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Why Is Iran’s Electricity Industry Facing a Crisis?

Despite possessing the world’s second-largest natural gas reserves and one of the largest fossil fuel resources, Iran theoretically should not be facing an electricity crisis. However, the reality for millions of Iranian citizens is quite different: widespread power outages, industrial shutdowns, reduced production, and growing public dissatisfaction. This raises the question of how a country with such vast energy resources has become unable to supply its own electricity needs.

The answer lies in a combination of structural corruption, rent-seeking, chronic mismanagement, and the political priorities of the Iranian regime.

Power Outages to Resume in Iran Starting in January

According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), Iran has faced a widening gap between electricity generation and consumption in recent years. In the summer of 2023, the country’s electricity shortfall reached approximately 12,000 megawatts, and some domestic estimates for 2025 and 2026 suggest that the gap could exceed 20,000 megawatts. This is despite Iran’s officially reported installed power generation capacity of about 95,000 megawatts. Due to aging equipment, underinvestment, and technical problems, however, the actual operational capacity has fallen to around 70,000 to 75,000 megawatts.

One of the primary causes of this crisis is the lack of effective investment in electricity infrastructure over the past two decades. While the country’s electricity demand has grown by 4% to 6% annually, many power plant projects have either never been completed or have entered operation only after years of delay. The Sirik Power Plant in Hormozgan Province is a notable example. The project was intended to become one of the country’s largest combined-cycle power plants but remained stalled for years due to financial, managerial, and implementation problems.

The Aging Structure of Iran’s Electricity Industry

Meanwhile, billions of dollars in oil revenue that could have been used to modernize the country’s electricity infrastructure were instead directed toward military and security institutions and opaque projects rather than investment in the energy sector. As a result, a significant share of Iran’s electricity is still generated by power plants that, in some cases, are more than 30 to 40 years old. According to official statistics, the average efficiency of Iran’s thermal power plants is approximately 39%, a figure that significantly lags behind modern power plants elsewhere in the world.

In addition to aging infrastructure, Iran’s electricity transmission and distribution network faces serious challenges. Some reports estimate that power losses across the grid are around 13%, meaning that a substantial portion of generated electricity is lost before reaching consumers. In many developed countries, this figure is below 6%.

Cryptocurrency mining has also become one of the most controversial issues affecting the electricity sector. Iran’s Ministry of Energy has repeatedly stated that part of the electricity shortage is caused by cryptocurrency mining operations. However, the key question remains: how did thousands of mining machines enter the country and begin operating on such a large scale despite international sanctions? Numerous media reports over recent years have indicated that large cryptocurrency mining facilities affiliated with military institutions have benefited from subsidized electricity and special permits. These operations have generated substantial profits for powerful organizations, while ordinary citizens have borne the cost through power outages and rising prices.

Meanwhile, renewable energy continues to play only a minor role in Iran’s electricity sector. Despite the country’s vast solar and wind potential, renewable and nuclear energy combined account for less than 7% of the country’s electricity generation. This comes as many neighboring countries have made substantial investments in clean energy in recent years.

Therefore, Iran’s electricity crisis is neither a natural occurrence nor the result of increased public consumption. Rather, it is the product of years of corruption, rent-seeking, mismanagement, and the allocation of resources to priorities other than the development of national infrastructure. Today’s power outages are, in reality, the price of the decisions and corruption that have accumulated within the country’s energy management system over past decades.

Concept of Escalating Bread Prices in Chain of Economic and Political Hyper-Crises

Crises in Iran under the rule of the mullahs are interconnected like links in a chain, forming a comprehensive hyper-crisis engulfing the country. A brief look at the headlines highlighted by state-run media

The heaviest weight of the escalating crisis, which has not stopped for a single day over the past decade, lies within the economic hyper-crisis. One must not overlook a constant reality: the economic crisis is always the legitimate offspring of the political crisis—a policy built on deception, lies, theft, and empty promises that define the current establishment, where its government resorts to raising wages by 60% while increasing bread prices by 140%.

