The United States on September 18 issued a new round of sanctions on 12 individuals who it said were tied to Iran’s "ongoing, violent repression” inside and outside the country.
Both the Treasury Department and the State Department noted that the sanctions come two years after the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in police custody and a crackdown on the protests that followed.
Amini had been detained by Iran's "morality police" for allegedly improperly wearing her hijab, or head scarf. Within hours of her detention, she was hospitalized in a coma and died a few days later.
Since Amini’s “senseless killing in the custody of Iran’s so-called Morality Police, the Iranian regime has continued to systematically violate the human rights of the Iranian people,” said State Department spokesman Matthew Miller in a statement.
The protest that followed her death against the regime’s mandatory hijab laws sparked the Women, Life, Freedom movement, which the government responded to “with brutal suppression, including murder, torture, sexual violence, and other acts of repression,” Miller said.
SEE ALSO: Iranian Women Still Targets Of 'Brutal Repression' Since Amini DeathBradley T. Smith, acting undersecretary of the Treasury for terrorism and financial intelligence, said in a statement that despite the Iranian people’s peaceful calls for reform, Iran’s leaders have “doubled down on the regime’s well-worn tactics of violence and coercion.”
The sanctions target members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), Iranian prison officials, "and those responsible for lethal operations overseas," the statement said.
Iran's security forces, including the IRGC and its Basij paramilitary force, led the crackdown on protests in cities all over Iran, the department said. It added that IRGC units used lethal force against protesters, arrested people for political expression, and attempted to intimidate the Iranian people through violence.
Among the 12 targeted by the new sanctions are Hamid Khorramdel, who serves as the commander of the IRGC’s Fatah Corps of Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province, which the Treasury Department said suppressed demontrations in 2019 and 2022 by arresting and detaining protesters.
Also named is Mustafa Bazvand, commander of the IRGC and Basij Resistance Force in Mazandaran Province’s Babolsar county. Forces under Bazvand’s command led the regime’s crackdown in Babolsar in October 2022, killing at least one individual and arresting several journalists covering the violence, the department said.
The Treasury Department designated the IRGC, Basij, and Law Enforcement Forces (LEF) for sanctions in June 2011 in connection with human rights abuses and violent actions in the wake of Iran's disputed 2009 presidential election.
The sanctions freeze any assets the individuals hold in U.S. jurisdiction and bar U.S. persons from dealing with them.