Masked Iranian soldiers and government employees preparing to publicly hang a condemned man in Shiraz.

AN Iranian woman is facing execution after allegedly killing 11 elderly husbands over 22 years in a chilling bid to inherit their wealth.

Kulthum Akbari, 56, admitted to a serial murder spree that went undetected for more than two decades.

Masked Iranian soldiers and government employees preparing to publicly hang a condemned man in Shiraz.
Iran is the world’s second-most prolific executioner after China, according to Amnesty International (stock)Credit: AFP
Photo of Kolsum Akbari, a woman accused of poisoning 11 husbands.
Kulthum Akbari, 56, has admitted to a serial murder spreeCredit: supplied

Prosecutors claim she used diabetes drugs, sedatives, and in some cases, industrial alcohol to fatally poison her spouses.

She would then transfer inherited property and dowries into her daughter’s name, reports Gulf News.

The killings began in 2000 and continued until 2023, when the suspicious death of her final victim, 82-year-old Gholamreza Babaei, led to her arrest.

Babaei’s son reportedly became suspicious after a family friend disclosed that his own father had previously been married to a woman named Kulthum who had tried to poison him.

When the family recognised her as Babaei’s recent wife, they alerted police.

The murders spanned across multiple cities in Iran’s northern Mazandaran province, including Sari, Neka, Mahmoudabad, Babol, and Qaemshahr.

Under interrogation, Akbari told investigators: “I don’t know how many I killed. Maybe it was 13 or 15 people. I don’t remember exactly.”

Akbari, dubbed by Iranian media as the ‘Black Widow,’ eventually confessed to murdering 11 men and attempting to kill another, according to court documents.

Masih Nemati survived Akbari’s poisoning attempt after drinking contaminated syrup in 2020.

Some of the confirmed victims include Mirahmad Omrani, 69, who died a month after their 2013 marriage, Esmail Bakhshi, 62, who died two months after their 2016 marriage, along with Ganjali Hamzei, 83, who died 43 days after their marriage.

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Akbari’s first marriage took place when she was aged 18 with a man who, according to her relatives, suffered from mental health issues.

In her second marriage, she lived for years with a much older man and reportedly suffered beatings from both him and her stepsons.

After his death, she attended women’s gatherings, where she is said to have publicly spoken about her desire to marry elderly, lonely men.

“The defendant was skilled at covering her tracks,” prosecutors told the court. “Most of the victims appeared to have died of natural causes due to their age and chronic illnesses, allowing her to continue for decades without raising suspicion.”

Over 45 individuals have joined the case as plaintiffs.

Akbari faces 11 charges of premeditated murder and one charge of attempted murder.

Her defence argued that she should undergo a mental health assessment.

But plaintiffs rejected the claim, with one victim’s family member reportedly stating: “Such a skillful plan that deceived many prominent families cannot be the work of an insane person.”

During the hearing on Wednesday in the Sari Revolutionary Court, the families of four victims demanded that Akbari be sentenced to death – a punishment legal in Iran since 1979.

A verdict is set to be announced after the final hearings have taken place.

The case has shocked Iran, with Akbari becoming a popular topic of conversation and even inspiring a character on a popular show on state TV that aired during Persian New Year holidays.

Victims’ families expressed frustration that the case has become a target of jokes on social media.

A family member of one victim said: “This incident was difficult and terrifying for us because the victims of this crime were our fathers.

“Now instead of witnessing swift justice and a thorough investigation of this case, we are seeing jokes that deepen our grief.”

It comes as Iran has executed a nuclear scientist accused of passing sensitive information to Israel’s Mossad amid an intensifying crackdown on alleged foreign spies.

Roozbeh Vadi reportedly worked as a nuclear expert at the Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran.

Meanwhile, one of Iran’s longest-serving prisoners recently revealed how the execution rate has spiralled in the last month in a harrowing letter written behind bars.

Saeed Masouri, who has spent 25 years behind bars, wrote an emotional letter, which was smuggled out of the notorious Ghezel Hesar prison in Iran and shared with The Sun by Iran Human Rights Monitor.

A blindfolded man about to be hanged is held by law enforcement officials; the victim's family forgave him.
Pictures show a killer named only as Balal who was spared by the victim’s mother moments before his execution in 2014

Death penalty in Iran

Since 1979, the death penalty has been legal in Iran.

Over 200 acts – including murder, rape, adultery and sodomy – carry capital punishment.

The majority of people sentenced to death are convicted on drug trafficking charges.

The primary method of execution is hanging, with the condemned individual hung from a crane or a stool with a noose around their neck.

While executions most often take place in prison complexes, they can also occur publicly at the location of the crime.

Iran executed at least 901 people in 2024, according to the UN.

The year before, 853 people were reportedly executed – a number that accounted for 74 percent of all recorded executions worldwide, according to Amnesty International.

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