Former Iranian prisoners reveal torture horrors as regime kills protesters on sight during crackdown
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As the flames of protest ignite across Iran, the response from security forces has grown increasingly severe, and former political prisoners are sounding the alarm over the disturbing realities concealed from public view. The turmoil evident on the streets, they warn, is only the tip of the iceberg, with far graver abuses taking place behind the impenetrable walls of prisons.

Three individuals who have endured detention under the Iranian regime shared their harrowing experiences with Fox News Digital. Their testimonies reveal a chilling system designed not merely to punish those who dissent but to utterly crush their spirit through solitary confinement, brutal beatings, medical neglect, and the looming threat of execution. Spanning nearly two decades, from the 2009 protests to the recent “Woman, Life, Freedom” movement and the current unrest, their stories highlight a persistent and escalating pattern of human rights violations.

Among these voices is Maryam Shariatmadari, a prominent figure in the “Girls of Revolution Street” movement, which boldly challenged Iran’s compulsory hijab laws. In March 2018, she was condemned to a year in prison for allegedly “encouraging corruption by removing her hijab.”

A woman with a mock-up of a gunshot bullet wound on her forehead looks on during a rally in Rome

In a recent interview, Shariatmadari remarked on the vast scale of the ongoing protests, suggesting that the regime is struggling to manage the sheer volume of demonstrators. “According to eyewitness accounts, the suppressive forces of the Islamic Republic are executing wounded protesters on the spot,” she revealed. “This is unprecedented in the past 47 years and suggests that the number of detainees has overwhelmed the capacity of the Islamic Republic, leading them to kill without trial.”

As images from around the world, such as a protester in Rome symbolically bearing a mock gunshot wound, underscore the global resonance of these protests, the stories emerging from Iran paint a stark picture of a government increasingly resorting to lethal measures to maintain its hold on power. The situation demands urgent attention from the international community to address these human rights atrocities.

“According to the testimonies of eyewitnesses, the suppressive forces of the Islamic Republic … are delivering ‘final shots’ to wounded protesters, killing them on the spot,” she said. “This has been unprecedented over the past 47 years and indicates that the number of detainees has become so large that the Islamic Republic no longer has the capacity to hold them and is killing them without any form of trial.”

She said that while detainees in earlier uprisings were transferred to prisons or unofficial “safe houses,” authorities expanded detention during the 2022 “Woman, Life, Freedom” protests to schools, ambulances and food transport vehicles.

“They used ambulances and food transport vehicles to detain protesters, something I believe to be unprecedented in human history,” Shariatmadari said.

Maryam Shariatmadari is detained by Iranian security forces after removing her hijab in protest against mandatory veiling laws during the "Girls of Revolution Street" demonstrations in Tehran. Shariatmadari was later sentenced to one year in prison for what authorities described as "encouraging corruption by removing her hijab."

Maryam Shariatmadari was detained by Iranian security forces after removing her hijab in protest against mandatory veiling laws during the “Girls of Revolution Street” demonstrations in Tehran. Shariatmadari was later sentenced to one year in prison for what authorities described as “encouraging corruption by removing her hijab.” (Fox News)

Inside detention facilities, she described systematic abuse.

“These include beatings, transfers to prisons without separation based on the type of offense, and the deliberate incitement of other inmates to harass and abuse us,” she said.

One of her most traumatic experiences occurred during interrogation.

“I was ordered to remove my clothes and remain completely naked for a body search while cameras were present,” Shariatmadari said. “I knew that men were watching me, and I could hear their voices.”

She also recalled being denied urgent medical care after an injury.

“Only after approximately 24 hours was I taken to a hospital to undergo surgery,” she said. “I believe this happened as a result of media pressure and public support.”

Iranians attend an anti-government protest in Tehran, Iran, on Jan. 9, 2026.

Iranians attend an anti-government protest in Tehran, Iran, on Jan. 9, 2026. (UGC via AP)

Eight hours a day, blindfolded

Shariatmadari’s husband, Mehdi Ghadimi, a freelance journalist who worked with reformist newspapers Etemad and Shargh, was arrested in January 2023 during protests and taken to an undisclosed location. He spent nearly his entire detention in solitary confinement.