Bread Prices Rise Again in Tehran; Fresh Pressure on Household Budgets

In this context, the state-run Tose’e Irani newspaper published a report on June 30, 2026, exposing the futility of these policies:

“The minimum wage for the current year was set at 16,625,550 tomans (Approximately $91), while the minimum basic subsistence basket for workers was estimated at around 45 million tomans (Approximately $257) during the March 14, 2026, meeting of the Supreme Labor Council. Consequently, the approved minimum wage covers only about 37% of the subsistence basket cost… Many working-class families rely on bread, cheese, eggs, and tomatoes to meet their minimum food needs… The latest central bank data shows that bread recorded an inflation rate exceeding 140% in May 2026, capturing the highest inflation rate among all basic commodities.”

Indicators of Collapse and Erosion of Purchasing Power

 The data published in the state newspaper provides a clear picture of the depth of the livelihood crisis in Iran. This crisis is no longer limited to declining purchasing power; it has transformed into a direct threat to the most basic elements of human survival. When the minimum wage covers only 37% of the cost of the subsistence basket, it means the vast majority of workers enter their daily life cycle with a permanent and chronic financial deficit, which can only be compensated for by eliminating the essential needs for staying alive.

Consequently, bread, which for decades represented the last resort on the tables of low-income groups—has become a luxury item difficult to obtain. The official admission that “many working-class families have restricted their food to bread, cheese, eggs, and tomatoes” proves that the tables of millions of citizens had already been reduced to the bare minimum before this wave. Now, with inflation exceeding 140% in bread prices, this minimum itself is threatened with erasure and non-existence.

This catastrophic situation is the product of chronic economic and political policies based on inefficiency, organized structural corruption, and the theft of the people’s sustenance. The promotional wage increases, which coincide with frantic leaps in the price indices of the most vital food items by multiples of that percentage, are nothing but a desperate attempt to hide the real and resounding collapse of purchasing power. Thus, rampant inflation in bread prices becomes a milestone of the collapse of food security, the deepening of poverty, and the widening of the vast chasm between the regime’s official promises and the bitter reality experienced by millions of Iranian families.

Future Outlook

When people are deprived of bread, the resulting vacuum will be filled by two forces that are seemingly contradictory but flow into the same channel: the first is a sequential multiplication of crises of corruption, crime, and social collapse, and the second is explosion, anger, and an inevitable uprising that cannot be avoided. The consequences of high bread prices and the stark imbalance between wages and the inflation rates of basic items will inevitably lead to these two compounded effects.

There are no horizons for the mullahs’ regime to avoid this fate unless the structural framework is completely overthrown from its foundations, allowing a new system that respects human rights to emerge from its rubble. This dark horizon for the Iran’s regime is what even its official media warns against, quoting the executive secretary of the “Worker’s House” (Khaneh Kargar) in eastern Tehran, who issued a public warning to the ruling authority, stating:

“If a family is forced to reduce its daily bread consumption, this matter will have widespread repercussions that will directly affect social stability and peace and disturb the tranquility of the public.”

Iranian Regime Parliament Speaker: No Access Will Be Granted to Bombed Sites

Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the speaker of the Iranian regime’s Majlis (parliament) and head of the Iranian regime’s negotiating team, claimed that inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) will not be allowed access to nuclear facilities that were bombed by the United States.

The Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan nuclear sites were targeted in U.S. and Israeli strikes against the Iranian regime last year and this year.

Since last year’s 12-day war, the Iranian regime has denied the IAEA access to enrichment sites, where it is believed the regime has stored enough highly enriched uranium to produce as many as 10 nuclear weapons if it decided to move rapidly toward building an atomic bomb.

Grossi: A Very Robust Verification System is Needed for Iran’s Nuclear Program

Earlier, U.S. President Donald Trump said, “With the cooperation of the Iranian regime and by entering Iran, we will collect the enriched uranium and then transfer all of it to the United States.”

Earlier, Rafael Grossi, Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency, said during a press conference in Japan that an agreement exists and that, in order to implement it, the IAEA must have access to the sites and conduct inspections.

Access to these sites has become one of the main points of contention in the recent negotiations.

In a televised interview broadcast Wednesday evening on the Iranian regime’s state television, Ghalibaf said: “At present, they only have the right of access to two facilities: the Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant and the Tehran Research Reactor. Access has been limited to these two sites, and we remain committed to that.”

