UN: Iran Executed 21 People, Arrested Over 4,000 Since Escalation of Conflict
Iran has executed at least 21 people and detained more than 4,000 more since the escalation of conflict in the Middle East, the United Nations Human Rights Office said.
According to the UN Human Rights Office, at least nine people have been executed in connection with the January 2026 protests, 10 on charges of alleged membership in opposition groups, and two on espionage charges.
The organization also said that more than 4,000 of people have been arrested in Iran on national security-related charges since the beginning of the conflict.
“I am appalled that -- on top of the already severe impacts of the conflict– the rights of the Iranian people continue to be stripped from them by the authorities, in harsh and brutal ways,” said UN Human Rights Chief Volker Turk in the statement.
“In times of war, threats to human rights increase exponentially. Yet even where national security is invoked, human rights can only be limited where strictly necessary and proportionate, and for a legitimate end. And core, non-derogable rights -- such as protection against arbitrary detention, and the right to fair trial -- must be respected absolutely, at all times."
Previously, Amnesty International warned that cease-fires in the Middle East could not prevent the humanitarian crisis from escalating, saying civilians in Iran continue to face the "double threat" of war and repression.
Human rights groups, including Amnesty International, say Iran carries out one of the highest numbers of executions per capita in the world and ranks among the countries with the highest total executions globally, after China, for which reliable data is limited.
Two organizations, the Norway-based Iranian Human Rights and Together Against the Death Penalty, based in Paris, have reported that Iran executed at least 1,639 people in 2025.
According to the rights groups, this is the highest annual execution total recorded in Iran since 1989.
Trump Says Iran 'Better Get Smart Soon'
US President Donald Trump asserted that Iran is incapable of reaching a non-nuclear deal.
Writing on his Truth Social network on April 29, Trump said: "Iran can't get its act together. They don't know how to sign a non-nuclear deal. They better get smart soon!"
He did not elaborate further on what such a "deal" would entail.
His post also featured an AI-generated image of Trump, in aviator sunglasses, holding a machine gun with fires blazing behind him.
This new statement by the US president comes as negotiations between Iran and the United States remain deadlocked after a round of talks in Islamabad failed to produce any positive results amid an ongoing cease-fire.
It was reported earlier this week that Iran had made a proposal to open the Strait of Hormuz in exchange for lifting the naval blockade by the US military, but reports indicate that US government officials have not accepted this offer.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio explicitly called the offer unacceptable.
In Iran, officials have often remained silent on the matter, but in recent media discussions, the issue has been raised that lifting the naval blockade should be a precondition for negotiations for any agreement with the United States, while the Iranian government's resistance to dismantling Tehran's nuclear program has been cited as one of the main obstacles to the failure of Iran-US negotiations.
Japanese Vessel Safely Passes Strait of Hormuz
Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has confirmed that a Japanese-linked vessel that had been stranded in the Persian Gulf safely passed through the Strait of Hormuz on April 29 and is heading to Japan with three Japanese crew members on board.
In a post on X published on April 29, she also emphasized the importance of quickly restoring free and safe navigation through the strait for vessels of all countries, including Japan, and said she had conveyed this position to Iranian President Masud Pezeshkian.
"The Government of Japan considers this passage of a Japan-related vessel as a positive development," Japan's Foreign Ministry said in a separate statement.
Iran has restricted commercial shipping from transiting through the strait, while the United States has enforced a naval blockade on all ships entering or leaving Iranian ports. This has led to sharply reduced traffic and ongoing disruptions to global oil flows.
US Flags Sanctions Risk Over China 'Teapot' Refineries
- By RFE/RL
The US Treasury Department has warned that China-based independent "teapot" refineries, especially in Shandong Province, pose sanctions risks due to their role in importing Iranian crude oil.
According to the Treasury, China buys about 90 percent of Iran's oil exports, much of it processed by these smaller refineries, generating revenue for Tehran.
"This revenue ultimately benefits the Iranian regime, its weapons programs, and its military," the Treasury statement said.
The United States has intensified economic pressure on Iran by targeting the country’s international shadow banking infrastructure, shadow shipping fleet, and Chinese "teapot" refineries that support Tehran’s oil trade, as part of the administration’s "maximum pressure" campaign, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a post on X.
Bessent stated that Iran's key oil export hub, Kharg Island, is nearing storage capacity, a situation that could force Tehran to reduce oil production. He added that this could cost the country around $170 million per day in lost revenue and potentially cause "permanent damage to Iran's oil infrastructure."
"Treasury will continue to exert maximum pressure and any person, vessel, or entity facilitating illicit flows to Tehran risks exposure to U.S. sanctions," Bessent wrote on X.
We are now closing the live blog for the day. We'll be back at 7:30 a.m. Central European time to cover the latest events across the Middle East.
US Hits Iran's 'Shadow Banking' Network With New Sanctions
The US has announced new sanctions targeting 35 entities and individuals tied to Iran's covert financial network.
