Iran has dramatically escalated its use of the death penalty in the weeks following the April ceasefire that ended its war with the United States and Israel, with rights organizations warning that the Islamic Republic is using executions as a tool of political intimidation, according to a report by The New York Times published May 15. Iranian authorities executed four prisoners this week alone on charges including espionage and terrorism, Iranian state media reported. But rights groups say the surge began earlier — in mid-March — and has accelerated sharply since the ceasefire took hold. Many of those executed were detained during the mass anti-government protests that shook Iran in January, when security forces killed thousands of demonstrators. "Many of these executions follow extremely rapid judicial proceedings in which defendants have little or no access to legal counsel, face fundamentally unfair trials and are often convicted using forced confessions extracted under torture...
Bahrain, in the wake of previous Iranian attacks and threats of continued missile and drone strikes, has placed all its units on the highest state of alert, warning that the risk of a new assault by the Islamic Republic has not been fully eliminated. In a new statement, Bahrain’s General Command of the Defence Force announced that all military units are now at the “highest level of readiness and defensive alert,” a move that follows the wave of tensions triggered by recent Iranian missile and drone strikes on Bahraini territory. According to the Iran International, the decision comes amid warnings from Bahraini officials and regional analysts that the possibility of renewed Iranian attacks on military and infrastructure targets, especially around Manama and key energy and security installations, remains serious. During the 2026 war, Iran used a mix of missiles and drones to hit Bahrain several times, and according to official estimates, dozens of missiles and hundreds of ballistic and ...