IRGC steps up arrests, opposition demand international investigation into prison violations
A report by the Iranian opposition abroad has revealed an
escalation in the detention and torture of Iranian youth by Supreme Leader Ali
Khamenei's regime, and they called for an international investigation into
cases of detention and torture in Iranian prisons.
The secretariat of the National Council of Resistance of
Iran (NCRI) reported that Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence and the intelligence
service of the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) recently began a campaign of arrests
that affected large numbers of opposition youth, especially the families and
supporters of the People's Mujahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI), as the regime
fears an outbreak of popular uprisings.
The report indicated that arrests are taking place in
Tehran, Mashhad, Nishapur, Kermanshah, Sabzevar, Arak, Kashan, Mahshahr,
Bushehr, Amol, Ahvaz, Andimeshk, Rasht, Behbahan, Isfahan, Karkan, Karaj,
Tabriz and Shiraz, in parallel with the launch of a campaign by the mullahs'
intelligence and supporters abroad against the Iranian resistance.
According to the report, the IRGC, Ministry of Intelligence,
and security personnel in civilian clothes stormed the homes and workplaces of
Iranian citizens, beating and arresting them. The regime’s forces also
confiscated the victims' phones, computers, valuables and various personal
belongings.
Khamenei’s thugs carried out hours of torture, psychological
and physical pressure, interrogation, and fabricating scenes of execution with
the aim of destroying prisoners’ morale, as well as forcing them to participate
in plays and TV shows.
The report added that the investigators deliberately
insulted detainees, especially young women and girls, using the most severe
forms of torture.
According to those who survived the arrests, the regime’s
focus was on obtaining information about the PMOI and strongholds for uprisings,
uncovering relationships between the detainees and the organization, and
searching for reasons that young people are attracted to the Iranian resistance.
"In Mashhad, the investigators created a scene of the
execution of a group of 10 young detainees by accusing them of being linked to
the PMOI in order to extract confessions from them," the report added.
In Tehran, torturers harassed and abused young women and
girls with the worst forms of psychological torture, although witnesses reported
remarkable resistance from the detainees.
The report also indicated that the mullahs' intelligence
services made phone calls and sent threatening messages to create an atmosphere
of terror in an attempt to prevent young people from communicating with and
advocating for the PMOI.
PMOI leader Maryam Rajavi renewed her call to the
Secretary-General of the United Nations, the High Commissioner for Human Rights,
the Special Rapporteur on Violence against Women, and international human
rights organizations to send international missions to visit Iran’s prisons and
meet political prisoners and those detained in the recent period, especially women.