Ghalibaf added: “The Majlis passed a law, and the Supreme National Security Council has also adopted a resolution on the matter. Under this law, no access whatsoever will be granted to sites that have been bombed and damaged.”

Before the U.S. strikes on the Iranian regime’s nuclear facilities during the 12-day war, the IAEA announced that the regime possessed more than 400 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60%.

In the final days of the 12-day war, U.S. President Donald Trump ordered the bombing of Iran’s enrichment facilities at Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan. He later announced that the facilities had been destroyed and that the enriched uranium had been buried beneath the rubble.

In April, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency said that a large portion of the Iranian regime’s enriched uranium was likely still located at the Isfahan nuclear complex.

One month later, CNN reported that the Iranian regime had deliberately destroyed the tunnels leading to its high-enriched uranium storage facilities and had mined their entrances.

Five sources familiar with U.S. intelligence told CNN that in recent weeks, following U.S. President Donald Trump’s threat to seize Iran’s stockpile of 60%-enriched uranium through military action, the Iranian regime has significantly intensified efforts to block access to the material.

Tanker Trackers: Vessel Grounded in the Strait of Hormuz Belongs to Iran’s Oil Smuggling Network

Maritime monitoring firm TankerTrackers responded to Iranian regime media claims that a vessel had “run aground” after sailing outside a route designated by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), stating that the ship is part of the “Shamkhani smuggling network” fleet.

The company, which monitors maritime traffic, particularly the so-called “shadow fleet,” wrote on X on July 1: “This is ARISTA (9348493). She is Comoros-flagged (as far as being “foreign” goes) but is part of Iran’s Shamkhani network. ARISTA has been under US OFAC sanctions since last summer.”

According to TankerTrackers, the ARISTA has been under sanctions by the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) since last summer and has effectively been stranded and grounded in Iranian territorial waters north of Hormuz Island since early April 2026.

Iranian regime state television claimed in a report on Wednesday, July 1, that a vessel traveling outside the designated route in the Strait of Hormuz had run aground.

The state television reporter, who presented the report in a dramatic tone, claimed the vessel was a foreign container ship that became grounded after entering shallow waters along its chosen route, preventing it from continuing its voyage.

U.S. Treasury Sanctions Shamkhani Oil Network

The reporter further claimed that the ship’s owner would need the Iranian regime’s assistance to refloat the vessel and would have to pay for that assistance.

During the war with the United States and Israel, the Iranian regime disrupted the main shipping lane through the Strait of Hormuz and forced vessels to transit south of Larak Island.

Reports indicate that the Iranian regime has laid at least 80 naval mines in the Strait of Hormuz and clearing them is expected to delay the full reopening of this strategic waterway.

The United States and Arab Allies Sanction Five Entities and 16 Hezbollah Officials

The United States and the member states of the Terrorist Financing Targeting Center (TFTC) have imposed a new round of sanctions against the financial network of Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Iranian regime’s principal proxy group in the country. In this joint action, five entities and 16 senior executives and officials associated with Hezbollah’s financial structure were placed under sanctions.

The U.S. Department of the Treasury announced on Tuesday, June 30, that the sanctions were imposed to weaken Hezbollah’s financial infrastructure, deny the group access to funding, and restrict its operational capabilities in Lebanon and across the region. According to the statement, Hezbollah’s two principal financial institutions, “Al-Qardh Al-Hassan” and “Bayt al-Mal,” along with several of their senior executives and officials, have been designated under the sanctions.

Iranian Regime-Backed Hezbollah Under Heavy Pressure

The joint statement issued by the member states of the Terrorist Financing Targeting Center emphasized that financial networks linked to proxy groups backed by the Iranian regime threaten regional stability, international security, shared interests, and global trade. The U.S. Department of the Treasury also stated that targeting Hezbollah’s financial resources is part of international efforts to protect the global financial system, support the people of Lebanon, and prevent the activities of terrorist networks affiliated with the Iranian regime.