“I was interrogated twice daily, morning and afternoon, for eight hours with my eyes blindfolded,” Ghadimi said.

In the final days of his detention, he was transferred to a shared cell, where he encountered detainees from across Iranian society.

“I encountered students, workers, technical specialists and others who had been arrested during the Woman, Life, Freedom movement,” he said.

According to Ghadimi, detainees accused of supporting the Pahlavi dynasty were beaten more severely.

“Because their slogans and symbols supported the Pahlavi dynasty, they were beaten far more than the others,” he said.

Based on his experience, he warned that current detainees are likely to face even harsher treatment.

“I can only imagine that this time all detainees will face similarly brutal treatment,” Ghadimi said, adding that Iran’s judiciary chief has publicly signaled a hard line.

Ghadimi, who fled the country in 2024, also cited figures circulating among activists claiming well over the 2,600 reported, likely dwarfing that number. He said the number of detainees is likely far higher than the 10,000 reported.

protesters chant and march in Tehran

In this photo obtained by The Associated Press, protesters chant slogans during an anti-government protest in Tehran, Iran, Thursday, Jan. 8, 2026. (UGC via AP) (UGC via AP)

“On the other side of those bars is hell”

Shabnam Madadzadeh, who was imprisoned during the 2009 uprising, said watching the current protests has revived memories of extreme brutality and raised fears of mass executions.

“What immediately comes to my mind is the regime’s sheer brutality in torture and killing,” Madadzadeh said.

She said detention facilities were already overflowing during the 2009 protests.

“There was no space left for detainees. Even the solitary cells were overflowing with people,” she said.

Madadzadeh recalled interrogators accusing nearly everyone arrested of links to the Mujahedin-e Khalq and described torture and beatings “to the point of killing.”

One threat made to her during interrogation still haunts her.

“He told me: ‘If we are going to be overthrown, we will kill all of you. We will leave no one alive,’” she said.

She warned that the current internet blackout has heightened the danger for detainees.

“We truly do not know what level of brutality is currently taking place inside the prisons,” Madadzadeh said, adding that information reaching her suggests the regime is seeking to carry out executions quickly.

Citing Iran’s past, she warned of the risk of mass killings similar to the 1988 executions of political prisoners.

“Today, at a moment when the regime is on the brink of collapse, there is a real danger that such a massacre could be repeated,” she said.

Madadzadeh said young detainees are likely facing forced confessions, mock executions and threats of sexual violence.

“Whatever I do to you, no one will hear your voice,” an interrogator once told her, she recalled.

She also emphasized the suffering of families searching for loved ones.

“Families are moving between detention centers, prisons, morgues and cemeteries,” she said. “This uncertainty itself is the greatest form of torture.”

As the protests continue, all three former prisoners said the outside world must not look away.

Shabnam Madadzadeh, a former political prisoner detained during Iran’s 2009 uprising

Shabnam Madadzadeh, a former political prisoner detained during Iran’s 2009 uprising, later spoke publicly about torture, solitary confinement and threats of execution inside the Islamic Republic’s prisons, warning that detainees during the current protests face extreme and immediate danger. (Fox News)

“The first thing I expect the free world to understand is the true voice of the people inside Iran,” Shariatmadari said. “The people of Iran are united in their demand for regime change and want to restore Iran to its former dignity, a dignity in which human rights and human worth were respected.”

Ghadimi echoed that warning.

“Without a doubt, when the regime displays such open violence in the streets, even worse atrocities occur behind prison walls,” he said. “I can only imagine that this time all detainees will face similarly brutal treatment.”

For Madadzadeh, the danger is immediate.

“The world must respond decisively to this brutality,” she said. “Every minute of delay costs lives.”

She called for concrete international action.

Demonstrators burn pictures of Iran's Supreme Leader

Demonstrators burn pictures of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei outside the Iranian embassy during a rally in support of nationwide protests in Iran, in London, Jan. 12, 2026.  (Toby Melville/Reuters)

“Force the regime to allow independent visits to prisons and to the secret detention centers run by the IRGC and the Ministry of Intelligence,” Madadzadeh said. “Lives depend on it.”

Together, their testimonies paint a stark picture of Iran’s prisons as the hidden front line of repression and a warning that what remains unseen may be even more deadly than what is already visible in the streets.

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