‘massacre' as part of desperate crackdown, insiders fear

Scottish Sun6 days ago
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
IRAN'S merciless regime is plotting to kill tens of thousands of prisoners in a repeat of the 1988 massacre, insiders fear.
Rattled supreme leader Ali Khamenei has ordered a surge in executions - turning hangings into public spectacles in a chilling warning to dissidents.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
9
Executions are often well-attended public events
Credit: AFP
9
Mehdi Hassani has been executed by Iran's regime
Credit: NCRI
9
Behrouz Ehsani was also killed by the regime
Credit: NCRI
It comes as callous mullahs yesterday hanged two political prisoners who had been jailed on trumped-up charges.
Mehdi Hassani, 48, and Behrouz Ehsani, 70, were killed in cold blood for daring to oppose the barbaric regime they were forced to live under.
Earlier this year, The Sun shared a haunting voice message from dad-of-three Hassani as he lambasted the cruelty of mullahs.
Ehsani meanwhile bravely vowed he was "ready" to sacrifice his life in the ongoing fight for freedom for the Iranian people.
Iran has repeatedly unleashed lethal force on its own people - especially at times of crisis - in a sickening bid to stamp out rebellion.
Glaring vulnerabilities in the regime's grip on power have been exposed after Israel and the US launched a monumental effort to destroy its nuclear threat.
Executions and arrests are weaponised to scare dissidents, and it is feared panicked Ayatollah Khamenei is planning a similar plot to the 1988 massacre of 30,000 political prisoners.
The regime was also in turmoil that year after accepting a ceasefire with Iraq.
Now, death sentences against those affiliated with the main democratic opposition, the People's Mojahedin Organisation of Iran (PMOI/MEK), are being expedited as Khamenei scrambles for control.
Chillingly, state-run Fars News Agency - a mouthpiece of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps - this month issued a public call to repeat 1998's inhumane massacre as the regime fears for its survival.
Dad set to be executed in Iran shares powerful audio message blasting regime from behind bars
British politicians and leading human rights lawyers have urged the UK government to intervene to prevent such an atrocity.
Alongside the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), they also criticised the focus on Tehran's nuclear programme, warning that it has overshadowed the worsening human rights crisis.
Baroness O'Loan DBE said: "Those threatening our national security are the same individuals planning atrocities in Iran's prisons. So, we must act, now."
Dowlat Nowrouzi, the NCRI's UK representative, told The Sun: "The international community's failure to hold the regime accountable for its atrocities, including crimes against humanity and genocide, has allowed the regime to enjoy impunity.
"It is long overdue to hold Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader, and others accountable for committing these crimes.
It comes as one of Iran's longest-serving political prisoners has laid bare the dire situation in a handwritten letter shared with The Sun.
Saeed Masouri, who has spent 25 years behind bars, was forcibly dragged from his cell Qezelhessar Prison to solitary confinement.
More than 100 armed guards raided the ward Masouri was on, beating prisoners before hauling them across the floor with handcuffs and leg shackles and bags over their heads.
Masouri has been exiled to the notorious Zahedan Prison - just days after penning a haunting letter warning a massacre is looming.
9
Saeed Masouri has been in jail for 25 years
Credit: NCRI
9
He shared a chilling handwritten letter from inside jail
Credit: SUPPLIED
9
Four Iranian convicts hanging after a public execution in 2007
Credit: AFP
9
Pictures show a man named Balal who was led to the gallows by his victim's family
He wrote: "Just as it happened in 1988, today we fear that the same path is being repeated, albeit with different language and methods.
"Back then, it was called the 'Death Committee'; today, it is 'Fire at discretion'.
"But this widespread repression and intensification of executions are not signs of strength—they are admissions of the regime's helplessness in the face of truth and the will of the people.
"Likewise, this so-called 'fire at discretion' is nothing but an attempt to conceal the depth of infiltration, decay, and structural collapse within the ruling system—failures they now seek to compensate for by exacting revenge on the people of Iran and their prisoners."
All contact between political prisoners and their families has now been cut off.
Ms Nowrouzi added: "The assault on Mr. Masouri is not an isolated incident.
"It is part of a broader campaign of escalating executions, arbitrary detentions, and systematic repression.
"The regime, emboldened by decades of impunity and inaction, is now openly signaling its intent to repeat the horrors of 1988.
"As Mr. Masouri warned in his message from prison, 'a crime is in progress,' and the world must not remain silent."
Iran's calculating mullahs meanwhile are refusing to hand the bodies of slain Ehsani and Hassani back to their grieving families.
How Iran is stifling critics after defeat to Israel
by Katie Davis, Chief Foreign Reporter (Digital)
