CNN â An Iranian man who was detained in connection to anti-government protests and reportedly sentenced to death has been released on bail, according to a rights group and Iranian state media.
Erfan Soltani, 26, was arrested last month as demonstrations roiled the country, sparking a violent crackdown by authorities. He was detained on January 10 at his home in Fardis, a city about 25 miles west of Tehran, and charged with âassembly and collusion against the countryâs internal securityâ as well as âpropaganda activitiesâ against the regime, according to the state broadcaster IRIB.
Following his arrest, the US State Department and one of Soltaniâs relatives said Iranian authorities planned to execute Soltani, but Iranâs judiciary dismissed those reports as âfabricated news,â according to IRIB.
Soltaniâs family later said his execution was postponed, and US President Donald Trump said he had received assurances âon good authorityâ that there was no plan for executions in Iran amid fears for Soltaniâs fate. Trump has warned Iran against executing protesters, saying the US would âtake strong action.â
On Saturday, Soltani was released on bail, according to Hengaw, a Norway-based human rights organization. Iranian state media outlet Press TV also confirmed Soltaniâs release in a post on Telegram.
Soltaniâs precarious fate became one of the most high profile cases internationally during the huge anti-government protests that convulsed Iran last month. Iranâs security forces responded with a brutal crackdown as well as a lengthy internet shutdown nationwide.
On January 19, CNN reported that Soltani was in good physical health and had been able to meet with his family, according to Hengaw and one of his relatives.
Soltaniâs relative, identified as Somayeh, said Soltani is an âincredibly kind and warm-hearted young manâ who has âalways fought for the freedom of Iranâ in an interview with CNN last month.
More than 6,400 protesters have been killed and over 1,000 arrested since the protests broke out last month, according to recent reports by the US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), which added a further 11,280 deaths are under review. CNN cannot independently verify HRANAâs numbers.
Despite the internet shutdown, details of the brutal crackdown continued to emerge with witnesses, human rights activists and medical professionals telling CNN that security forces unleashed widespread violence against protesters.
Iranâs supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has acknowledged that thousands of Iranians were killed during more than two weeks of unrest â but blamed some of the deaths on Trump, who he said âopenly encouragedâ the protesters by promising them US âmilitary support.â
As the protests raged, Trump encouraged Iranians to keep up the demonstrations and âtake overâ the countryâs institutions, assuring them that âhelp is on its way.â However, no military action came during the protests or subsequent crackdown.
Instead, Trump is now weighing a major strike on Iran after negotiations about limiting the nationâs nuclear program and ballistic missile production failed to make progress, people familiar with the matter told CNN. The US has also built up its military presence in the region.
In a post to Truth Social Wednesday, Trump demanded Iran come to the table to negotiate âa fair and equitable deal â NO NUCLEAR WEAPONS,â warning the next US attack on the country âwill be far worseâ than the one it carried out last summer against three of Iranâs nuclear sites.
Iranâs Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told CNN on Sunday he is âconfident that we can achieve a dealâ with the US on Tehranâs weapons program. However, Iranâs supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, struck a defiant tone, warning a US attack would face a strong retaliation.
âThe Americans should know that if they initiate a war, this time it will be a regional war,â he told a crowd at Tehranâs Imam Khomeini mosque Sunday.
Iran has one of the worldâs highest execution rates and has previously put multiple protesters to death after periods of large-scale demonstrations and unrest.
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