Iran demands that the families of those sentenced to death pay for the ammunition if they want to recover the body

A bullet in Iran can cost up to $20.000. This is the price that the Persian authorities come to charge some families for recovering the body of their loved ones executed before a squad, for the crime of political dissent. The macabre institution of charging for the ammunition used in executions arose with the fundamentalist revolution of Ayatollah Khomeini, which in 1979 overthrew the Shah's secular dictatorship. In the 80s, most death sentences were applied to drug dealers, and some to stubborn dissidents of the system. Currently, the Khomeinist regime opted for the use of the gallows -generally a crane- although using the execution squad and the collection of the bullet, because he finds it imaginative. As reported by the BBC a few days ago, the Iranian government is doing some days these days, except for the victims of the protests that, since mid-September, have rendered the country sterile. A change in the delivery of the deceased in the police repression requires that the families of the dead find out about them in privacy and without making noise. In some cases, however, he maintained the habit of demanding money for the corpse. Standard Related News No "When they see this video, I'll be dead": rallies in Lyon to register the Iranian who committed suicide while Juan Pedro Quiñonero protested "The Police attack people on the street, men, women, children, the elderly," he denounced Mohamed Moradi before taking his own life The same report from the British channel reported that the brother of one of the victims of a repressed demonstration, Mehran Samak, 27, decided to storm the morgue where the body was found to take it away. Mehran had been shot by Iranian police when he was honking his car horn on the street to celebrate Iran's defeat in the World Cup in Qatar, as a sign of political protest. Similar protest gestures -burning women's veils in public, or ripping off a Muslim cleric's turban with a flick- have been repeated daily in the cities of Iran for more than a hundred days, after the death in a police station of a young woman who was not wearing "properly" the Islamic headscarf. MORE INFORMATION news Yes Check the Iranian regime: Sara competes without a veil news No The Iranian Police shoot at point-blank range at the faces and genitals of women demonstrating the power of the Shiite clerics, reaching 500 deaths, 69 of them minors. There are thousands of detainees from all walks of life, and so far there have been two public executions of protest leaders, which do limit themselves to asking for respect for human rights.