Abdorrahman Boroumand Center

for Human Rights in Iran

https://www.iranrights.org
Omid, a memorial in defense of human rights in Iran
One Person’s Story

Bahman Haqiqatkhah

About

Age: 23
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Islam (Shi'a)
Civil Status: Single

Case

Date of Killing: May 21, 1984
Location of Killing: Tabriz, Azarbaijan-e Sharqi Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Hanging
Charges: Unspecified counter-revolutionary offense
Age at time of alleged offense: 22

About this Case

News of the execution of Mr. Bahman Haqiqatkhah, son of Molud and Rajabali, was submitted to the Abdorrahman Boroumand Center via email by a person close to him. (February 25, 2021). News of this execution was also submitted to the Boroumand Center via email by an eyewitness who was present at the scene of Mr. Haqiqatkhah’s execution. (August 11, 2021).

Mr. Haqiqatkhah is among 282 individuals whose names appear in a 1985 United Nations report on the situation of human rights in Iran dated November 13, 1985. This report includes a list entitled “Persons who were allegedly summarily and arbitrarily executed in the Islamic Republic of Iran: 1984-1985.”

News of Mr. Haqiqatkhah’s execution was also published in Mojahed Publication’s Appendix Number 261, published by the Mojahedin Khalq Organization of Iran, dated September 6, 1985. This Appendix includes the names of 12,028 individuals, mostly affiliated with political groups opposed to the Iranian regime. These individuals were either executed between June 20, 1981, until the date of publication of the Mojahed Publication, or killed in skirmishes with the Islamic Republic police forces.

According to available information, Mr. Haqiqatkhah was 23 years old, single, held a high school diploma with a concentration in economics, and was born in Astaneh Ashrafieh County in Guilan Province into a farmer family.

Mr. Haqiqatkhah was popular among his fellow townsmen: “He was kind to everybody and was very charismatic. He was friends with everyone in the neighborhood and had very good and warm relations with others. It was because of this pleasant demeanor that he had a great many friends in the neighborhood and in the town of Astaneh.” He was interested in sports: “He worked out every day and encouraged children to exercise.”

Mr. Haqiqatkhah joined the Mojahedden Khalq Organization* in 1979. He became one of the Organization’s commanders after a while. He had to live in hiding in the jungle for a time, along with his friends and brothers in arm, because he had been identified by the Revolutionary Guards Corps operatives in his town of residence. He had to move to the cities of Tehran, Shiraz, and finally Tabriz because he was in danger of being arrested. Furthermore, he did not have any contact with his family.

The Mojahedin Khalq Organization (MKO) was founded in 1965. This organization adapted the principles of Islam as its ideological guideline. However, its members’ interpretation of Islam was revolutionary and they believed in armed struggle against the Shah’s regime. They valued Marxism as a progressive method for economic and social analysis but considered Islam as their source of inspiration, culture, and ideology. In the 1970s, the MKO was weakened when many of its members were imprisoned and executed. In 1975, following a deep ideological crisis, the organization refuted Islam as its ideology and, after a few of its members were killed and other Muslim members purged, the organization proclaimed Marxism as its ideology. This move led to split of the Marxist-Leninist Section of the MKO in 1977. In January of 1979, the imprisoned Muslim leaders of the MKO were released along with other political prisoners. They began to re-organize the MKO and recruit new members based on Islamic ideology. After the 1979 Revolution and the establishment of the Islamic Republic, the MKO accepted the leadership of Ayatollah Khomeini and supported the Revolution. Active participation in the political scene and infiltration of governmental institutions were foremost on the organization’s agenda. During the first two years after the Revolution, the MKO succeeded in recruiting numerous sympathizers, especially in high schools and universities; but its efforts to gain political power, either by appointment or election, were strongly opposed by the Islamic Republic leaders. *

Arrest and detention

In December 1983, Mr. Haqiqatkhah was identified in Tabriz by a Revolutionary Guards operative named Reza Khoshsirat, who was from the same town and neighborhood as he.

