
The International News Agency for Human Rights has received a report from Iran, Tehran, with deep fear and urgency, to draw immediate attention to an escalating human rights and humanitarian catastrophe unfolding across the country.
Credible reports and estimates from independent observers, medical workers, and human rights sources indicate that more than 36.000 people have been killed, over 10,000 individuals have been deliberately blinded, and approximately 330,000 people have been injured, many of whom have lost limbs or other body parts as a result of state violence. These numbers continue to rise. This is a human catastrophe of immense scale.
Survivors and eyewitnesses report that civilians have been brutally massacred using military-grade weapons, including .50 caliber firearms, shotgun weapons firing heavy projectiles, sniper rifles, AK-47 assault rifles, and Beretta-type Kalashnikov variants, used directly against unarmed people at close and long range.
It is further reported that more than 100,000 people are currently detained in prisons, military facilities, and unofficial detention centers. Many are held without charges, without legal representation, and without access to their families.
Disturbingly, detainees who are released show signs of severe respiratory distress resembling asthma, as well as symptoms consistent with organ failure. There are reports that some former detainees die within 48 hours of release, with causes including heart attacks and kidney failure, raising grave concerns about torture, poisoning, or systematic denial of medical care while in custody.
In addition, over 1,000 people are reported missing or forcibly disappeared, many of them under the age of 20, and a significant number young women and girls. Families receive no information about their whereabouts and are often threatened into silence.
There are also reports that the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has mobilized forces into schools and educational institutions, leading to schools being closed until further notice and widespread fear among families.
We urgently request that international human rights and humanitarian organizations be immediately dispatched to Iran, with full and unrestricted access to detention centers, hospitals, schools, and affected communities. International presence is essential to document crimes, protect civilians, and prevent further mass loss of life.
Former detainees and witnesses report that security forces are acting with extreme brutality and reckless violence. Numerous survivors state that IRGC and security personnel are under the influence of crystal meth, crack, and hashish. Witnesses describe officers displaying uncontrollable aggression, lack of judgment, and total disregard for human life.
There are grave concerns that executions are being carried out at an accelerated pace without due process, and that bodies are buried without notification to families. These acts destroy evidence and deny families the right to truth, justice, and mourning.
Conditions of detention are described as inhumane and degrading. Confessions are reportedly extracted through torture and extreme psychological pressure. The denial of medical treatment has resulted in permanent disability and death.
This is no longer only a human rights crisis. It is a humanitarian emergency.
IHRC Call the UN to intervene, by sending international observers tostop this. The people of Iran cannot survive this alone.
