Activist commit su!cide in protest at Iranian regime
A popular Iranian human rights activist, Kianoosh Sanjari, has taken his own life in protest against what he termed the dictatorship of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
In a social media post, Sanjari announced his decision to end his life if four political prisoners were not released by 19:00 local time (15:30 GMT) on Wednesday.
His death was confirmed shortly thereafter by fellow activists.
In a post before he died, he said he wished that “one day Iranians” would “wake up and overcome slavery”.
Sanjari was a vocal critic of Iran’s leadership and a staunch advocate for democracy. He famously stated, “No one should be imprisoned for expressing their opinions,” and “Protest is the right of every Iranian citizen.”
On Wednesday morning, he had written: “If Fateme Sepehari, Nasreen Shakrami, Tomaj Salehi and Arsham Rezaei are not released from prison by 19:00 today … I will end my life in protest against the dictatorship of Khamenei and his partners.”
All four were arrested for their support and involvement in the wave of unprecedented protests following the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in 2022, who died after being detained by Iran’s morality police.
Sanjari was repeatedly arrested and imprisoned for his political activism between 1999 and 2007.
He left Iran in 2007 and received asylum in Norway, before joining US broadcaster Voice of America’s Persian service in Washington DC.
He returned to Iran in 2016 to be with his parents, and was arrested and sentenced to 11 years imprisonment in Evin prison, where political prisoners are often imprisoned.
He was released on bail in 2019 on medical grounds, and subsequently taken to a psychiatric hospital.
He shared with local media that he endured electric shocks, was chained to a bed, and injected with substances.
“Kianoosh Sanjeri is not just a name, it is a symbol of years of pain, resistance and struggle for freedom,” freedom of speech activist Hossein Ronaghi posted on X.