According to the U.S. Department of the Treasury, although Al-Qard Al-Hassan is officially registered as a non-governmental organization in Lebanon, it effectively operates as Hezbollah’s unofficial bank and provides extensive financial services beyond its legal authority. U.S. officials say Hezbollah has used the institution to transfer funds, finance its military activities, and evade international sanctions. According to the Treasury, over the past decade, the network has moved more than $500 million through Lebanon’s banking system by using intermediary and front accounts.

Among those sanctioned are several senior members of Hezbollah’s financial network, including Ahmad Mohammad Yazbek, Chief Financial Officer of Al-Qard Al-Hassan; Abbas Hassan Gharib, the institution’s Information Technology Director; Ibrahim Ali Zaher, head of Hezbollah’s Central Finance Unit; Adel Mohammad Mansour, Executive Director of Al-Qard Al-Hassan; as well as Samer Hassan Fawaz, Ali Mohammad Karneeb, and Imad Mohammad Baz.

The U.S. Department of the Treasury also identified Bayt al-Mal as Hezbollah’s unofficial financial treasury, responsible for holding the group’s assets, managing its investments, and overseeing its financial resources while acting as an intermediary between Hezbollah and Lebanon’s formal banking sector. In addition, the companies “Al-Khubaraa for Accounting, Auditing and Studies” and “Tasheelat” have also been sanctioned for assisting in the management and transfer of Hezbollah’s financial resources.

Hezbollah, which has been designated as a terrorist organization by the United States and a number of Western and Arab countries, has served as the Iranian regime’s primary proxy in Lebanon for the past four decades and has received a substantial portion of its financial, military, and logistical support from Tehran. U.S. officials and their Arab allies have emphasized that the objective of this latest round of sanctions is to disrupt Hezbollah’s funding channels and limit the group’s ability to continue its military and regional activities.

Drug Crisis: Chemotherapy Costs in Iran Have Increased Tenfold

A new wave of drug price increases in Iran has catastrophically raised the cost of medical treatment. In one example alone, the cost of each chemotherapy cycle has risen from about 70 million rials two years ago to nearly 700 million rials. The increases affect everything from widely used generic medications to specialized drugs for patients with rare and chronic illnesses. Insurance providers have not increased their coverage in line with rising prices, forcing patients to pay the difference out of pocket.

Inflation in the healthcare sector has been significantly higher than overall inflation, reaching 15.6% in April, 23.1% in May, and 8.6% in June. In addition, the foreign currency allocation for medicines and medical equipment has been reduced from $3.5 billion to $3 billion.

Iranian Citizens Face Drug Shortages and Health Crisis

Other factors behind rising healthcare costs include severe liquidity shortages, government-imposed price controls, delays in insurance reimbursements, fragile supply chains, and the forced shift in transporting medicines and raw materials from sea routes to land routes due to regional tensions resulting from the Iranian regime’s foreign policies, which has sharply increased transportation costs.

Months ago, pharmaceutical industry representatives warned that production could not continue without structural reforms, but the Iranian regime has taken no effective action. The main burden of soaring prices has fallen directly on patients.

The Iranian regime’s destructive foreign policies, which have resulted in extensive sanctions, proxy wars, and international isolation, have reduced foreign currency allocations and made transportation routes more expensive and less secure. At the same time, systemic corruption, economic mismanagement, government-imposed price controls, and the failure to allocate resources properly have pushed the pharmaceutical industry to the brink of collapse. As a result, cancer patients and people suffering from serious chronic illnesses now face an extremely critical situation. Many are abandoning treatment altogether, while others are selling their assets and taking on overwhelming debt, destroying their own lives and those of their families. This humanitarian disaster is unfolding while a large share of the country’s oil revenues and national resources is being spent on war, regional adventurism, domestic repression, and looting by regime institutions instead of being invested in public healthcare.

By continuing these failed policies, the Iranian regime is effectively condemning patients to death or extreme poverty and has plunged Iranian society into a deep healthcare crisis.

Iran’s Negative Economic Growth: From Statistical Manipulation to the Collapse of Investment

When the gap between official figures and reality becomes too wide, the economic crisis is no longer confined to production and investment—it also consumes public trust. Iran’s negative economic growth during 2025 reflects the collapse of investment, declining household consumption, and the role of the governance structure, international sanctions, and the erosion of social capital in shrinking the country’s economy.

