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

Ali Reza Sanandaji

About

Age: 62
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Presumed Muslim
Civil Status: Married

Case

Date of Killing: August 27, 1979
Location of Killing: Kordestan Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Shooting
Charges: Association with the Shah's idolatrous regime; Rape; Unspecified offense

About this Case

The information about Mr. Ali Reza Sanandaji, son of Ebrahim, has been drawn from an interview with a relative. His execution was announced in the Enqelab Eslami and Kayhan newspapers on September 15, 1979. Having finished elementary school, Mr. Sanandaji enrolled in English College of Esfahan. After two and half years, before finishing school, he went back to Sanandaj when his father had a stroke. Known as Vali Khan, Mr. Sanandaji was a land-owner and he raised farm animals. He was married and had three children. The interviewee remembers him as modern man, with good taste and was well-dressed. After the Revolution, his lands were de facto confiscated by local revolutionary and political activists without a court order. He appealed to the court for the return of his property.

Arrest and detention

According to the available information, in the evening of August 26, 1979, Revolutionary Guards went to the house of a relative of Mr. Sanandaji where he was arrested. The guards told his family members that they would soon bring him back. From the time of his arrest until execution, he was in custody for only a few hours.

Trial

There is no detailed information regarding his trial other than that Mr. Sanandaji and some other individuals were tried by an infamous religious judge named Sadeq Khalkhali at the Sanandaj airport. (Eleven men were condemned to death at this trial and immediately executed.)

Charges

In Kayhan the charges brought against Mr. Sanandaji were as follows: “close affiliation with the previous corrupt regime, abuse of this affiliation against the farmers of Alek village, which led to some farmers’ blindness and deafness, and forceful rape of a village women, and therefore, adultery.”

The validity of the criminal charges brought against this defendant cannot be ascertained in the absence of the basic guarantees of a fair trial. International human rights organizations have drawn attention to reports indicating that the Islamic Republic’s authorities have brought trumped-up charges against their political opponents and executed them for drug trafficking, and for sexual, and other criminal offences. The exact number of people convicted based on trumped-up charges is unknown.

Evidence of guilt

The report of this execution does not mention evidence used against him at the trial. According to the interviewee, a few months after the execution of Mr. Sanandaji, the national broadcasting company showed a documentary film of his house. The film depicted the pool in the yard and the bathtub inside the house, as well as some bottle of alcoholic beverages. The film also showed metal cuffs of hobbles used in the stable of the house to tie the feet of unruly horses and other farm animals. The commentary in the film referred to the hobbles as torture instruments used on farmers who worked for him.

Defense

No information is available concerning Mr. Sanandaji’s defense at the trial. He was denied the right to have an attorney.

According to the interviewee, after a trip to Britain, Mr. Sanandaji returned to Sanandaj despite the warnings of family and friends against going back to the city and appealing to the court in order to take back his land. He was not concerned for his own safety upon return and believed he had committed no crime to be afraid of his safety. Based on the testimony of some farmers as well as his own knowledge of Mr. Sanandaji, the interviewee refuted the charges of rape. The interviewee states that after Mr. Sanadaji was tried and condemned to death, he was brought to Alek village (in Kordestan Province). At the place of his execution, some state officials asked a few women from the village, who had gathered at the location, to testify that he had raped them. Under duress and right before Mr. Sanandaji was shot by firing squad, the women testified to this offence.

Judgment

The Islamic Revolutionary Tribunal of Sanandaj called Mr. Sanandaji a “corruptor on earth” and condemned him to death. He was flown by a helicopter from Sanandaj airport to Alek village. Meanwhile, other officials went to the village and called farmers to gather at the place of the execution, where Mr. Sanandaji was shot by firing squad on August 27, 1979. All of his property was confiscated. State officials returned his body to Sanandaj where family members buried him at the city cemetery.

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