Abdorrahman Boroumand Center

for Human Rights in Iran

https://www.iranrights.org
Omid, a memorial in defense of human rights in Iran
One Person’s Story

Arnika Dabagh

About

Age: 15
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Presumed Muslim (Shi'a)
Civil Status: Single

Case

Date of Killing: January 9, 2026
Gravesite location is known: Yes
Location of Killing: Gorgan, Golestan Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Arbitrary Execution » Arbitrary shooting » Assault weapon/ Fire arm » targeting vital organs
Age at time of alleged offense: Under 18

About this Case

Arnika Dabagh was a talented 15-year-old swimmer from Gorgan, known for her energy, determination, and dreams of breaking national swimming records.

 

Information regarding the arbitrary execution of 15-year-old Ms. Arnika Dabagh, daughter of Mehdi, was obtained from government sources (February 1, 2026), Iran International (February 3, 2026; February 19, 2026; February 21, 2026), BBC Persian (February 20, 2026), Voice of America Persian (February 15, 2026), her sister’s Instagram page (February 11, 2026), Dadban’s X account (January 13, 2026), and Mojtaba Pourbakhsh’s X account (January 19, 2026).

Arnika Dabagh is also listed as entry No. 1761 among those killed during the protests, according to the Office of the President of the Islamic Republic of Iran's published list. (Government List, February 1, 2026)

Ms. Dabagh, from Gorgan in Golestan Province, was both a student and a competitive swimmer. She had achieved notable success, winning a silver medal, two bronze medals, and multiple other awards at national events. Those close to her described Arnika as energetic, diligent, an animal lover, and very active on social media. At her time of death, she was preparing for upcoming competitions and aimed to set new national swimming records. (BBC Persian, February 20, 2026; Iran International, February 19, 2026)

December 2025 Protest Background 

(This background has been prepared based on the initial information at the start of the protests and will be updated at the earliest opportunity.)

On December 28, 2025, merchants in Tehran’s Grand Bazaar went on strike to protest the country’s deteriorating economic conditions. Protests were sparked by the rapid depreciation of the Iranian rial to the U.S. dollar which reached a record low of 1.4 million rial to dollar by late December. High inflation, reaching 42% by December, further deepened Iranians’ economic frustrations. By December 30, protests had spread to half of Iran’s provinces, including Alborz, Khuzestan, Fars, Hamedan, Kermanshah, Khorasan Razavi, West Azerbaijan, Hormozgan, Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari, Markazi, Isfahan, Zanjan, and Yazd. In addition to labor strikes, Iranians also held street gatherings and marches, and convened rallies at universities and outside government offices. 

During the first week, protest slogans largely focused on economic grievances and government corruption, but by the second week, evolved into anti-regime chants targeting the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the Islamic Republic itself. Chants of “Death to Khamenei” were recorded in several cities including Tehran, Arak, Urmia, Qom, and Zahedan, as well as “death to the dictator”, “we don’t want an Islamic Republic”, and calls for a return of the Pahlavi dynasty: “Pahlavi will return”, and “long live the Shah”.  While economic hardships initially triggered the protests, protest demands increasingly evinced calls for an end to the theocratic government altogether. The first protester’s death was recorded on December 31st, 2025 in Kuhdasht in Lorestan Province.

In the first days of January, the US president, Donald J. Trump made statements including on social media, in support of protesters and warned Iran about potential US retaliation, if they shoot protesters.*

On January 6, 2026, Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei, then Head of the Judiciary, stated during the “14th Session of the Imam Ali Law Enforcement Headquarters” that “special branches” had been established to ensure the “swift and decisive” prosecution of protesters’ cases. He announced that experienced judges had been assigned to handle these cases through “direct and field-based” oversight. Accusing foreign countries of directly supporting the protesters, Ejei claimed that detainees could no longer argue that they had been “misled,” and emphasized that, unlike in previous years, “no leniency” would be shown toward defendants in these cases. 

On the same day, during a meeting of the “High Council of the Judiciary,” Ejei also ordered the acceleration of proceedings against those accused in connection with the protests, stating: “At the prosecutor’s office stage, we should not keep clear-cut cases waiting unnecessarily; the courts should act likewise. From this very moment, one or more branches should be specifically assigned to the recent unrest cases. There must be no delay or negligence; it should not be the case that a verdict for an agitator who committed additional crimes during the unrest is issued six months later. Such an approach would lack a deterrent effect.” 