Why Did Iran’s Economy Shrink in 2025?

Official data released for 2025 show that Iran’s economy has entered a new phase of structural stagnation. Although some official institutions have reported slightly positive economic growth, excluding oil revenues presents a completely different picture. Negative economic growth indicates that the core problem is not a temporary shock but the gradual erosion of the foundations of production, investment, and social trust.

Inflation in Iran and the Limits of What an Agreement with the United States Can Achieve

Oil Growth: A Cover for the Reality of the Domestic Economy

Statistics from the Central Bank of Iran and the Statistical Center of Iran show that economic growth in 2025, including oil, ranged between -0.7% and 0.2%. However, excluding oil, the country’s economy entered negative territory and gross domestic product contracted.

This reality once again highlights Iran’s historical dependence on oil revenues. Negative economic growth demonstrates that the existing economic structure has failed to transform oil resources into a driver of industrial development and higher productivity. As a result, whenever oil revenues decline or their growth potential becomes limited, the weaknesses of other sectors become apparent.

Negative growth in agriculture, declining industrial output, and a sharp slowdown in the services sector all indicate that the main engines of the economy are in a state of deterioration. Limited growth in the oil sector has only prevented an even larger economic decline.

The Collapse of Investment: A Warning Sign for the Future

One of the most significant aspects of negative economic growth is the sharp decline in investment. Gross fixed capital formation fell substantially in 2025, and investment in machinery also entered negative territory.

Investment is the most important indicator of economic actors’ confidence in the future. When investors lack confidence in legal stability, economic security, and the political outlook, they do not commit their resources to productive sectors. Under such conditions, the economy shifts toward speculation, capital flight, and unproductive activities.

In Iran’s current system, the dominance of regime institutions over the economy, widespread organized corruption, international sanctions, and the lack of transparency have created an unfavorable environment for investment. Negative economic growth shows that the investment crisis is not merely an economic issue but the direct result of the governing system and the concentration of political power.

Declining Household Consumption and the Erosion of Public Welfare

The slowdown in private consumption is another key sign of economic stagnation. In recent years, Iranian households have faced chronic inflation, the depreciation of the national currency, and rising living costs.

Declining household consumption means a smaller domestic market and reduced incentives for producers to expand economic activity. This vicious cycle intensifies stagnation and reduces employment opportunities.

Social studies also show that a large portion of the population has lost hope in the country’s economic future. The decline in social capital and the growing sense of discrimination have themselves become factors deepening the economic crisis. Negative economic growth reflects precisely this connection between economic crisis and the erosion of political legitimacy.

War, Sanctions, and the Governance Structure

The wars of 2025 and early 2026 caused extensive economic damage and intensified existing uncertainty. However, attributing all of the country’s problems solely to war or sanctions would be an incomplete analysis.

International sanctions have undoubtedly imposed heavy costs on the economy, but a significant portion of the current crisis is rooted in domestic policies and the structure of political power. A rent-based economy, extensive government intervention, weak independent institutions, and prioritizing ideological goals over economic development have created the primary conditions for negative economic growth.

Negative economic growth shows that even during periods when oil sales increased, Iran’s economic growth was not sustainable. The reason is that oil revenues have been used to reinforce the political structure and expand the rent-based economy rather than to develop productive infrastructure.

Structural Deadlock and the Need for Fundamental Change

The experience of various countries shows that sustainable economic development is not possible without fundamental political and institutional reforms. In Chile after the end of Augusto Pinochet’s rule, in Eastern Europe following the collapse of the Eastern Bloc, and in many developing countries, the transition to accountable and democratic systems created the conditions for long-term economic growth.

In Iran as well, negative economic growth indicates that the current crisis goes beyond management failures or short-term policies. The current governance structure has itself become an obstacle to the development of a competitive economy, the attraction of investment, and higher productivity.

Iraq Sets September 30 as Deadline for Disarmament of Iranian Regime-Backed Militia Groups

Iraqi government spokesperson Haider al-Aboudi announced on Monday, June 29, that the government has given Shiite armed groups backed by the Iranian regime until September 30 this year to surrender their weapons.

