Iran has executed at least 1,000 people so far in 2025, the highest such figure in some three decades, an NGO said Tuesday, denouncing the "mass killing campaign" in prisons as a crime against humanity.
At least 64 people were hanged in the past week alone, an average of more than nine per day, said the Norway-based Iran Human Rights group, which counts and verifies executions in Iran daily.
With more than three months of 2025 still to go, the figure is already the highest since IHR began keeping records in 2008, topping the 975 executions recorded last year.
Responding to the report, the UN rights office in Geneva described the current number of executions in Iran as "staggering".
Iran carried out a wave of executions in the 1980s and early 1990s in the aftermath of the Islamic revolution of 1979 and the Iran-Iraq war.
But activists say the Islamic republic is now using capital punishment more intensely than at any time in the past three decades, with the clerical leadership under Ayatollah Ali Khamenei challenged by 2022-2023 protests and the 12-day war against Israel in June.
"In recent months the Islamic republic has begun a mass killing campaign in Iran's prisons, the dimensions of which -- in the absence of serious international reactions -- are expanding every day," said IHR director Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam.
Iranian and European ministers were to hold talks on the nuclear standoff at the UN General Assembly in New York on Tuesday. But Amiry-Moghaddam said the executions "amount to crimes against humanity and must be placed at the top of the international community's agenda".
- 'Crime against humanity' -
Raphael Chenuil Hazan, director of Paris-based campaign group Together Against the Death Penalty, said the figures confirmed his group's verdict that Iran's use of the death penalty can be classified as "a crime against humanity".
"The international community must consider that Iran as a state commits a crime against humanity in the mass and systematic use of the death penalty," he told AFP.
Iran has executed ten people this year in charges of spying for Israel, according to IHR, the majority after the conflict with Israel began.
The latest to be hanged on such charges was Babak Shahbazi, who was executed on September 17 after what Amnesty International described as a "grossly unfair trial in which the authorities never investigated his torture."
IHR said its figures for executions are "an absolute minimum", with the real number likely higher "due to the lack of transparency and restrictions on reporting".
- 'Horrific proportions' -
Executions in Iran are currently carried out exclusively by hanging, although other methods have been used in past. Most take place in prison, although there are occasional public hangings.
Iran last month defended its use of the death penalty, saying it applied only to the most serious offences with foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei saying Tehran was "striving to limit the use of this punishment to only the most severe crimes".
But IHR said most hangings were for non-lethal offences, with 50 percent of executions for drugs-related cases.
Ravina Shamdasani, spokeswoman for the UN rights office, told AFP that it had "repeatedly stressed" that drug offences "must not be punishable by death".
Out of IHR's toll for 2025, 28 of those hanged were women, many of whom according to activists were convicted after killing a husband they had been forced to marry or who was violent.
According to human rights groups including Amnesty, Iran is the world's second most prolific executioner after China, which is believed to execute thousands each year although no precise figures are available.
Amnesty said this week that executions in Iran had reached "horrific proportions" and "scores of people" were at risk of execution in Iran after "unfair trials and convictions on politically motivated charges".
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