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How Iran’s legal system transforms law into an instrument of fear is one of the most pressing human rights concerns of our time. This video investigates how courts, security forces, and restrictive legislation in Iran operate as a unified system of repression rather than a framework for justice. Through executions, closed-door trials, and the criminalization of peaceful protest, Iran’s authorities have built a legal structure designed to intimidate communities, silence dissent, and maintain state power. International human rights mechanisms, including United Nations experts and fact-finding missions, consistently refer to these abuses as systematic, widespread, and deliberate. Understanding this pattern is essential for grasping how repression in Iran is not accidental but embedded in the country’s legal and institutional design. One of the most alarming elements is the excessive use of the death penalty. Iran carries out executions at one of the highest rates in the world. Many of these sentences follow trials that fail to meet basic fair-trial standards, sometimes involving individuals who were minors at the time of the alleged offense. Human rights experts have repeatedly stated that the death penalty is used intentionally to instill fear in the population and deter opposition. Revolutionary Courts form the core of this machinery. These courts frequently rely on broadly defined national security charges to prosecute journalists, activists, and protesters. Proceedings are often held in secret, where coerced confessions replace evidence, and defendants are denied access to legal representation. This opacity erodes any claim to justice and reinforces a climate of fear. During major protest waves, Iranian authorities respond with lethal force, firing live ammunition at unarmed crowds. Hundreds of protesters and bystanders have been killed during these crackdowns. Afterwards, survivors and grieving families face intimidation, harassment, and prosecution for seeking accountability. This practice extends the repression from the streets into homes and communities. Iran’s gender apartheid system also uses law as a tool of control, particularly through compulsory hijab laws and aggressive morality policing. The death of Mahsa (Jina) Amini exposed the deadly consequences of this state-enforced control over women’s bodies, dignity, and autonomy. These laws turn daily life into a space of constant surveillance for women across the country. Ethnic and religious minorities endure intersecting layers of discrimination, including disproportionate executions and targeted national security charges. These practices deepen systemic inequality and further entrench fear among marginalized groups. United Nations bodies continue to highlight that without independent investigations, accountability, and serious legal reform, Iran’s cycle of repression will persist. The legal system is not merely failing to provide justice. It is actively weaponized against the public. This video breaks down these issues to help viewers understand how Iran’s legal system has become a central tool of fear, coercion, and human rights violations. Subscribe for more investigative human rights coverage. #IranHumanRights #IranProtests #MahsaAmini #HumanRights #PressFreedom #StopExecutionsInIran #WomensRights #MiddleEastNews #UNReports #RevolutionaryCourts #FreedomOfSpeech #AccountabilityNow #InvestigativeJournalism #RuleOfLaw