The announced deadline coincides with the end of the U.S.-led international coalition’s mission against ISIS in Iraq.

The announcement comes ahead of Iraqi Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi’s visit to the United States, as Washington has been pressuring Baghdad to ensure the disarmament of these groups.

The deadline for the Iran-backed groups was announced one day after Iranian regime Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi visited Baghdad.

Haider al-Aboudi, the Iraqi government spokesperson, said during his weekly press conference, “A specific date has been announced to all armed groups for resolving this issue (disarmament)… That date is September 30, which also coincides with the end of the international coalition’s presence.”

He added that after that date, any weapons outside the authority of the state would be subject to legal prosecution.

At the same time as Araghchi’s visit to Iraq, Iraqi security forces, backed by the army, raided Baghdad’s Green Zone early Sunday to arrest several senior officials. According to the Iraqi News Agency (INA), 47 people, including government officials and several members of parliament, were arrested as part of an anti-corruption campaign.

Some reports indicate that a number of those arrested are figures backed by Tehran.

Iraq hosts dozens of powerful armed groups backed by Iran, many of which are part of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), also known as Hashd al-Shaabi.

Many of these groups were formed following the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 and expanded their power and influence after 2014 during the campaign against the Islamic State (ISIS).

In recent months, under intense U.S. pressure, Iraqi officials have announced plans to fully integrate all Popular Mobilization Forces factions into the state’s security forces so that the government holds the exclusive authority to bear arms.

The Baghdad government also intends to incorporate brigades currently operating outside the PMF’s official structure into this integration process.

The move comes after some PMF factions launched attacks against U.S. interests in Iraq following the outbreak of the U.S. and Israeli war with Iran in March 2026.

In response, Washington carried out strikes against these groups and subsequently suspended the transfer of Iraq’s oil revenues under an arrangement established after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion.

During the 40-day war and the subsequent ceasefire, reports also emerged of attacks by these groups against other countries. In May 2026, the United Arab Emirates announced that drones launched toward one of its nuclear power plants had originated from Iraq.

The Iraqi Shiite groups were not the Iranian regime’s only proxy force involved in the war. Hezbollah in Lebanon also began launching rocket attacks into northern Israel shortly after the conflict started, prompting extensive Israeli air and ground operations across Lebanon.

Iraqi officials had been working to fully integrate the Popular Mobilization Forces into the state’s security forces well before the Iran war began. However, some of these groups have argued that the continued presence of U.S. forces in Iraq justifies delaying the disarmament process.

In early June, Iraqi officials announced that they had received information on the weapons held by Kataib Imam Ali, an Iranian regime-backed armed group, a move regarded as the first step in the plan to integrate these groups into the state security forces.

Shortly before that, two groups aligned with the Iranian regime—Kataib Imam Ali and Asaib Ahl al-Haq—announced that they would transfer control of their brigades within the Popular Mobilization Forces to the Iraqi government.

Escalating Iran-US Conflict Cuts Strait of Hormuz Traffic, Lifts Oil Prices

Oil Prices Rise and Ship Traffic Through the Strait of Hormuz Declines Following Tensions Between Iran and the United States.

New shipping data show that vessel traffic through the Strait of Hormuz declined again on Saturday and Sunday of the current week following a new round of reciprocal attacks between Iran and the United States in the strategic waterway.

At the same time, the attacks and the resulting tensions caused oil prices, which had eased following the signing of the Islamabad memorandum of understanding, to resume an upward trend.

Iran’s Regime Nearing Oil Export Deadlock

According to data released on Monday, June 29, by the maritime analytics company Kpler, a total of only 29 cargo vessels passed through the Strait of Hormuz on Saturday, while 12 vessels transited the strait on Sunday.

Before the outbreak of the war involving the United States and Israel against Iran, which led to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), at least 130 vessels, including oil tankers and container ships, passed through the waterway each day.

According to Agence France-Presse (AFP), Sunday’s figures show a sharp decline compared with the previous week, when the signing of a memorandum of understanding between Tehran and Washington on June 15 pushed traffic through the strait to its highest level since the start of the 40-day war. According to Kpler, the number of transits reached 70 last Wednesday.

