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

Mohammad Hashem Haqbayan

About

Age: 27
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Non-Believer
Civil Status: Single

Case

Date of Killing: July 9, 1981
Location of Killing: Nur, Mazandaran Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Shooting
Charges: Counter revolutionary opinion and/or speech; Participating in clashes with revolutionary guards and or Bassij brothers; Unspecified offense

About this Case

The information about Mr. Mohammad Hashem Haqbayan, son of Ramezan Ali, was sent to Omid via an electronic form by an individual close to him. His execution along with his brother Ali Akbar, was announced in the Kayhan and Jomhuri Eslami newspapers on August 12, 1981. Mr. Haqbayan is also one of the 430 individuals whose names appear on the list of “Martyrs of the Peykar Organization for the Liberation of the Working Class” published on the website of Andeesheh va Peykar. This list contains the names of more than 400 individuals executed after the 1979 revolution. Additionally, his name appears among the 12,028 individuals listed in an addendum to the Mojahed magazine (No 261), published by the Mojahedin Khalq Organization on September 6, 1985. The addendum lists 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.

Mr. Haqbayan was born in 1954 in Amirabad village in northern province of Mazandaran. He received his bachelor’s degree in accounting from Mazandaran University in Babolsar. As a student, he began his political activities and worked for the amelioration of workers’ rights and their living conditions. He was a member of the Paykar organization. In addition to reading Peykar publication, he worked in rice farms and taught at schools as a volunteer.

The person familiar with this case remembers Mr. Haqbayan as a “calm man who believed in the principles of the Peykar organization… When hearing criticism of the organization, he defended Peykar and enthusiastically cooperated with the publishing section of Peykar.” Once, when participating in a demonstration in Amol (another city in Mazandaran province), the revolutionary guards attacked the protestors. Shrapnel from a grenade hit Mr. Haybayan’s leg and he was taken to a hospital. With the help of his brother and a nurse, he escaped from the hospital before being arrested.

The person close to Mr. Haqbayan conveyed this memory about him. “Once Hashem borrowed a motorcycle from his friends, but he did not know how to ride in properly. One night, his brother Akbar asked him if he could take Akbar on the motorcycle to another village. Hashem accepted but since he lacked the skill to ride the motorcycle, they had an accident and they both fell into a stream and it took them several hours to get themselves out of the stream and into a safe place.”

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

Based on the available information, at 7 p.m. on June 26, 1981, the revolutionary guards of Nur (city in Mazandaran) surrounded Amirabad and arrested Mr. Haqbayan and his brother without a warrant and took them to Nur. Their family members went to the revolutionary guards headquarters in Nur to visit them, but they were not allowed to see their sons. The Haybayan brothers were held incommunicado the entire time.

Trial

On July 8, 1982, Mr. Haqbayan was tried at Islamic Revolutionary Tribunal of Nur.

Charges

The collective charges against Mr. Haqbayan and his brother were announced in the newspaper as “supporting the Peykar Organization, continuous activity and participation in confrontations in Amol, Qa’emshahr, and Gonbad, propaganda for those groups that were active in the incidents in Gonbad and Kordestan, misleading youngsters, and animosity against the Islamic Republic based on deception and wrong doing.”

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

At the time of arrest, the revolutionary guards searched the Haqbayans’ house and found some publications of the Peykar organization. These were used as evidence to prove guilt.

Defense

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

Judgment

َThe Islamic Revolutionary Court of Nur called Mr. Mohammad Hashem Haqbayan as “an apostate, a corruptor on earth and an enemy of God” and condemned him to death. The sender of the electronic form has found contrary information years after the executions. This information states that state officials told the Baqbayan brothers that only one of them would be executed. Mr. Ali Akbar Haqbayan, who was the older brother, hoped to save Mohammad Hashem. He stated that the Peykar publications belonged to him and that he was a sympathizer of the organization, volunteering to be executed. He was kept in a public ward after the trial, where he told other prisoners about what had happened at the court.

On July 9, 1981, state agents transferred both brothers to the Kashpal forest, the execution location. Mr. Ali Akbar Haqbayan was shot by firing squad before his brother’s eyes. After the execution, the latter was told to go and collect his older brother’s body. As Mohammad Hashem Haqbayan ran towards his brother’s body, he was shot and killed.

Revolutionary guards informed the family of the executions. One of them told family members, “God ordered me to execute them.” No will was returned to the family members. They examined Mohammad Hashem’s body and saw that he had been shot from behind.

Mr. Haqbayan is buried at Amirabad’s cemetery. At the time of execution, he was 27 years old.

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