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 Ebrahim Harati

About

Age: 27
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Islam
Civil Status: Single

Case

Date of Killing: September 29, 1981
Location of Killing: Quchan, Khorasan\Khorasan-e Razavi Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Shooting
Charges: Attempt to assassinate or assassination of state dignitaries; Membership of anti-regime guerilla group; Participating in an anti-regime demonstration; Participating in clashes with revolutionary guards and or Bassij brothers; Unspecified counter-revolutionary offense

About this Case

The information about Mr. Mohammad Ebrahim Harati, son of Mohammad, was gathered from an interview with a relative. The public relations department of the Central Revolutionary Prosecution Office issued a statement regarding the execution of Mr. Harati along with four other individuals. The Kayhan newspaper published the statement on October 1, 1981.

Mr. Harati was born in Quchan (in the eastern province of Khorasan) in 1954. He studied mechanics at Aryamehr High School in Mashhad. While serving in the national draft, he was a sergeant and worked in the communications unit of the Hamedan Division. He participated in demonstrations against the monarchy. After the 1979 revolution, he became a sympathizer of the Mojahedin Khalq Organization (MKO). He designed and distributed posters and signs. His designs were also published in MKO publications.

In 1980, Mr. Harati was admitted to the Tehran University, and specialized in textile design at the School of Fine Arts. In April 1980, when universities closed during the Cultural Revolution,* he returned to Quchan and worked at the Ministry of Health office in Quchan.

The MKO had an office in Quchan. Many individuals who were political active and who had worked in the MKO office in Quchan have been executed. Mr. Harat’s family knew that he was a well-known political activist in the city and advised him to go underground, but Mr. Harati refused.

The interviewee remembers Mr. Harati as “very warm and kind.” He helped others in every way that he could. He was a social, positive, and well-loved person. He could also draw very well.

The statement of the Central Revolutionary Prosecution Office states, “Five of the active members of the militia section of the Hypocrites Organization… have been condemned to execution. [They] oppose Islam and think that through assassinations, they can avenge the divine religion and prophets. Yet, it is obvious that these dregs of Great Satan, similar to other criminals and followers of the devil, will be held in the garbage bin of history, and as God has promised, they will be in the abyss of hell for eternity.” (‘Hypocrites’ is a term Iranian officials use to refer to the affiliates of the MKO.)

Arrest and detention

Mr. Harati was arrested in early September 1981 when he tried to help a relative avoid arrest. The revolutionary guards of Quchan drove their vehicle into Mr. Harati, who was riding a bicycle, and arrested him. State officials did not inform his family of the arrest and initially did not inform them where he was detained. About one week after the arrest, his family found out that he was detained in the Quchan prison, where political and other prisoners were held together. Soon, he was taken to another detention center, which was the former house of an official from the previous regime. The house was confiscated after the 1979 revolution and used as a detention center.

During his detention, Mr. Harati was denied visitations. According to his cellmates, who were later released, he was severely beaten in custody. Every week, his family brought clean clothes for him, left them with prison guards, and took his dirty clothes to wash. Mr. Harati hid small notes in his clothes, which was the only means of communication between him and his family. In the note, he let his family members know that he was fine and asked them to bring him belongings that he needed in prison.

Some time after his arrest, a cleric contacted his family and advised them to convince Mr. Harati to repent and that repentance was in his own best interest. Hoping to have a visit with him, his family stated that if they were allowed to visit him, they might be able to do so. Shortly after, Mr. Harati made a short phone call home.

Trial

According to the statement of the Central Revolutionary Prosecution Office, Mr. Harati was tried at the Islamic Revolutionary Court of Quchan. His family is unaware of any such trial.

Charges

The Central Revolutionary Prosecution Office announced that Mr. Harati and four others were collectively charged with “membership in the militia of the Hypocrites; involvement in arson of an Imam Khomeini Relief Foundation branch as well as stores belonging to innocent people; assassination of a Hezbollahi merchant; participation in a demonstration and throwing Molotov cocktails; organization of illegal protests; and causing unrest with the public.”

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 concerning the evidence presented against the accused.

Defense

No information is available concerning Mr. Harati’s defense. The interviewee emphasizes that “except for participation in the national demonstration of June 20 [1981], the other charges are completely false.” This person notes that when his family advised him to hide, Mr. Harati refused and said that he was a state employee and had done nothing illegal. The last time that his family fetched his laundry from prison, they did not find or sense anything unusual. He had asked for some objects that he needed in prison. His family believes that until a few days prior to his execution, he had not been tried. They believe he was executed in order to retaliate against the assassination of a person in Mashhad by affiliates of the MKO.

Judgment

The Islamic Revolutionary Court of Quchan identified Mr. Harati as “at war with God and His Prophet, and a rebel against the Islamic regime” and condemned him to death. He and four others were executed by a firing squad in Quchan on September 29, 1981. Mr. Harati was 27.

The authorities returned his body to his family the next day and asked them to pay for the bullets. They told the family that they had to bury the body within one hour. Mr. Harati’s body was buried on October 1. When the family held a memorial ceremony, it was under the surveillance of a revolutionary guard that warned them against mourning loudly. Mr. Harati was buried in Bagh-e Behesht cemetery in Quchan. His family placed gravestones on his tomb but the officials broke the gravestones each time a new one was placed. State officials insulted his family each time they visited the cemetery.


* The Cultural Revolution began after Ayatollah Khomeini gave a speech in March 1980 and ordered that universities be purged of all those who opposed his regime and be transformed into “learning environments” [as opposed to political forums] where “an all-Islamic curriculum” would be taught. The first wave of violence began on April 15, 1980 during a speech by Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani [a member of the Council of the Islamic Revolution and Minister of Interior] at the University of Tabriz. Following the speech, students supporting the regime took control of the University’s central building and demanded that the “university be purged” from “pro-Shah elements and other sellouts.”

On April 18, the Council of the Islamic Revolution issued a communiqué accusing political groups of converting higher education institutions into “headquarters of discordant political activities” and naming them as obstacles to the radical transformation of the universities. The communiqué gave these groups three days (Saturday April 19 to Monday April 21) to shut down their activities in the universities. The Council stressed that the decision included libraries along with activities related to arts and sports. Political groups, which recruited members and had strong support in the universities, refused to evacuate.

Before the Council’s deadline, serious clashes took place between leftist groups and Islamist Associations, which were at times supported by security forces and paramilitary groups. These clashes, which peaked at the end of the three-day deadline, resulted in the death of several people and the wounding of hundreds of others on university campuses around the country.

On April 21, the Islamic Republic authorities announced the victory of the Cultural Revolution and the closure of all universities in order to Islamicize the curricula. The universities remained closed for two years. One of the outcomes of the Cultural Revolution was the purging of many university professors and students based on their political beliefs.

Correct/ Complete This Entry