Mr. Haqiqatkhah, who was armed, defended himself in a shootout with the Revolutionary Guards, who surrounded and subsequently arrested him. He spent six months in the Revolutionary Guards’ detention center in Tabriz. “He underwent the most severe forms of torture at the Revolutionary Guards’ detention center in Tabriz; they even obtained a forced confession from him which was broadcast on Tabriz television.”

Mr. Haqiqatkhah’s family finally visited with him in prison on May 19, 1984, after five years of separation.

Trial

Mr. Haqiqatkhah was tried without access to an attorney. There is, however, no information regarding the trial session(s).

Charges

The charge brought against Mr. Haqiqatkhah is not known.

Evidence of guilt

The report of this execution does not contain information regarding the evidence provided against the defendant.

International human rights organizations have repeatedly condemned the government of the Islamic Republic of Iran for its systematic use of severe torture and solitary confinement to obtain confessions from detainees and have questioned the authenticity of confessions obtained under duress.

Defense

No information is available on Mr. Haqiqatkhah’s defense.

Judgment 

Mr. Haqiqatkhah was determined to be Mohareb (“one who wages war against God”) and sentenced to death. On May 21, 1984, he was hanged from a crane in public in Tabriz’ main square. 

“They kept his lifeless body hanging from the crane for two days in order to scare others, and the newspapers’ bold headlines read ‘Terrorist commander was hanged in Tabriz’.”

Mr. Haqiqatkhah’s body was not turned over to his family and “was buried at Tabriz’ Vadi-e Rahmat Cemetery based on the Revolutionary Guards’ decision.”

A witness who was in the Bazaar with her mother that day wrote about what she had heard: “I did not want to forget his name even though I was very young. Those who had witnessed the scene of his hanging said that he was 17 or 18 years old and that he took a very deep breath before his execution, that he was very calm and had a smile on his face, a smile that he kept on his face after he had been hanged. Additionally, the charge against him was [of a] political [nature], and they had announced the news of his hanging on TV the day before. My mother and I had a flower plant in the house and we didn’t know what kind it was; we had been waiting for it to bloom for a long time, and it had bloomed when we returned home that day. We named it the Bahman Haqiqatkhah flower.”

Mr. Haqiqatkhah was 23 years old.

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* The exclusion of MKO members from government offices and the closure of their centers and publishing houses, in conjunction with to the Islamic Republic authorities’ different interpretation of Islam, widened the gap between the two. Authorities of the new regime referred to the Mojahedin as “Hypocrites” and the Hezbollahi supporters of the regime attacked the Mojahedin sympathizers regularly during demonstrations and while distributing publications, leading to the death of several MKO supporters. On June 20, 1981, the MKO called for a demonstration protesting their treatment by governmental officials and the government officials’ efforts to impeach their ally, President Abolhassan Banisadr. Despite the fact that the regime called this demonstration illegal, thousands came to the streets, some of whom confronted the Revolutionary Guardsmen and Hezbollahis. The number of casualties that resulted from this demonstration is unknown but a large number of demonstrators were arrested and executed in the following days and weeks. The day after the demonstration, the Islamic Republic regime started a repressive campaign – unprecedented in modern Iranian history. Thousands of MKO members and sympathizers were arrested or executed. On June 21, 1981, the MKO announced an armed struggle against the Islamic Republic and assassinated a number of high-ranking officials and supporters of the Islamic regime.
In the summer of 1981, the leader of the MKO and the impeached President (Banisadr) fled Iran to reside in France, where they founded the National Council of Resistance. After the MKO leaders and many of its members were expelled from France, they went to Iraq and founded the National Liberation Army of Iran in 1987, which entered Iranian territory a few times during the Iran-Iraq war. They were defeated in July 1988 during their last operation, the Forugh Javidan Operation. A few days after this operation, thousands of imprisoned Mojahedin supporters were killed during the mass executions of political prisoners in 1988. Ever since the summer of 1981, the MKO has continued its activities outside of Iran. No information is available regarding members and activities of the MKO inside the country.

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