On January 8, the 12th day of protests, Iranian authorities instated a nationwide internet blackout. By this time, protests had spread to at least 22, a majority, of Iran’s provinces, half of which are minority regions, including Kurdistan and Khuzestan which experienced some of the largest protests outside of Tehran. According to the Human Rights Activist News Agency (HRANA), protests had taken place in at least 585 locations across 186 cities in all of Iran’s 31 provinces by the 15th day. Image and footage of scores of bodies in a makeshift morgue in Kahrizak Forensic Medical Center in Tehran surfaced online amid the blackout around January 10. Testimonies obtained by the Abdorrahman Boroumand Center (ABC) described a chaotic environment at Kahrizak, with vehicles unloading piles of corpses, and people forced to identify their loved ones among the body bags strewn on the ground.  

ABC documented the first protester death on January 1st. ABC has received testimonies from several provinces, including Mashad, Tehran, Yazd, Kurdistan describing protesters shot in the heart, throat, or head, suggesting the security forces were shooting-to-kill. Eyewitnesses also described security forces' use of machine guns at protest sites, underscoring the indiscriminate and arbitrary nature of the shootings. It is difficult to ascertain the exact number of protesters killed due to the ongoing blackout as of this writing on January 16, 2026, but preliminary estimates indicate a high death toll, at minimum in the several hundred, but potentially in the thousands. 

Initial government statements varied at the onset of the protests, with President Masoud Pezeshkian instructing the Minister of the Interior to “engage in dialogue with the protesters’ representatives to address their legitimate demands” on December 30, 2025, with Ayatollah Khamenei stating during a Friday sermon on January 3, 2026 that, “officials must talk with protesters”, but added “rioters must be put in their place”. As protests became more widespread and focused their demands for an end to clerical rule, the Iranian government’s statements became more unified and hostile towards protesters. On January 5, Iran’s Chief Justice Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Eje’i said that the government would show no “leniency” towards protesters and called for expedited judicial proceedings. President Pezeshkian claimed protesters, or “rioters” were foreign agents, and that “These individuals were trained both inside and outside the country. Foreign terrorists were brought in to set fire to mosques, bazaars, and public spaces. They have killed people with guns, burned them, and beheaded others. Truly, such atrocities are not the work of our people.” On the same day on January 11, Iran’s Cabinet of Ministers released an official statement reiterating Pezeshkian’s statements, writing: “The Zionist regime and the criminal U.S ... have repeatedly emphasized their efforts to incite chaos. They have exploited the current situation by deploying mercenaries and terrorists across the country to attack and martyr a large number of our dear citizens, as well as our devoted police, Basij, and security forces”. On January 13, Ali Larijani, secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council stated, “We declare the names of the main killers of the people of Iran: 1 - Trump, 2 - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu”. During an interview with Fox News on January 14, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi described reports that thousands of protesters had been killed by security forces as an "exaggeration" and “misinformation campaign”, and that the number of deaths were “only hundreds”.  

Abroad, U.S. President Donald Trump warned on January 1, “If Iran violently kills peaceful protesters…the United States will come to their rescue. We are locked and loaded and ready to go”. He took again to Truth Social, writing: “Iranian Patriots, KEEP PROTESTING - TAKE OVER YOUR INSTITUTIONS!!! Save the names of the killers and abusers. They will pay a big price” on January 13. Later that same day, he wrote, “HELP IS ON ITS WAY”. Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of Iran’s former Shah, also issued several statements echoing President Trump’s statements that foreign assistance was coming, and called for more strikes and demonstrations on January 10 and 11: “Our goal is no longer merely to come to the streets; the goal is to prepare for seizing the centers of cities and holding them”. 

On 1 February 2026, the Office of the President of Iran published a list containing the details of 2,986 individuals who were killed during the protests. On 3 February 2026, the number was increased to 3,038. (IRNA, 8 February 2026).

In an official statement, the Government of Iran emphasized that the list was compiled “by aggregating the names prepared by the Legal Medicine Organization of the country and cross-referencing them with the database of the National Organization for Civil Registration. The discrepancy of 131 individuals compared to the previously announced figures is due to a number of unidentified bodies and inconsistencies in the registration of national identification numbers of some of the deceased within the Civil Registration system, which will be corrected and reflected in a supplementary list as soon as the necessary amendments are made.”