TYRANNICAL leaders in Iran have demanded citizens act as undercover informants to turn in anyone who dares oppose the regime, insiders say.
Panicked mullahs have also ordered "telecom cages" be installed around prisons as the regime wages war against its own people.
Political prisoners - largely banished to death row on trumped-up charges - have been subject to extreme torture and a disturbing rate of executions in the face of growing tensions in the Middle East.
Insiders say their treatment is being weaponised to deter opposition.
The fight against repression has loomed large for decades in the rogue state - but the so-called 12-day war last month has made the barbaric Ayatollah more fearful than ever of being toppled.
Sources inside Iran told The Sun how a direct alert has been issued to the public, urging them to report any activity linked to resistance groups of the People's Mojahedin Organisation of Iran (PMOI/MEK).
Regime loyalists have been implored to act as informants - compiling detailed reports with photos, times, locations, licence plates and facial features of suspected individuals.
Orders were publicised in an official government news outlet - marking a distinct shift in the paranoid regime's usual strategy of covert suppression.
Insiders noted it points to the regime's growing perceived threat posed by the PMOI's grassroots operations.
The PMOI has long fought for a secular, democratic Iran, and is understood to be gaining traction amid frustration with economic hardship, political repression, and international isolation.
READ MORE HERE
Insiders say they are instead planning to secretly bury them in a twisted bid to cover up their actions.
Hassani's devastated daughter, who bravely campaigned for her dad's release, wept as she told how they had not been informed of his execution.
In a harrowing video message shared with The Sun, she said: "They didn't grant him a final visit before the execution.
"None of us knew, not even my father, who had told my sister to visit him on Monday.
"I don't know what to say. I fought so hard. I had so much hope, so much… I still can't believe what has happened."
Maryam Rajavi, president-elect of the NCRI, has called on the United Nations to take "concrete and effective measures against a regime built on executions and torture".
Mrs Rajavi said: "They [Ehsani and Hassani] now join the eternal ranks of those who have given their lives in the struggle for freedom and justice.
"In what appears to be a desperate act during the twilight of his rule, Khamenei has perpetrated yet another grave crime - an effort to delay the inevitable collapse of his regime.
Ayatollah 'on his heels'
by Katie Davis, Chief Foreign Reporter (Digital)
IRAN'S merciless regime is "fully on its heels" - leaving the Ayatollah's days numbered, a former US ambassador says.
But the West will not be able to topple Tehran's brutal dictatorship, Mark D. Wallace, CEO & Founder of United Against Nuclear Iran, warned.
The ex-ambassador to the UN said it will be down to the Iranian people - who have suffered outrageous repression for decades - to finally end the regime's rule.
Iron-fist fanatics have used violent and ruthless measures, including executions and torture, in a twisted bid to stamp out opposition and silence critics.
The regime's future now appears to be hanging by a thread, however, as it sits in a "combustible state" following the obliteration of its nuclear empire by the US and Israel.
Several of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's top military brass were wiped out in the 12-day war - leaving the barbaric ruler vulnerable.
Power held by Iran's terror proxies - including Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Houthis in Yemen - has also been severely depleted.
Wallace told The Sun: "The regime isn't just wounded, they're fully on their heels."
READ MORE HERE
"Far from securing his hold on power, this brutality only intensifies the outrage of the Iranian people and reinforces the determination of Iran's courageous youth to bring an end to this theocratic tyranny.
"Honour to these steadfast Mojahedin who, after three years of unwavering resistance under torture, pressure, and threats, fulfilled their solemn pledge to God and the people with pride and dignity."
It comes after The Sun reported how Iran's wounded regime massacred defenceless inmates at a prison before blaming their deaths on shrapnel from airstrikes.
As Israeli missiles rained down on a nearby military site on June 16, panicked inmates at Dizel-Abad Prison in Kermanshah begged to be moved to safety.
But they were instead met with a hail of bullets from the regime's merciless enforcers in a "deliberate and cold-blooded act", a witness said.
Meanwhile, sweeping arrests are also plaguing Iran's population - with around 700 people understood to have been detained last month with reported links to a "spy network".
Iran has one of the most horrific human rights records in the world, and according to campaigners also holds the harrowing title for the highest execution rate.
Official records show that the number of executions last year reached 1,000 - the highest number in 30 years and 16 percent higher than the previous.
Insiders believe this year that distressing toll will be much higher.
9
Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei makes his first public appearance since the war with Israel on July 6
Credit: Getty
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