Announcing the move, State Department spokesperson Tommy Pigott said that Iran's shadow banking operations have "enabled the transfer of tens of billions of dollars to evade sanctions."
The United States maintains a comprehensive sanctions regime against Iran, including a near-total trade embargo for US persons, frozen Iranian assets, bans on dealings with the Iranian government and the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), and secondary sanctions that punish foreign companies for engaging in Iran’s oil, petrochemical, shipping, finance, and weapons sectors.
Under the current “maximum pressure” campaign, the US has added hundreds of new designations since 2025 targeting shadow fleets, illicit financial networks, and proliferation activities.
Pigott said that the newly targeted shadow banking network had enabled Iranian forces such as the IRGC "to illicitly access the international financial system to obtain proceeds from illicit oil sales, acquire sensitive components for missiles and other weapons systems, and fund Iran's terrorist proxy groups throughout the Middle East."
Dismantling these channels, Pigott said, would advance the Trump administration’s policy in the conflict with Iran and continue to impose "maximum pressure" on the Islamic republic.
In a post on X, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said that funds funneled through this shadow banking system "support the regime’s ongoing terrorist operations, posing a direct threat to US personnel, regional allies, and the global economy."
Britain Summons Iranian Ambassador Over Social Media Posts
Britain announced on April 28 that it had summoned Iran's ambassador to London following what it described as "unacceptable and inflammatory comments on social media.”
The British Foreign Office said in a statement that Middle East Minister Hamish Falconer had stressed that the Iranian embassy "must cease any form of communications that could be interpreted as encouraging violence in the UK or internationally."
Iranian officials were not immediately available for comment after the British announcement, Reuters reported.
In a post on the Telegram channel of the Iranian Embassy in London earlier this month, Iranians living in the UK were asked to volunteer for the "Jan Feda" campaign, in which they would declare their readiness to sacrifice their lives in a war with the US and Israel.
The Foreign Office did not specify which of the embassy's social media posts it was referring to. British MPs have previously warned of “significant and widespread threats” from Iran against the UK.
Britain also summoned Iran's ambassador last month after an Iranian citizen and a British-Iranian dual national were charged under the UK's National Security Act for allegedly assisting Iran’s intelligence services.
European Parliament's Iran Delegation Head Demands Release Of Political Prisoners
The chair of the European Parliament's Delegation for relations with Iran has called for the release of Nasrin Sotoudeh, Narges Mohammadi, and other political prisoners in Iran.
Referring to recent talks between Iran and the United States in Islamabad, Hannah Neumann posted on X on April 28: “We demand #NasrinSotoudeh’s immediate release. No deal unless the Iranian regime opens the internet, #StopExecutionsInIran and releases all #politicalprisoners!.”
She also spoke to the European Parliament.
Sotoudeh, a lawyer and human rights activist, was arrested at her home in Tehran on the evening of April 1 without being charged.
Meanwhile, concerns have grown about Mohammadi's health in prison and reports that the Nobel Peace Prize winner is being denied access to proper medical care.
Chinese Leadership Pledges To Prioritize Energy Security In Wake Of Iran War
In a meeting held on April 28, China’s leadership laid out plans to strengthen the economy by prioritizing energy security and technology self-sufficiency in the wake of the Iran war.
Beijing’s highest decision-making body, the Politburo, pledged to “systemically respond” to external challenges and “counter various uncertainties,” according to a readout published in Xinhua, a prominent Chinese news outlet.
Beijing has been comparatively resilient to the effects of the war in Iran, largely due to oil stockpiles and a focus on renewable energy. The extended blockade, however, of the Strait of Hormuz is starting to take effect.
A 5 percent growth figure for the first quarter shows that China has weathered the worst of the energy shock, but the economy has still been affected by the crisis. Export growth slowed to 2.5 percent in March, down from 21.8 percent between January and February.
Speaking to Reuters on April 28, Zhang Zhiwei, chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management, said that Beijing’s economic momentum “will likely slow in the second quarter due to the uncertain external environment and high energy prices."
Trump Says Iran Wants The US To Open The Strait Of Hormuz
US President Donald Trump has said that Iran has asked the US to open the Strait of Hormuz.
In a post on his TruthSocial network, Trump said that Iran had "informed us that they are in a 'State of Collapse'" and wanted the US to open the strait "as soon as possible."
Iran has restricted commercial shipping from transiting through the strait, while the United States has enforced a naval blockade on all ships entering or leaving Iranian ports. This has led to sharply reduced traffic and ongoing disruptions to global oil flows.
Trump said Iran wanted the strait opened “as they try to figure out their leadership situation,” although it remains unclear exactly what he was referring to.
After Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in a US-Israeli attack, his son Mojtaba Khamenei was reportedly appointed, although he has not yet been seen in public, with some speculation that he was also injured in air strikes.
There are divisions in Iran between various political groups about whether to negotiate with the US.
Trump has said before that Iran wants the Strait of Hormuz open. In a April 22 TruthSocial post, Trump said that Iran wanted the strait open immediately as the country was "collapsing financially."