At the time this list was published, the Boroumand Center’s ongoing and continuously updated list included names that did not appear in the government’s list. The Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) had also reported that it had documented more than 6,000 deaths. 

Ms. Arnika Dabagh ’s arbitrary execution

According to available information, Ms. Arnika Dabagh was killed on January 9, 2026, during the nationwide protests in Gorgan after being shot by security forces. (BBC Persian, February 20, 2026; Dadban, January 13, 2026)

On that day, the telephone service's communication system was cut off, which preventing those nearby from reaching emergency services immediately. Consequently, an ambulance was delayed, which ultimately contributed to her death due to the severity of her injuries. (Dadban, January 13, 2026)

Arnika’s sister shared a personal note, recalling that on the night of the incident, she found Arnika’s bloodstained eyeglasses and initially feared she might have suffered a serious eye injury. She admitted she lacked the courage to enter the morgue at first, but three days later, she touched her sister’s cold face, describing it as “a difficult farewell.” (Armita Dabagh’s Instagram page, January 24, 2026)

A brief video shared on social media showed Ms. Dabagh’s body in a coffin during her funeral, which was attended by her family members. (Mojtaba Pourbakhsh’s X account, January 19, 2026)

In a photograph of Arnika’s grave posted by Armita Dabagh on Instagram, her burial place was mentioned as the Ahangarmahalleh Cemetery in Gorgan. (Armita Dabagh’s Instagram page, February 11, 2026)

A memorial ceremony marking the fortieth day after Ms. Dabagh’s death was held in Gorgan on February 18, 2026. Participants honored her memory by lighting candles, laying flowers, singing the patriotic song “Ey Iran,” reciting passages from the Shahnameh, and setting doves free. (BBC Persian, February 20, 2026)

Members of Iran’s sports community also honored Arnika. After the Iranian Men’s Swimming League event at Tehran’s Azadi Sports Complex, participants held a minute of silence in her memory. (Voice of America Persian, February 15, 2026) 

Regulations on Controlling Protests

There have been numerous reports of deaths during critical demonstrations in Iran. In many of these cases, armed forces have used firearms to suppress protests. Iranian law provides certain regulations regarding the use of firearms by armed forces during demonstrations. In addition, there are legal provisions in Iran for the punishment of officials who act unlawfully by firing weapons, as well as rules for the compensation of victims. This brief overview will review these provisions.

The law allows armed forces officials to use firearms in certain situations, including to prevent riots and disorders. However, the law does not provide a clear definition of what constitutes riots and disorders. The Law on the Use of Firearms by the Armed Forces in Essential Cases, enacted in 1994, outlines specific conditions for the use of firearms. The main principle established by this law is that of necessity, meaning that armed forces officers may fire their weapons only in emergencies. Regarding protests, Articles 4 and 5 of this law allow officials to use their weapons under certain conditions to restore order and prevent riots. Article 4 states: "Police officers are authorized to use firearms to restore order and control illegal demonstrations, suppress riots and disorders that cannot be controlled without the use of weapons, upon the order of the commander of the operation, if the following conditions are met:".

a) Other measures must have been tried first and proven ineffective.

b) There must be a final warning to the rioters and insurgents before the use of firearms. 

Note 1: The determination of riots under Article 4 is the responsibility of the heads of the provincial and district security councils. In their absence, it is the responsibility of their deputies. If the governor has no political deputy, this responsibility is assigned to a member of the Security Council. Note 2: In cases where armed forces are assigned the task of restoring order and security under this article, they are also subject to the provisions of this article regarding the use of firearms. This article clearly states that armed personnel must first use non-lethal methods and only resort to firearms if those methods fail to control the situation. They must also warn the demonstrators. The law does not specify what other non-lethal methods should be used, but logically they would include things like water cannons, tear gas, and batons. This article refers to unarmed protests. For armed demonstrations, Article 5 states: "Military and police officers are authorized to use firearms to restore order and security during illegal armed demonstrations, riots and armed rebellions. Such forces are required to act immediately upon orders of the commander to restore order, disarm and collect weapons and ammunition, and arrest those to be handed over to the judicial authorities".

