The U.N. human rights office told Reuters on Thursday it understood that the number of detainees was very high and they were at risk of torture and unfair trials. Mai Soto, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Iran, said the thousands of detainees included doctors and healthcare workers.
UNOFFICIAL DETENTION CENTRES, THOUSANDS OF ARRESTS
Two Iranian officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed to Reuters that thousands of arrests had been carried out in the past few days.
They said many detainees were being held in unofficial detention sites, "including warehouses and other improvised locations", and the judiciary was acting quickly to process cases.
Iranian authorities declined to comment publicly on the number of arrests, or say where the detainees were being held. Authorities said on January 21 that 3,117 were killed in the unrest, including 2,427 civilians and security personnel.
Amnesty International reported on January 23 that "sweeping arbitrary detentions, enforced disappearances, bans on gatherings and attacks to silence families of victims mark the suffocating militarisation imposed in Iran by the Islamic Republic’s authorities in the aftermath of protest massacres".
Arrests are continuing across the sprawling country, from small towns to the capital, witnesses and activists said.
"They arrested my brother and my cousin a few days ago,” said a resident of northwestern Iran who asked not to be named.
"They stormed our home in plainclothes, searched the entire house, and took all the laptops and mobile phones. They warned us that if we make this public, they will arrest all of us."
FAMILIES FRANTIC OVER MISSING YOUNG PEOPLE
More than 60% of Iran's 92 million people are under the age of 30. Although the latest protests were snuffed out, clerical rulers will eventually risk more demonstrations if the heavy repression persists, according to rights activists.
Three Iranian lawyers told Reuters that dozens of families had approached them in recent days seeking help for relatives who had been detained.
"Many families are coming to us asking for legal assistance for their detained children,” one lawyer said. "Some of those arrested are under 18 - boys and girls."
Human rights groups have long said Iranian security organs use informal detention sites during periods of serious unrest, holding detainees without access to lawyers or family members for extended periods.
Five doctors told Reuters that protesters wounded during protests had been removed from hospitals by security forces and dozens of doctors had been summoned by authorities or warned against helping injured demonstrators.
Prison authorities denied holding wounded protesters.
Families of five detainees said the lack of information about their whereabouts itself had become a form of punishment.
"We don’t know where they are, whether they are still alive, or when we’ll see them,” said an Iranian man whose daughter was rounded up. "They took my child as if they were arresting a terrorist."
Writing by Parisa Hafezi; additional reporting by Olivia Le Poidevin in Geneva; editing by Mark Heinrich
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