Three more victims of the Rajaei port explosion have been identified, bringing the total to 36, according to Hormozgan’s forensic authority.
DNA samples have been collected from remaining bodies and close relatives.
“After genetic data is clarified and the samples matched, the results will be announced,” Javad Mirhadi said.


Over 300 global figures—including UN experts, Nobel laureates, former ambassadors, judges, and human rights leaders—have issued an urgent appeal for United Nations intervention to stop what they call a “campaign of politically motivated executions” in Iran.
The joint statement, signed by a wide range of international voices, condemned Tehran’s judicial handling of political prisoners and called on democratic governments and UN bodies to act swiftly.
The appeal centers on the cases of Behrouz Ehsani, 69, and Mehdi Hassani, 48, whose death sentences were recently upheld by Iran’s Supreme Court.
The statement described their prosecution as a sham: “Their kangaroo trial on 10 August 2024, lasting just five minutes, was a travesty of justice: they were denied legal counsel for nearly two years, tortured, and silenced during proceedings.”
The charges include “membership in the exiled opposition group Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization” and “propaganda,” framed as “enmity against God” and “corruption on earth” under Iran’s legal code.
“We demand an immediate halt to their execution,” the signatories wrote. “The international community must not remain silent.”
The group also warned of a broader execution drive under President Masoud Pezeshkian, who took office in August 2024. Since then, more than 1,000 executions have been carried out, disproportionately targeting women, juveniles, ethnic and religious minorities, and political dissenters. Several prisoners, including Abolhassan Montazer and Sharifeh Mohammadi, have already been moved to Ghezel Hesar Prison—described in the statement as “a notorious execution site.”
The appeal highlights findings by former UN Special Rapporteur Javaid Rehman, whose July 2024 report concluded that mass killings in Iran in 1981–82 and 1988 amounted to crimes against humanity and genocide. “The Iranian authorities’ systematic targeting of political prisoners is rooted in a culture of impunity,” the joint statement said.
They called on the UN and democratic governments to “identify and sanction Iranian officials responsible for human rights violations” and to tie future relations with Iran to the release of political prisoners and abolition of the death penalty.
Iran accounted for 64% of all known global executions in 2024, with at least 972 people executed, according to Amnesty International.
Iran will respond strongly to any military threat and does not take such warnings lightly, government spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani said on Saturday, after US Secretary of State Marco Rubio warned that Iran must halt uranium enrichment or face serious consequences.
“Iran will give a very strong response if they take any action. We are absolutely not joking about this,” Mohajerani said in remarks to ILNA news agency. “We will not back down from threats on this issue under any circumstances.”
Her comments came after Rubio said Iran must end enrichment and allow full American inspections of its nuclear facilities or risk potential military action. Iran, which maintains its program is peaceful, has rejected full disarmament.
Mohajerani stressed that Iran is fully prepared for all scenarios but prefers diplomacy. “We are ready for everything, but we are not interested in conflict,” she said. “That is why we support dialogue and negotiations.”
She emphasized that Iran did not enter the talks lightly. “We didn’t enter negotiations to waste our time. Of course, we hope for a positive outcome, but we are continuing to run the country regardless of what happens.”

The explosion last week at Iran’s Rajaee port had the force of roughly 50 tons of TNT, according to explosives experts cited by The Washington Post, who analyzed crater size and the shockwave.
The blast “could depict confined storage of an oxidizer” and noted similarities to past ammonium perchlorate explosions, said Gareth Collett, a retired British Army brigadier and explosives engineer.
Iran’s ultra-hardline Kayhan newspaper on Saturday slammed US President Donald Trump as “an exceptionally destructive fool,” accusing him of pursuing reckless foreign policies and warning that Tehran will never agree to full nuclear disarmament.
The paper, which is run by a representative of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, said Trump’s efforts to reshape global politics could end in failure. “Even his fiercest critics may have to acknowledge his ambition,” Kayhan wrote, “but that same ambition could leave behind a world more unstable and dangerous than the one he inherited.”
In a stinging rebuke, the editorial added: “The title he gave Biden — ‘the worst and most incompetent president’ — may ironically become his own. He is, in the end, an exceptionally destructive fool.”
On Iran’s nuclear stance, the paper suggested limited flexibility: Tehran might agree to reduce uranium enrichment to a non-military level and allow independent verification. However, Kayhan made clear that “Iran will never submit to total nuclear disarmament.”
The comments follow US Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s warning on Thursday that Iran must end all enrichment and open its nuclear facilities to American inspectors or face serious consequences, including military action.

Republican Senator Ted Cruz said Friday that US President Donald Trump has made clear to Iran’s Supreme Leader there will be “no deal unless Iran dismantles its enrichment and centrifuges.”
The outspoken Iran hawk said in a post on X that Trump is reimposing maximum pressure and will not tolerate any agreement that leaves Iran’s nuclear infrastructure intact.
The Texas senator added that under Trump, Iran’s oil exports were heavily restricted, but those limits collapsed under President Joe Biden, allowing Tehran to expand its nuclear program while selling up to 2 million barrels per day.






