
From death row to exile, Iranian-Kurdish rapper gives firsthand account of what he calls ‘severe torture' in Iranian prison
Editor's Note: Warning: This article contains descriptions of torture.
Berlin
CNN — Saman Yasin thought he was leaving prison. It was five am and the guards had just told him to pack up his belongings. But the next thing he knew, he was blindfolded with a noose around his neck.
'I was under that noose for about 15 minutes, I think,' the Iranian-Kurdish rapper told CNN in an exclusive interview, as he recounted being subjected to a mock execution – allegedly at the hands of the Iranian regime.
'I could tell that they had brought in a cleric, and he was reciting the Quran over my head… and he kept telling me 'Repent, so that you go to heaven.''
Yasin is now in Berlin after making a perilous escape from Iran. He spoke to CNN exclusively about his plight, and how he says his jailers used torture trying to force him to confess to crimes he says he did not commit.
Yasin spent two years in Iran's jails for his involvement in the 'Woman, Life, Freedom' protests in 2022, during which he joined street demonstrations and recorded anti-regime songs.
The months-long uprising was sparked by the death of 22-year-old Iranian-Kurdish woman Mahsa Amini in September that year after she was arrested for allegedly not observing Iran's mandatory hijab law.
Protesters were met with brutal force, with more than 500 people killed in the crackdown since, according to a United Nations report, citing 'credible reports' that at least 49 women and 68 children were among them. CNN cannot independently verify the numbers of people killed or arrested, as Iran has not given precise data.
A police motorcycle burns during a protest in Tehran in September 2022 over the death of Mahsa Amini, a woman who died after being arrested for allegedly not observing Iran's mandatory hijab law.
WANA/Reuters
Yasin, whose legal name is Saman Sayedi, was arrested in October 2022 and is among many artists who were prosecuted in connection with the movement.
He was initially sentenced to death after being charged with the Islamic Republic's crime of 'waging war against God' by pulling out a gun during an anti-government protest, firing three bullets into the air, and 'gathering and colluding with the intention to carry out a crime against national security,' according to the Iranian judiciary's Mizan news agency. Yasin denies the charges.
Both Amnesty International and the UN's Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on Iran say that 10 men have been executed in relation to the insurrection sparked by Amini's death.
Yasin was one of dozens of protesters who appeared in what rights groups described as sham trials based on forced confessions extracted under torture.
Iran's Supreme Court later overturned Yasin's death sentence on appeal, and his sentence was eventually set at five years. In the summer of 2023, the artist managed to release an audio message from prison, shared by a Kurdish rights organization, in which he first alleged being abused by the authorities as they attempted to extract a confession.
Now, he is able to describe his ordeal in far greater detail as he recovers in Germany, and earlier this month testified before a UN human rights commission in Geneva, Switzerland.
'Mentally, I am completely shattered, but I am slowly learning to cope with it,' the 29-year-old artist told CNN, speaking at a Berlin music studio that has invited him to record for free. While he tried to break into a smile as he arrived, he was visibly anxious.
'Physically, the torture I endured has changed me tremendously – there are still lasting effects. I developed a lot of trauma after prison,' he said. The words 'Nothing can stop me' are tattooed in English on one of his wrists.
CNN reached out to the Iranian government's permanent mission to the United Nations for comment regarding Yasin's allegations of torture and abuse while in detention. The mission acknowledged the request but has yet to comment.
Yasin had long been writing what he describes as 'protest music' about social injustice and hardship in Iran.
In his song 'Haji,' written and released months before being arrested, he sang:
'I stood tall with pride. Yet they banned my voice. They forbade my happiness. They hung me upside down like a sacrificial animal.'
Those lyrics were to foreshadow the torture he says was inflicted by Iranian authorities after his arrest.
'They call it the morgue'
Yasin told CNN he was under 'the most severe torture' during his first three months in detention, and that at one point his interrogator told him he would get a confession out of him with the pen he was holding.
'They inserted a pen into my left nostril and then forcefully hit it from below. I passed out from the pain, and when I woke up, I was covered in blood,' he said.
The rapper interrupted his conversation with CNN multiple times as he recalled his experience behind bars. He wears a nasal dilator to help him cope with breathing difficulties he says are a result of the abuse he suffered. His nose looks damaged.
They hoisted me up – one hour, two hours – just hanging. Then they would bring me down for two or three hours before hanging me up again
Saman Yasin
Then there was the underground cold room inside the Evin prison compound, which Yasin says interrogators told him 'doesn't even exist on the map.' He believes it's in a building that belongs to Iran's Ministry of Intelligence.
'I heard from the other prisoners that they call it the morgue because the temperature is so low,' he said. 'It is freezing cold.'
'They hoisted me up – one hour, two hours – just hanging. Then they would bring me down for two or three hours before hanging me up again,' Yasin told CNN. 'After a while, I reached a state where it felt like I was slipping in and out of consciousness – like a dream, half awake, half asleep – because I was hanging upside down. They did this to me for three days.'
Saman Yasin alleges torture and abuse while held in Evin prison in Tehran, pictured in October 2022.
