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

Majid Safapur

About

Age: 16
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Islam (Shi'a)
Civil Status: Single

Case

Date of Killing: September 27, 1981
Location of Killing: Esfahan Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Shooting
Charges: Murder; Armed rebellion against the Islamic Republic

About this Case

“Brilliant,” people said of him, although his parents worried over his firm commitments.  A friend recognized his voice, in prison, chanting the Qur’an.

The information about Mr. Majid Safapur, son of Iraj, has been collected from an interview with his brother. The public relations unit of the central Islamic revolutionary prosecution office announced his execution in a communiqué, along with his older brother Farhad and 51 other persons. This communiqué was published in the Jomhuri Eslami newspaper on September 30, 1981. An individual familiar with this case has sent Omid further information about Mr. Safapur. Additionally, he is one of the 12028 individuals listed in an addendum to the Mojahed magazine (No 261), published by the Mojahedin Khalq Organization (MKO) in 1985. The list includes individuals, affiliated with various opposition groups, who were executed or killed during clashes with the Islamic Republic security forces from June 1981 till the publication date of the magazine.

Mr. Safapur was born in Esfahan in 1965. He was a third year high school student, majoring in mathematics. His brother remembers him as a brilliant and well-loved student. He says, “Once when I was a junior high school student, one of the teachers came to me and whispered, ‘I taught your brother. He was one of the brightest students I have ever had.’” Mr. Safapur enjoyed reading. He was a religious person; he prayed. However, the Islam he believed in was completely different from the Islam that officials of the Islamic Republic preached.

Mr. Safarpur was a sympathizer of the MKO. He was active in the propagation department of the prganization. His parents were worried about the consequences of his activism. A few months before his arrest, they forbade him from bringing political publications to the house. He and his older brother Farhad moved out of the house into rented a room. The interviewee remembers that Mr. Safapur was very steadfast in his political beliefs. His parents could not convince him to stop his political activities. Even after he moved out, his parents’ efforts to persuade him from not be politically active remained futile.

 

Arrest and detention

Mr. Safapur was arrested during a demonstration on June 20, 1981. State officials did not notify his family of the arrest. His friends who also attended the demonstration informed his family. His parents visited the police station, on the base of the Revolutionary Guards Corps. Officials of these agencies told the Safapurs that they did not know anything about their son. The interviewee remembers that his mother left the house in the morning with a bag containing food and clothes for Mr. Safapur. Having visited different offices, she returned home in the evening with the same bag, unable to find her son.

About one month before his execution, Revolutionary Guards of the Third District in Esfahan gave a piece of paper to Mr. Safapur’s mother. He had written on the paper “God willing, we will be soon released.” The guards told his mother than many were arrested but were going to be released soon. However, they did not inform her of the location of Mr. Safapur’s detention.

Mr. Safapur had a good voice. He sang and chanted the Quran in prison. A friend of his, who was also arrested, heard Mr. Safapur’s voice while in custody. Mr. Safapur was denied visitors for his entire detention period of more than three months.

The demonstration of June 20, 1981, took place in protest against the Parliament’s impeachment of President Banisadr and the Islamic Republic’s systematic policy of excluding the MKO from the country’s political scene, the refusal of Ayatollah Khomeini to meet with MKO leaders and his insistence for them to disarm. The MKO had, until then, supported the leadership of Ayatollah Khomeini and agreed to function within the framework of the new political system.

On June 20, the organization officially changed its policy and tried to overthrow the regime by organizing mass demonstrations, in which some of the demonstrators were armed, all over the country. These demonstrations, which were severely suppressed and resulted in the killing of dozens of demonstrators, were followed by a wave of mass arrests and executions by the Revolutionary Guards and para-military forces that targeted not only the MKO, but all other opposition groups. The massive repression, unprecedented in the history of the Islamic Republic, legitimized as official government policy the months-old state harassment and suppression of dissidents and resulted in the banning of all forms of independent political dissent.

Trial

According to the central prosecution office, Mr. Safapur was tried at the Islamic Revolutionary Tribunal of Esfahan. His family members were unaware of this trial. The date of the trial is not known.

Charges

The central prosecution office announced that Mr. Safapur and 52 others, including his brother Farhad, were collectively charged with “armed action against the Islamic Republic of Iran; terror; murder and attacking the Revolutionary Guards and Basij brothers; attacking the Basij dormitories; throwing Molotov cocktails and grenades in public places, [aiming at] cars and shops of the Revolutionary Guards, Basij, and the Hezbollahi [Party of God] people.” There is no information regarding the specific charges brought against Mr. Safapur.

The validity of the criminal charges brought against this defendant cannot be ascertained in the absence of the basic guarantees of a fair trial.

Evidence of guilt

No information is available about evidence presented against the defendant.

Defense

No information is available about Mr. Safapur’s defense at the trial. He was denied legal representation. According to his brother, “He was never armed. He was peaceful. Peacefulness was one of the values that our parents taught us.” Mr. Safapur thought of his peaceful political activism as a duty to his nation.

Judgment

The Islamic Revolutionary Tribunal of Esfahan condemned Mr. Safapur to death. He, his brother, and 51 others were shot by firing squad in Esfahan on September 27, 1981. At midnight of the following day, a doctor who worked at the coroner’s office and happened to be a family friend contacted a relative of the Safapurs and informed them of the execution. He issued a death certificate. There were marks on their bodies associated with beatings. The Safapur brothers were buried in the public cemetery. The family was not allowed to hold memorial services for them.

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