Iran Executed 2,159 People in 2025, Taliban 6, Says Amnesty International

Amnesty International said global executions in 2025 reached their highest level in 44 years, with the Taliban carrying out six executions in Afghanistan.

Amnesty International said global executions in 2025 reached their highest level in 44 years, with the Taliban carrying out six executions in Afghanistan.
According to Amnesty International’s annual report on death sentences and executions published on Monday, at least 2,707 people were executed in 17 countries in 2025, the highest figure recorded since the organisation began tracking executions in 1981.
Amnesty International said the Taliban carried out six executions during the year.
The organisation stated that all executions were conducted publicly, with at least one death sentence issued on charges of “blasphemy”.
Amnesty International also reported that authorities in Iran executed at least 2,159 people in 2025; more than double the figure recorded in 2024 and the largest contributor to the global rise in executions.
The report said Saudi Arabia increased executions to at least 356 cases and made extensive use of the death penalty for drug-related offences.
Last year, executions rose in Kuwait from six to 17, in Egypt from 13 to 23, in Singapore from nine to 17 and in the United States from 25 to 47.
Overall, the number of recorded executions worldwide increased by 78 per cent compared with the previous year.
In 2024, at least 1,518 executions had been documented.
The figures do not include thousands of executions Amnesty believes continue to take place in China.
Drug-Related Executions
Amnesty said hardline anti-drug policies were among the main drivers behind the rise in executions.
According to the report, nearly half of all recorded executions in 2025, 1,257 cases, were linked to drug-related offences, including in Iran, China, Singapore, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait.
Iran accounted for the highest number, with 998 drug-related executions.
The Taliban does not carry out executions for drug trafficking offences.
Agnes Callamard, Amnesty International’s Secretary General, said: “A shameless minority are weaponizing the death penalty to instill fear, crush dissent and punish marginalized communities.”
She added: “From China, Iran, North Korea and Saudi Arabia to Yemen, Kuwait, Singapore and the USA, this shameless minority are weaponizing the death penalty to instil fear, crush dissent and show the strength state institutions have over disadvantaged people and marginalized communities.”
Countries Carrying Out Executions Remain a Minority
Amnesty International stressed that despite the increase in executions, countries that continue to use the death penalty remain in the minority.
The United States, Iran, China, Somalia, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, North Korea, Egypt, Vietnam and Yemen have remained among the countries carrying out executions for five consecutive years.
At the same time, Amnesty International said the global movement towards abolishing the death penalty continues. When the organisation launched its campaign against capital punishment in 1977, only 16 countries had abolished the death penalty, compared with 113 today.
According to the report, Vietnam abolished the death penalty for eight crimes, including drug transportation, bribery and embezzlement, while Gambia removed capital punishment for murder, treason and certain crimes against the state.
Amnesty International also highlighted efforts in Kyrgyzstan, Lebanon and Nigeria to prevent the return or expansion of the death penalty.
Executions Under Taliban Rule
According to Taliban statements, the group has executed at least 12 people in the provinces of Farah, Laghman, Ghazni, Jowzjan, Badghis, Nimruz and Khost during nearly five years of renewed rule, often in front of hundreds of spectators.
During the Taliban’s previous rule in the late 1990s, public executions and stonings were among the defining features of its government.
Taliban officials refer to executions as “qisas” [retributive justice] and say such punishments are carried out under Islamic law and are necessary to prevent “serious crimes and murder” in Afghanistan.