Iranian dad fatally beaten for using Starlink during web blackout; karate champ executed over protest

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The barbaric Iranian regime reportedly tortured a dad to death for the high crime of using the internet and abused and executed a 21-year-old karate champ for merely attending a protest.

Father of two Hesam Alaeddin, 40, was beaten to death after being arrested for using Starlink to access the internet — which has been banned in the country since the US-Iran war started Feb. 28.

News of Alaeddin’s death was reported by Reza Pahlavi — the exiled son of the last shah of Iran — and spread across shocked posts on social media.

Hesam Alaeddin, a 40-year-old father of two, was reportedly beaten to death in his home by police for using the internet.

“The brutal and criminal regime of the Islamic Republic killed Hesam Alaeddin under torture after he was reportedly arrested for using Starlink,” Pahlavi wrote on X on Friday. “For 62 days, this regime has shut down the internet and continues to massacre Iranian people. The world cannot stay silent.”

Alaeddin was detained sometime in the past two weeks after being accused of connecting to the internet with Starlink, IranWire reported.

Iranian regime police searched his home, and when they found the Starlink device, they beat him in the family’s residence until he died, according to IranWire.

Alaeddin’s body was then confiscated and wasn’t returned until his family agreed to not speak about what happened, the outlet reported. He was finally buried Wednesday, but only under tight police security.

Sassan Azadvar Joonqani, a 21-year-old karate champion, was executed by hanging Thursday, reports said.

Outraged posts about Alaeddin’s death spread across social media, with the Independent Persian also reporting on the murder.

Starlink uses private satellites orbiting the Earth to connect internet with transponders on the surface, which can allow people to access the web anywhere on the planet — and circumvent blackouts in countries such as Iran that strictly regulate how its people connect with the world.

The Iranian regime has weaponized nationwide internet blackouts to control its people for years, but this ban been one of the most brutal as depraved leaders struggle to hold power while battling US and Israeli forces battering the country after war broke out.

Insiders have said the regime is using the blackout to keep its people in the dark about the realities of Iran’s dire position in the war — and to keep the world from seeing what’s being done to the Iranian people to crush dissent.

That reality includes violence similar to what happened in January, when nearly 40,000 people were killed while participating in protests against the regime.

Nearly 40,000 Iranians were murdered by the Iranian regime during protests in January alone. MEK/The Media Express/SIPA / Shutterstock

Stories of ongoing executions have filled the headlines throughout the Iran war, even after the ceasefire with the US started April 7.

Among those also recently executed was Sassan Azadvar Joonqani, a 21-year-old karate champion who was hung until dead Thursday for “effective cooperation with the enemy” and “enmity against God,” Euro news reported.

His crime was merely attending a protest in January, where authorities claimed he attacked a police car — though a lawyer assigned to Joonqani argued there was no evidence of that.

Joonqani was arrested Jan. 8 and tortured physically and psychologically until he made a confession which led to his execution, according to Euro News.

He was just one of numerous Iranians murdered in a similar fashion.

At least 145 Iranians are believed to have been executed since the war started, according to the Norway-based Iran Human Rights group.

Many of those people were killed by hanging — with their bodies dropped on publicly erected gallows to terrify the citizenry.

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