Majid Asgaripour/WANA/Reuters
Other abusive techniques Yasin says he endured included being thrown down the stairs, beatings, insults, false claims that his brother was in custody, and forced psychiatric evaluations.Yasin says he was coerced and ultimately confessed under duress that he was the man in a video released on state media, and that he fired a gun during a protest the night he was arrested. He told CNN neither point was true and that his death sentence was later reduced in part because video evidence showed it was not his hands holding the gun.
His testimony is consistent with the findings of a two-year investigation into the 2022 crackdown by the UN's fact-finding mission. It said the Iranian government 'consistently refuted allegations of torture,' but did not indicate whether allegations had been investigated or why they had been dismissed. The UN report also found that the alleged crimes were committed 'in furtherance of a state policy.'
A daring escape from Iran, and the cost of freedom
In late October 2024, after two years in prison, Yasin was released on medical furlough. About a month later he had nasal surgery and was recovering at home when the phone rang unexpectedly. The authorities were ordering him to go back to prison, five months earlier than expected.
But he didn't go back. 'I thought to myself, I can't just sit here and do nothing,' the rapper said. 'If I left the country, first of all, it would spare my family from even more suffering because of me. And second of all, if I was on the outside, I could be a voice for the people, I could do something meaningful and take a step forward for them.'
That same night, Yasin fled Iran, heading over the mountains to northern Iraq with the help of a smuggler who ultimately abandoned him, he says. In footage shared with CNN, he can be seen on a foggy mountain as the wind blows. His nose is bandaged.
'When I got to the very top, the pressure was too much – my nose started bleeding, and I passed out,' he said. 'By some miracle, I made it into Iraq.' From there, with the help of NGOs and a German politician, he was able to travel to Germany.
Now he finds himself starting from scratch in Berlin on a special humanitarian visa, a struggling artist with dreams of making it in America. Loneliness and being far from family are taking a toll, but he's trying to make terms with the cost of freedom.
'In those early days, even though the atmosphere was terrifying, and the repression aimed at silencing people was intense, there was still a scent of freedom in the air,' he said.
'After prison, I feel like I have a huge responsibility toward the people. I have much greater expectations of myself – to be their voice… that means everything to me.'
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Egypt Independent
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16 hours ago
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On May 17, the day before the Kerem Shalom crossing reopened, work started on a tent encampment in eastern Rafah, according to satellite imagery reviewed by CNN. That work appears to have concluded on May 30. The camp is less than 500 meters from where Abu Shabab runs checkpoints. Members of the Popular Forces can be seen in this image posted on the group's Facebook page. From Popular Forces/Facebook Four days later the so-called Popular Forces issued a statement saying that Abu Shabab 'invites the residents of these areas to return, where food, drink, shelter, security and safety have been provided, shelter camps have been set up, and humanitarian relief routes have been opened.' The encampment is in an area known as the Morag Corridor, to which the Israeli military wants Gazans to move as it orders evacuation orders for much of the strip. Early in May, the far-right Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said the population of Gaza, would be 'concentrated' in a narrow strip of land between the Egyptian border and the corridor. A senior Israeli security official said at the same time that the goal was to separate humanitarian aid from Hamas 'by involving civilian companies and creating a secured zone patrolled by the IDF.' This would include a 'sterile area in the Rafah region beyond the Morag route, where IDF will screen all entrants to prevent Hamas infiltrators.' Palestinian branding Abu Shabab's force uses Palestinian insignia and flags prominently on its uniforms, but he told CNN that his 'grassroots forces are not an official authority, nor are we operating under a direct mandate from the Palestinian Authority.' The office of the spokesperson for the Palestinian Security Forces, Major General Anwar Rajab, told CNN there was no connection between the Palestinian security apparatus and Abu Shabab's group. Nor does his family want anything to do with him. 'Leaders and elders of the Abu Shabab family' said in a statement that they had confronted him about videos showing 'Yasser's groups involved in dangerous security engagements, even working within undercover units and supporting the Zionist occupation forces that brutally kill our people.' The family declared its 'complete disassociation from Yasser Abu Shabab' and urged anyone who had joined his security groups to do the same. 'We have no objection to those around him eliminating him immediately; we state clearly that his blood is wasted,' the family statement said. Abu Shabab told CNN that the statement was 'fabricated and false' and accompanied by 'a media campaign targeting me and my colleagues.' He said his group had endured 'false accusations and systematic smear campaigns, and we have paid a heavy price,' also alleging that Hamas had killed several of the group's volunteers 'and members of my own family while we were guarding aid convoys for international organizations.' Yasser Abu Shabab can be seen in this image posted on the Popular Forces' Facebook page. From Popular Forces/Facebook Muhammad Shehada at ECFR said there is evidence that Abu Shabab's presence is expanding with Israeli support into Khan Younis, to the north of his stronghold. Even so, his reach is still limited. The Popular Forces speaks of 'hundreds of daily requests we receive on our Facebook page from individuals seeking to join us,' but analysts believe Abu Shabab probably has only about 300 men under his command. Most people in Gaza would never think of joining him for fear of being branded collaborators, said Shehada. Even so, he added, Abu Shabab's militia now serve multiple functions for the Israelis, helping control where aid goes, or does not go; trying to entice desperate and hungry people to the so-called 'safe zone' in eastern Rafah; and carrying out high-risk missions to detect the presence of Hamas fighters.