Despite Iran’s warning against using unauthorized shipping routes, vessels continued to use several different routes to transit the waterway over the weekend.

After a ship was struck while transiting the strait on Saturday morning, vessels continued using the southern corridor in Omani waters for several hours. However, according to Kpler data, traffic declined afterward.

On Saturday and Sunday, the number of ships entering the Persian Gulf also exceeded the number leaving it, reversing the trend seen the previous week. During the previous week, the main focus had been on evacuating seafarers stranded in the Persian Gulf.

The United Nations-led operation to evacuate 11,000 seafarers was suspended on Thursday after a ship was attacked in the Gulf of Oman.

Following Iran’s attacks on these vessels, the U.S. military carried out strikes in southern Iran early Saturday and Sunday. In response, Iran launched an attack on Bahrain.

According to a post published on X by HFI Research, four oil tankers and one container ship entered the Persian Gulf through the southern corridor in Omani waters on Sunday under escort by U.S. Navy warships.

However, according to Kpler data, no vessels used the same route to leave the Persian Gulf on Sunday.

Oil Prices Rise Again

Amid renewed tensions in the Strait of Hormuz, oil prices rose again after falling sharply last week and approaching their pre-war levels.

According to Reuters, oil prices increased on Monday, June 29, after several days of attacks by the United States and Iran once again slowed energy shipments through the Strait of Hormuz.

According to reports, Brent crude from the North Sea rose to about $72.57 per barrel on Monday morning, while U.S. crude reached $70.11 per barrel.

This compares with last Friday, when Brent crude fell by more than 4% to $71.99 per barrel, while U.S. crude declined to $69.23 per barrel.

The ‘No To Executions Tuesdays’ campaign has entered its 127th week

The campaign “No to Executions Tuesdays,” a prisoner-led protest against executions held across multiple prisons in Iran, entered its 127th week on Tuesday, June 30. In this way, the longest-running protest and hunger strike by prisoners in Iran has entered a critical phase. On this occasion, prisoners participating in the campaign issued a statement, and while reviewing the most prominent crimes committed in Iran over the past week, they called for a global response to these executions.

The continuation of the “No to Executions Tuesdays” campaign in 57 different prisons during its 127th week

The machinery of execution and repression of the ruling authoritarian government continues to operate, and on a daily basis political prisoners and prisoners convicted of ordinary crimes are being executed across the country.

Iran: 304 Executions in One Month, 1,735 In 2025 So Far

The judiciary of the Iranian regime has announced that since the beginning of the recent war, 3,292 people have been arrested on charges of “cooperating with the enemy.” This figure comes amid a new phase of crackdown on protesters following the suppression of nationwide protests in January 2026 by military and security forces, with many detainees now facing death sentences or long prison terms. The prosecutor of Sari, a city in northern Iran, said that 700 cases have been filed against protesters from the January uprising. Ahmad Alamolhoda, the Friday prayer leader of Mashhad, has also reported thousands of cases against those arrested during the January uprising.

The number of executions between May 22 and June 21 has reached approximately 140 people.

The record of this regime is full of widespread and blatant human rights violations and the use of executions as a tool of repression and intimidation. Thousands of families in Iran are mourning loved ones who have been victims of the regime’s repressive will through inhumane processes. In this context, the voice of a father asking, “Where is my son’s grave?” rises from the depths of pain and injustice; this is the question of the father of Vahid Bani Amirian, a political prisoner who, along with five other political prisoners, was executed in April at Qezel Hesar prison. Other families who were not even given the bodies of their children express not only a personal demand but the collective cry of many justice-seekers who are deprived of the basic right to know the burial place of their loved ones. This deprivation is a continuation of punishment after death and a clear violation of human dignity, where suffering does not end and mourning is not even permitted.

In contrast to this repression and medieval brutality, the voice of prisoners in the “No to Executions Tuesdays” campaign continues to be raised. Every Tuesday without interruption, they remind that the death penalty must be abolished and that freedom and equality must be established in Iran.

Members of the “No to Executions Tuesdays” campaign are on hunger strike on Tuesday, June 30, during the 127th week, in 57 prisons across Iran.