Survivor of Israel’s Attack on Iran’s Evin Prison Describes a ‘Slow Death’ After 12-Day War
- Israeli Air Force launched hundreds of sorties, leading to significant destruction of Iran's Fordow and Natanz nuclear facilities during a 12-day conflict, resulting in over 900 Iranian deaths, including military leaders and nuclear scientists.
- Israel reported 28 deaths, along with over 3,000 wounded and 9,000 displaced, while Iran fired over 500 missiles targeting civilians.
- Iran condemned the strikes as aggression, and human rights groups raised concerns about civilian impacts and regional stability.
- U.S. Gen. Dan Caine noted that Iran's Isfahan facility, believed to contain 60% of its enriched uranium, was not fully penetrated by strikes.
38 Articles
38 Articles
Reza Khandan's life has been damaged since the detention of Evin of Tehran, where he was held, was hit by an Israeli air attack on 23 June. On the following night, the activist for human rights at the age of 60 – arrested in 2024 for the support granted by the “Women, Life, Liberty” movement – was transferred to another prison in the south of the capital where, according to family statements, conditions are difficult to support, writes The Guard…
Italian journalist Cecilia Sala (29) was released earlier this year from the high-security Evin prison in Tehran, which was recently bombed by Israel. "After the Israeli-American attack, repression threatens to worsen."
Shirin Ebadi: Torture has increased in Evin Prison following Israel's attack
Located in the Shahr-e Rey district north of Tehran, Evin Prison is known as Iran's largest prison and notorious for inhumane practices. According to Iran’s judiciary spokesperson Asghar Jahangir, at least 71 people were killed by the strike, including staff, soldiers, prisoners and members of visiting families. Footage released by the Iranian judiciary showed prison walls collapsed, ceilings caved in, and debris being cleared by heavy machinery…
Survivor of Israel's attack on Iran's notorious Evin prison describes 'slow death'
'The bombing by the U.S. and Israel didn't kill us. Then the Islamic Republic brought us to a place that will practically kill us,' said a jailed Iranian dissident, who narrowly escaped death when Israeli missiles struck Tehran's Evin Prison
Sayeh Seydal, an Iranian dissident incarcerated for a breath of death when Israeli missiles hit Evin's prison in Tehran.
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