While the boxing world argues about pound-for-pound lists and the next Saudi mega-card, a 30-year-old champion is sitting in a cell in Mashhad, Iran, waiting to be hanged.
His name is Mohammad Javad Vafaei-Sani. And if you’re waiting for the broader combat sports community to rally behind him the way they do for safer causes, you’re going to be waiting a long time. That’s the thing about athlete activism in combat sports—it’s incredibly selective. The silence around Vafaei-Sani’s case reveals more about the business calculations behind “speaking out” than anyone wants to admit.
The Story Nobody’s Talking About
Let’s get the facts straight, because misinformation helps no one. Vafaei-Sani isn’t a new arrest. He is a local boxing champion who was arrested in March 2020 for participating in the November 2019 anti-regime protests—demonstrations sparked by fuel price hikes, long before the “Woman, Life, Freedom” movement.
He has been trapped in a legal nightmare for five years. Accused of supporting the opposition group PMOI/MEK, he was charged with “corruption on earth”—a catch-all death penalty charge used by the regime to liquidate dissidents. His sentence has been a psychological torture device: issued, overturned twice, and now, reinstated.
This week, the nightmare reached its final stage. According to reports from Iran Human Rights (IHR) and La Presse, the Iranian Supreme Court has rejected his final request for a retrial. His case has been transferred to the “Implementation of Sentences” office.
Most chilling of all? On Monday, prison authorities granted his mother an unexpected in-person visit. In the grim playbook of Iran’s judicial system, that is usually the final goodbye before the noose.
A Massacre in the Shadows
Vafaei-Sani isn’t an isolated case; he is a statistic in a slaughter. 2025 has been a bloodbath in Iran. Reports indicate that at least 1,426 people have been executed between January and November of this year alone—a figure we haven’t seen since the mass purges of 1989.
The regime is paranoid, weakened by regional conflicts, and desperate to show who is in charge. They are killing political prisoners to instill fear. And yet, looking at the social media feeds of major boxing promotions, you’d think the world was perfectly peaceful.
The Hypocrisy of “Activism”
To be fair, there are a few voices in the wilderness. The WBC (World Boxing Council) and its president, Mauricio Sulaiman, released a statement pleading for Vafaei-Sani’s life, calling the sentence an attack on “human dignity.” Tennis legend Martina Navratilova and 20 other athletes signed a letter of support.
But where are the broadcasters? Where are the mega-promoters who claim to care about “empowerment” and “justice”? Where are the active fighters with millions of followers?
The silence is calculated. Combat sports have become increasingly dependent on international markets that do not share Western democratic values. The UFC learned to tiptoe around China. Boxing has gone all-in on the Middle East.
When fighters speak out about issues in countries where promotions do business, there are consequences. You think it’s a coincidence that fighters are vocal about safe, Western-centric political causes but mute when a boxer is about to be executed by a theocratic regime? They have families to feed and contracts to secure.
The Ghost of Navid Afkari
We have been here before. In 2020, wrestler Navid Afkari was executed under nearly identical circumstances despite a global outcry. He was tortured into a false confession and hanged to send a message to protesters.
The sports world said “Never Again.” Yet here we are, five years later, watching Mohammad Javad Vafaei-Sani walk the same path to the gallows.
The Uncomfortable Truth About the Vafaei-Sani Case
The Vafaei-Sani case is a mirror, and the reflection isn’t pretty. It demonstrates that the combat sports community will rally behind safe, popular, and financially neutral causes, while staying silent on those that might complicate a business deal.
As we cover here at Ringside Report, the globalization of boxing has created impossible ethical situations. But we should at least be honest about what we’re seeing. When a boxer faces state-sponsored murder for protesting, and the industry responds with a shrug, that tells you everything you need to know.
Mohammad Javad Vafaei-Sani is 30 years old. He is a fighter. And unless the volume of the outcry changes in the next 48 hours, he will become another name on a list that is already far too long.
