
GENEVA, Jan 19, 2026 (BSS/AFP) - Iran appears to be using executions "as a
tool of state intimidation", the United Nations said Monday, as it denounced
a jump in capital punishment globally in 2025.
The Islamic republic reportedly executed 1,500 people last year, UN rights
chief Volker Turk said in a statement.
"The scale and pace of executions suggest a systematic use of capital
punishment as a tool of state intimidation, with disproportionate impact on
ethnic minorities and migrants," he warned.
The spike in executions in Iran -- which according to rights groups is the
world's most prolific executioner after China -- had contributed to "an
alarming increase" in the use of capital punishment worldwide last year, Turk
said.
While the overall global trend continues to move towards universal abolition
of the death penalty, Iran and a handful of other states such as Saudi Arabia
and the United States saw executions surge.
Many of those executions were "for offences not meeting the 'most serious
crimes' threshold required under international law", Turk said, also
criticising "the continued execution of people convicted of crimes committed
as children, as well as persistent secrecy around executions".
- Public executions -
The sharp hike had especially been driven by a growing number of executions
for drug-related offences not involving intentional killing.
"This is not only incompatible with international law, but also ineffective
in deterring crime," Turk insisted.
In the case of Iran, at least 47 percent of executions in 2025 had been
related to drug offences, the rights office said.
The percentage was even higher in Saudi Arabia, where 78 percent of the 356
people reportedly executed there last year were sentenced for drug-related
crimes.
"At least two among those executed in Saudi Arabia were convicted of crimes
committed as children," Turk pointed out.
In the United States, meanwhile, 47 executions were carried out in 2025 --
the highest number in 16 years, the rights office said, stressing that the
broadened use of gas asphyxiation for executions there raised "serious
concerns of torture or cruel punishment".
It also highlighted the ongoing public executions in Afghanistan, "in breach
of international law".
At least 24 people were meanwhile executed in Somalia last year and 17 in
Singapore, it said, adding that secrecy around the death penalty in China and
North Korea made it "difficult to obtain accurate numbers".
And in Israel, the rights office pointed to a series of legislative proposals
seeking to expand the use of the death penalty with mandatory capital
punishment provisions applying exclusively to Palestinians.
"This raises serious concerns about violation of their due process rights, as
well as other breaches of international human rights law and international
humanitarian law," it said, also slamming executions carried out by Hamas in
Gaza as "blatant human rights violations".
"The death penalty is not an effective crime-control tool, and it can lead to
the execution of innocent people," Turk said, reiterating his call for all
states to "move towards full abolition".