In all of the above situations, officers must first have no alternative but to use their firearms. In addition, they must follow the following sequence, if possible: a) Warning shots; b) Shots aimed at the lower body; c) Shots aimed at the upper body. (Note 3, Article 3)

If an officer shoots following the above regulations and the victim is not found to be innocent, neither the officer nor the officer's organization will be held responsible (Article 12). However, if the officer violates these rules, shoots without following the rules, and someone is injured or killed as a result, the officer may face retaliation, compensation, or imprisonment, depending on the case. Article 41 of the Armed Forces Crimes Law states: "Any armed forces personnel who, while on duty or operations, intentionally shoot in violation of rules and regulations will be sentenced to imprisonment for three months to one year, and will also have to pay blood money. If the shooting results in death or injury, the officer will be sentenced to the above punishment, in addition to retaliation or payment of blood money, as the case may require. If the case falls under Articles 612 or 614 of the Islamic Penal Code (enacted on May 23, 1996), the officer will be subject to the penalties specified in those articles."

The law also addresses a situation where an officer follows all required protocols for the use of firearms, but the victim is still found innocent in court.

Note 1:If the shooting was conducted according to regulations, the officer will not be punished or required to pay blood money. If the victim is found innocent, the blood money will be paid from public funds. According to Article 13 of the Law on the Use of Firearms by the Armed Forces in Essential Cases: "If officials use firearms under this Law and an innocent person is killed or injured, as determined by the courts, or if there is financial damage, the responsibility for paying financial compensation and covering the damage falls on the relevant organization. The government is required to allocate a budget for this purpose each year and to provide it to the armed forces as necessary". 

Officials’ Reaction

Security officials visited Ms. Dabagh’s school, establishing a highly securitized atmosphere. They reportedly questioned students, conducted briefing sessions, led classroom discussions about the protests, and assigned schoolwork to reinforce the authorities’ official narrative of the events. (Iran International, February 3, 2026)

Familys’ Reaction

During a memorial ceremony in Gorgan on February 18, 2026, to commemorate the fortieth day after Arnika’s death, family members, relatives, and many local residents gathered at her gravesite to honor her. They laid flowers, lit candles, recited passages from the Shahnameh, sang the patriotic song “Ey Iran,” performed traditional mourning rituals, and set doves free as a tribute to her. The event saw strong public participation and broad community involvement. (BBC Persian, February 20, 2026)

“My daughter was expected to win a medal last week, and we had planned to celebrate her victory. Today, we held a celebration for her achievement, but unfortunately, she is no longer with us.”

During the ceremony, Arnika’s mother spoke about her daughter’s athletic dreams and mentioned that Arnika was supposed to compete in the Zayandeh Rud swimming contest the week before and was expected to win a medal. The family had planned to celebrate her success, but instead, they were holding her fortieth-day memorial. She said, “Today I am celebrating my daughter’s championship; it is a pity that she is not here with us.” (Iran International, February 21, 2026)

Arnika’s sister posted a message on Instagram reminiscing about her athletic successes from 2019 to 2024. She mentioned that during that period, Arnika had earned "colorful medals” for their family and expressed her hope that she would break a national record and become the top swimmer in the country next year. She ended her message by calling Arnika her “little champion.” (Iran International, February 19, 2026)

Impacts on Family

In her personal statement, Arnika’s sister offered a more detailed description of the emotional toll her loss had on her and her family. Speaking directly to Arnika, she shared her intense grief, her difficulty accepting her sister’s death, and the pressure to “stay strong” imposed by others. She explained that, while others expected her to comfort their parents, she felt as though she was “slowly melting away.” She also recounted her struggle to manage memories such as seeing the word “morgue” in the hospital, touching her sister’s cold face during the funeral, and hearing about her death. (Armita Dabagh’s Instagram page, February 7, 2026)

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*January 2-4, 2026 statements by President Donald J. Trump:
“If Iran shots and violently kills peaceful protesters, which is their custom, the United States of America will come to their rescue. We are locked and loaded and ready to go. Thank you for your attention to this matter! President DONALD J.TRUMP.” (January 2, 2026 | Truth Social)
“Obama failed to support Iran’s freedom protesters two decades ago, but Trump just rectified that” (January 3, 2026 | Truth Social)
“We’ll take a look. We’re watching it very closely. If they start killing people like they have in the past, I think they’re going to get hit very hard by the United States.” (January 4, 2026 | Press Gaggle on Air Force One)

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