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

Mojtaba Moradi

About

Nationality: Iran
Religion: Presumed Muslim
Civil Status: Married

Case

Date of Killing: July 31, 1980
Location of Killing: Evin Prison, Tehran, Tehran Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Shooting
Charges: Plotting to overthrow the Islamic Republic

About this Case

News of the execution of Mr. Mojtaba Moradi and 10 others was reported in the Jomhuri Eslami daily on July 31, 1980. He was reportedly involved in planning a coup d’état,  known as Nojeh, which was aborted the day it was launched. Information about Mr. Mojtaba Moradi, son of Ebrahim, is based on an electronic form sent to the Boroumand Foundation by a person familiar with his case. Additional information has been drawn from the indictment of four other individuals who were also involved in the Nojeh coup, as published in the Jomhuri Eslami and Enqelab Esmali newspapers on July 20, 1980. According to the existing information, Mr. Moradi was married with two children and was a parachutist of Nohed Brigade 23 of the Army.

According to available information, the planners of the Nojeh coup were members of the armed forces and the Iran Party (social democrat and part of the Iranian National Front), who opposed the religious rule and believed in the separation of church and state.  The core of the coup d’état was to fly aircrafts from the Nojeh base in Hamedan and bomb some military targets as well as the residence of Ayatollah Khomeini.  Another team was to take over the radio-television building inTehranin order to announce the coup and expose the motives to the population. A group of Bakhtiari nomads also participated in this coup. The plan was discovered a few hours before being carried out.

On July 9, 1980, the Islamic Republic of Iran authorities announced the discovery and dismantling of a civil and military network which had planned the coup d’état to overthrow the regime. Two months later, the organization Neqab, in a communiqué, claimed responsibility for this attempted “uprising.”  The organization attested that “the path of Mossadegh is that of the people” and, today, “Bakhtiar is its authentic leader… We have risen up to put an end to this curse [the Islamic regime] and to entrust the affairs of our land to the faithful disciple of Mossadegh – Shapur Bakhtiar.” (Iran: In Defense of Human Rights, National Movement of the Iranian Resistance, Paris, 1983).

Following the discovery of the plan for the coup, more than sixty officers and civilians were executed in several cities of Iran in less than a month. Most of the officers were still active in the army and had not been swept away in the first wave of purges which took place in the army after the fall of the monarchy. Executions of individuals involved in the Nojeh coup continued in the months and years to come; at least 200 persons were executed in relations to the coup.

Nureddin Kianuri, Secretary General of the Tudeh Party (the Iranian pro-Soviet communist party) mentioned the coup d’état in an article dated May 2, 2000 posted on the Rah-e Tudeh website. Kianuri stressed the fact that the military branch of the Tudeh Party, which cooperated with the Islamic Republic’s authorities, discovered and “neutralized” the coup.

Arrest and detention

According to the information sent to the Boroumand Foundation, he was arrested in Tehran during office hours, and marks of torture were evident after his arrest. No explanation was provided regarding this claim.      

Trial

No information is available on Mr. Moradi’s trial. 

Charges

No information is available on Mr. Moradi’s charges.  In an indictment dated July 19, 1980, the Public Prosecutor said the following regarding some other participants of this alleged coup d’état plan: “These enthusiasts of the Shah’s rotten, filthy, and reactionary regime, these supporters of the blood-thirsty American imperialism, [had in mind to] bring about ‘American social democracy’… and after two years of curfew and absolute oppression, put the monarchial system on referendum…”

The Public Prosecutor emphasized: “This conspiracy was not planned in a vacuum and hence cannot be described in a single indictment; and these conspirators cannot be considered ordinary convicts. They are criminals who have undermined the newly regained truth, honor, and dignity of a liberated community of Muslim people. Considering this, and consulting verses of the holy Quran regarding the punishment of a ‘rebel’ against the Islamic sovereign, it is imperative that the convicts receive their punishment according to the Shari’a law.”

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

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

Defense

No information is available about Mr. Moradi’s defense.   

Judgment

The Islamic Revolutionary Tribunal of the Army sentenced Mr. Mojtaba Moradi to death. According to the existing information, Mr. Moradi was executed by firing squad at the Evin prison yard in Tehran on July 31, 1980 at dawn. He was buried at the Behesht-e Zahra cemetery.    

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