Two men have been hanged in a Tehran square for the murder of a prominent judge, thought to be the first public execution in Iran's capital since 2002.
Majid and Hossein Kavousifar's deaths come a day after nine public hangings in other parts the country.
The government says it is part of a major effort to tackle violent crime and the illegal drug trade in Iran.
Human rights groups have criticised Iran for the high number of executions it carries out, second only to China.
The uncle and nephew were convicted of the murder of Judge Hassan Moghaddas in central Tehran two years ago.
Their execution was held at the same location as the murder, and on the same date, in front of a large picture of the murdered judge.
When Hossein Kavousifar looked distressed as he awaited his execution, his uncle gestured to him and smiled in an attempt to reassure him.
When the time came, hangmen with their heads covered, put the nooses around their necks kicked away the stools on which the two men stood.
A crowd of several hundred watched. Some shouted "God is great", some took pictures with their mobile phones. A few laughed.
The mother of one of the condemned men cried out: "God, please give me back my son."
'No remorse'
Executions doubled in Iran in 2006 to 177, and seven months into 2007, Amnesty International says 151 people have been executed, with the number increasing.
In 2001, he was the sitting judge in the case of Akbar Ganji - a prominent dissident whom he condemned to six years in prison.The assassinated judge was known for adjudicating in political cases and cases where Iran's Islamic revolutionary system had been criticised.
Tehran's chief prosecutor Saeed Mortazavi told reporters that the Majid Kavousifar had expressed no remorse, after killing a judge he had deemed "corrupt".
"People like him should know that their actions cannot and will not dissuade our judges from carrying out their deeds," he said.
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