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

Nastaran Akhlaqi

About

Nationality: Iran
Religion: Non-Believer
Civil Status: Single

Case

Date of Killing: September 29, 1982
Location of Killing: Iran
Mode of Killing: Unspecified execution method
Charges: Unspecified counter-revolutionary offense

About this Case

The information about Ms. Nastaran Akhlaqi has been sent to Omid through an electronic form by one of her cellmates who was in prison with her in 1981. Ms. Akhlaqi is also one of the 430 individuals whose name appears on the list of “Martyrs of the Peykar Organization for the Liberation of the Working Class” published on the website of Peykar Andeesheh. This list contains the names of those members of the Organization who died after the Revolution of 1979. More than 400 of the individuals on this list have been executed. This execution was also announced in the addendum of the Mojahed magazine, No. 261, published by the Mojahedin Khalgh Organization on September 6, 1985. The list includes 12,028 individuals, affiliated with various opposition groups, who were executed or killed during clashes with the Islamic Republic security forces from June 1981 to the publication date of the magazine.

Ms. Akhlaqi was a student and sympathizer of the Peykar Organization. Her father, who was a supporter of the Islamic Republic, reported her to the authorities. She told her cellmates, after a visitation by her family sometime after her arrest, that her father never expected his daughter to be condemned to death. He had rather thought that reporting her to the authorities would guide her in the right path and save her.

Ayatollah Khomeini, the Islamic Republic religious leader, had declared spying among neighbors and relatives to be a personal duty. In a speech on July 2, 1981, he stated: “Today, it is the obligation of the nation to pay attention and identify these saboteurs and report them to committees and courts and any other nearby place… Today, each of you should be a member of the Intelligence Ministry. Everyone of us is obligated to report these saboteurs [to the authorities] when we identify them. We have to try to identify them and report them, so that the police and military forces can hand them over to the court in order for these individuals to be prosecuted.”

The Peykar Organization for the Liberation of the Working Class was founded by a number of dissident members of the Mojahedin Khalq Organization who had converted to Marxism-Leninism. Peykar was also joined by a number of political organizations, known as Khat-e Se (Third line). The founding tenets of Peykar included the rejection of guerrilla struggle and a strong stand against the pro-Soviet policies of the Iranian Tudeh Party. Peykar viewed the Soviet Union as a "Social imperialist" state, believed that China had deviated from the Marxist-Leninist principles, and radically opposed all factions of the Islamic regime of Iran. The brutal repression of dissidents by the Iranian government and splits within Peykar in 1981 and 1982 effectively dismantled the Organization and scattered its supporters. By the mid-1980s, Peykar was no longer in existence.

Arrest and detention

Ms. Akhalqi was arrested in the summer of 1981, and according to her cellmate, she was tortured. Initially, her role in the Peykar organization was not disclosed to her interrogators.

Ms. Akhlaqi spent some time in the medical unit of Evin Prison. In mid-November 1981, along with others cellmates of the medical unit, she was transferred to Unit 240, Room number 6, which was assigned to leftist prisoners. After her role and activism in the Peykar Organization was disclosed to the authorities, once again she was taken for interrogation and tortured and her feet were flogged. Her cellmate saw the wounds on her feet in the corridor leading to interrogation rooms. After that she was transferred to another unit.

No specific information is available regarding Ms. Akhlaqi’s visitation with her family. Based on the testimony of individuals in Evin, during this period, after June 20, 1981, no visitation was allowed for political prisoners. Visitations resumed in March of 1982. The dates of upcoming visitations were announced in newspapers. Visitors were behind a glass window. It was impossible to speak openly and freely and one had to use gestures and allusions. After about six months, telephones were installed in the cabins and visitations were allowed once a month. Conversations during visitations were monitored by prison authorities through the telephones. Prisoners, whose interrogations were not completed, were not allowed any visitation.

Trial

No information is available on the defendant’s trial.

Charges

No information is available on the charges against Ms. Akhlaqi.

Evidence of guilt

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

Defense

No information is available on her defense.

Judgment

The Islamic Revolutionary Tribunal condemned Ms. Nastaran Akhlaqi to death. She was executed on September 29, 1982.

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