A 26-year-old protester faces "imminent execution" in Iran after he was arrested in connection with anti-regime demonstrations, a human rights group has said.
Erfan Soltani, from the city of Fardis to the west of Tehran, will be executed on Wednesday, according to Norway-based rights group Hengaw.
The Kurdish group that documents human rights abuse in Iran said Mr Soltani's family had been informed about the death sentence, although they had been "deliberately kept uninformed" about the judicial process.
Hengaw said Mr Soltani had been arrested in connection with protests in the city of Karaj and faced the "imminent execution of a death sentence following a rapid and opaque judicial process".
"The rushed and non-transparent handling of this case has heightened concerns over the use of the death penalty as a tool to suppress public protests," Hengaw said on Monday.
The reports come as Donald Trump urged demonstrators to "keep protesting" and promised that "help in on its way" in a post on Truth Social on Tuesday.
"Save the names of the killers and abusers. They will pay a big price," Mr Trump said.
"I have cancelled all meetings with Iranian Officials until the senseless killings of protesters STOPS.
Since demonstrations began in Tehran on 29 December, when shopkeepers staged a strike against the collapse of the Iranian currency to an all-time low, protests have spread across the country.
The death toll from the unrest climbed to 2003 people on Tuesday, according to US-based rights group HRANA.
The figure included 1,850 protesters, 135 government-affiliated individuals, nine people aged under 18 and nine non-protester civilians, the group said.
Iranian authorities blocked internet and telephone connections on January 9 as the protests intensified.
Phone connection was briefly restored on Tuesday, allowing witnesses to the protests to share reports with news outlets of a heavy security presence in central Tehran, burned-out government buildings and smashed ATMs.
Anti-riot police officers, wearing helmets and body armour, carried batons, shields, shotguns and tear-gas launchers, witnesses reported.
The demonstrations pose potentially the largest threat to Iran's regime since the 1979 Islamic Revolution - when former supreme leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini installed a Shia theocracy.
Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei criticised the US and praised the Iranians who took part in pro-government demonstrations on state TV on Monday.
"This was a warning to American politicians to stop their deceit and not rely on traitorous mercenaries," he said.
Iran's economy has struggled in recent years due to rising inflation and pressure from US sanctions imposed under the first Trump administration in 2018. The UN reimposed sanctions in September.
Mr Trump announced on Monday that any countries doing business with Iran will face 25% tariffs from the US.
The country suffered further blows during the 12-day war, which saw America and Israel strike the country's nuclear facilities in June.
Editorial Context & Insight
Original analysis and synthesis with multi-source verification
Methodology
This article includes original analysis and synthesis from our editorial team, cross-referenced with multiple primary sources to ensure depth, accuracy, and balanced perspective. All claims are fact-checked and verified before publication.
Editorial Team
Senior Editor
Marcus Thompson
Specializes in World coverage
Quality Assurance
Associate Editor
Fact-checking and editorial standards compliance