BBC launches investigation into Strictly stars' ‘cocaine use'
BBC launches investigation into Strictly stars' ‘cocaine use'

Leader Live

timean hour ago

  • Leader Live

BBC launches investigation into Strictly stars' ‘cocaine use'

Reports in The Sun allege their drug use was discussed on the BBC dancing show, and said that the corporation had appointed law firm Pinsent Masons to lead the investigation. According to reports, the allegations were made in a legal submission by law firm Russells in March on behalf of former contestant Wynne Evans, who was dropped by the BBC after apologising for using 'inappropriate language' during the launch of the Strictly tour. Others have also reported drug use on the show, according to The Sun. A BBC spokesperson said: 'We have clear protocols and policies in place for dealing with any serious complaint raised with us. 'We would always encourage people to speak to us if they have concerns. It would not be appropriate for us to comment further.' it is understood that the BBC often appoints external law firms to help it lead investigations, while reporting back to an internal team. The cast members involved in the investigation were not named by The Sun. It comes after the BBC launched a review into Strictly in 2024 that looked into allegations of bullying and harassment against former professional dancer Giovanni Pernice, made by his former dance partner Amanda Abbington. The corporation upheld some, but not all, of the complaints made – and introduced a series of new measures aimed at improving welfare. This included the introduction of a chaperone who is present 'at all times' during training room rehearsals. EastEnders star James Borthwick was also suspended from the BBC after a video emerged of the actor using a disabled slur on the set of the dance programme.

Teenager convicted for not insuring surprise birthday gift car before receiving it
Teenager convicted for not insuring surprise birthday gift car before receiving it

Scottish Sun

time2 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Teenager convicted for not insuring surprise birthday gift car before receiving it

The teen defended herself in a letter to Ipswich magistrates court CAR BUNGLE Teenager convicted for not insuring surprise birthday gift car before receiving it Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A TEENAGER has received a criminal conviction for not being insured for her car – before she had received it for her 18th birthday. The waitress, from Poole in Dorset, was gifted a Fiat for her landmark birthday, but mistakenly did not insure it immediately. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 1 A teenager was slapped with a criminal conviction for failing to have her car insured Credit: Getty The teen explained in a letter to Ipswich magistrates court that she never drove the car as she had not received her licence at the time of the offence. However, the DVLA charged her with keeping an uninsured vehicle and brought a criminal prosecution over the unpaid bill. She pleaded guilty to the offence, which took place a few weeks before her 18th birthday. 'My family got the car for me as my 18th birthday present," she wrote. "I was still 17 at the time of the offence and had not actually been given the keys to the car and was not aware that it would be mine.' She added that she and her dad have reading difficulties, and only realised the seriousness of what was happening when a friend read her the official letter. She continued: 'I have never used the car as I have still not passed my driving test. 'My dad is willing to pay the fine for me as he thinks this is his fault. 'He receives Universal Credit and PIP for his mental health, and I have just finished college and currently have a part-time job as a waitress on the minimum wage for an 18-year-old. 'I was a good student in school and college studying art and have never been in any trouble in my life. Daily Money News "We just misunderstood the letter, I thought it said I had to SORN it or pay a fine if it doesn't get sorted. 'I am very sorry.' A magistrate slapped the teen with a 12-month conditional discharge instead of a fine. But she chose not to send the case back to the DVLA for an extra public interest check. The teen will now have a criminal conviction, and must also pay a £20 court fee. It comes after news that one in six drivers admitted they have been behind the wheel without insurance. A poll of 2,000 adults found 24 per cent of these did so only on a short journey, believing cover wasn't necessary. A fifth unknowingly committed the offence when their policy had expired, but 17 per cent did it as they wanted to save money. And 15 percent drove uninsured because renewing their policy was a life admin task they kept putting off renewing. Learner drivers are twice as likely to drive uninsured compared to those with a full driving license (37 per cent). James Armstrong, a young driver expert at flexible car insurer Veygo, which commissioned the research, said: 'Driving without insurance is a serious offence that can result in hefty fines, points on your licence, or even having your car seized. 'It's worrying to see so many people are driving uninsured, especially as there are affordable options available for short-term cover.'

BBC launches investigation into Strictly stars' ‘cocaine use'
BBC launches investigation into Strictly stars' ‘cocaine use'

Rhyl Journal

time4 hours ago

  • Rhyl Journal

BBC launches investigation into Strictly stars' ‘cocaine use'

Reports in The Sun allege their drug use was discussed on the BBC dancing show, and said that the corporation had appointed law firm Pinsent Masons to lead the investigation. According to reports, the allegations were made in a legal submission by law firm Russells in March on behalf of former contestant Wynne Evans, who was dropped by the BBC after apologising for using 'inappropriate language' during the launch of the Strictly tour. Others have also reported drug use on the show, according to The Sun. A BBC spokesperson said: 'We have clear protocols and policies in place for dealing with any serious complaint raised with us. 'We would always encourage people to speak to us if they have concerns. It would not be appropriate for us to comment further.' it is understood that the BBC often appoints external law firms to help it lead investigations, while reporting back to an internal team. The cast members involved in the investigation were not named by The Sun. It comes after the BBC launched a review into Strictly in 2024 that looked into allegations of bullying and harassment against former professional dancer Giovanni Pernice, made by his former dance partner Amanda Abbington. The corporation upheld some, but not all, of the complaints made – and introduced a series of new measures aimed at improving welfare. This included the introduction of a chaperone who is present 'at all times' during training room rehearsals. EastEnders star James Borthwick was also suspended from the BBC after a video emerged of the actor using a disabled slur on the set of the dance programme.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store