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

Kiumars Mohammadi

About

Age: 38
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Islam (Sunni)
Civil Status: Married

Case

Date of Killing: October 10, 2007
Location of Killing: Sanandaj, Kordestan Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Hanging
Charges: Acting against state's security; Membership of anti-regime guerilla group; Sympathizing with anti-regime guerilla groups; Murder; War on God

About this Case

News of Mr. Kiumars Mohammadi’s execution was published by numerous media, including BBC Farsi (October 17, 2007), Kurdistan Media (October 14, 2007), and the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (October 3, 2007). Quoting the Kurdistan Province Judiciary’s Office of Public Relations, ISNA news agency published news of the execution of two individuals, without stating their names (October 17, 2007). Additional information was obtained from an interview conducted by the Abdorrahman Boroumand Foundation (ABF Interview) with two other individuals accused in the same case (Messrs. Layeq Moradi and Karim Zarei). 

Mr. Kiumars Mohammadi was a Sunni Kurd, married, with one child and resided in Sanandaj. He had an elementary school education and laid tiles for a living. According to persons close to him, Mr. Mohammadi was funny and fearless. He trusted everybody and was not afraid of anything. Although he was considered a Sunni Moslem, he was not really religious and held secular beliefs. Mr. Mohammadi was a supporter of the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (ABF Interview).

The Human Rights Organization of Kurdistan (March 28, 2007) and the Association in Defense of Political Prisoners and Human Rights in Iran (October 12, 2007) issued a bulletin objecting to Mr. Mohammadi’s “arbitrary arrest” and the violation of his legal and citizens rights.

The Democratic Party of Iranian Kordestan (PDKI) was founded in 1945 with the objective to gain autonomy for Kurdistan, in north-west of Iran. After the Revolution, conflicts between the new central Shiite government and the mainly Sunni Kurdistan, regarding the role of minorities in the drafting of the constitution, specification of Shiite as the official state religion, and particularly the autonomy of the region, ended in armed clashes between the Revolutionary Guards and the peshmerga (the militia of the PDKI). The PDKI boycotted the referendum of April 1, when people went to polls to vote for or against the Islamic regime. On August 19, 1979, Ayatollah Khomeini called the PDKI the “party of Satan” and declared it “unofficial and illegal.” Mass executions and fighting broke out and continued for several months in the region. By 1983, PDKI had lost much of its influence in the region. Various leaders of the PDKI have been assassinated.

Arrest and Detention

According to persons close to him, Mr. Mohammadi was arrested in the vicinity of [the city of] Sanandaj’s Azadi Square by Information Ministry agents, in the afternoon of February 4, 2007. He was taken to the Information Administration detention center, located behind the Census Registration Building. Mr. Mohammadi spent over eight months in solitary confinement cells at the Information Administration detention center and underwent physical and psychological torture by his interrogators. He had no contact or visitation with his family. On May 12, 2007, he and the other defendants in the case were transferred to the Sanandaj General Prison for three days. He had told his prison mates that he had spent four or five extremely difficult and indescribable days at the Information detention center and was afraid they would take him back there again (ABF Interview).

In an interview with the Boroumand Foundation, two of the other defendants in the case stated that interrogations were conducted at all hours of the day and night, and that they were handcuffed and blindfolded. The interrogators insulted them and their religious beliefs, and, through punching, kicking, and beating the sole of their feet with electric cables, wanted them to confess at all costs that they played a part in the killing of a member of Sanandaj Revolutionary Guards Corps (ABF Interview).

Trial

On August 1, 2007, the Sanandaj Islamic Revolutionary Court Branch Two conducted a closed door trial of Mr. Kiumars Mohammadi and three other defendants in the case. According to two of the defendants, Mr. Mhammadi met his court-appointed attorney for the first time at trial. The court took less than 25 minutes to try the four defendants of the case. In addition to the judge and the court secretary, representatives of the Prosecutor’s Office and of the Information Administration were also present at the trial. The judge treated the defendants and their attorneys harshly and with the utmost disrespect; he was reading messages on his cell phone while they were presenting their defense (ABF Interview).

Charges

Mr. Mohammadi and the other defendants of the case were charged with “Moharebeh (“waging war with God”) through acting against national security, affiliation to the defunct Democratic Party, carrying out activities on behalf of said Party, propaganda against the Islamic Republic, participation in identifying people loyal to the holy regime of the Islamic Republic, association and conspiracy in performing Party-relegated tasks.” (ABF Interview). According to the Kurdistan Province Judiciary’s Office of Public Relations, Mr. Mohammadi was accused of killing a member of the Revolutionary Guards Corps in Sanandaj’s village of Hajiabad (ISNA, October 17, 2007).

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

There is no precise information regarding evidence presented at trial. According to persons close to him, however, the court presented evidence documenting his illegal exit from the border an contact with the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (ABF Interview).

The Kurdistan Information Administration considered the fact that news of Mr. Mohammadi’s charges and execution had been published in “the defunct Iranian Kurdistan Democratic little group” as indicative of the acceptance of responsibility for the killing of the Revolutionary Guards member by said party (ISNA, October 17, 2007)

Defense

At trial, Mr. Mohammadi denied all the charges brought against him. According to two of the defendants in the case, there was absolutely no evidence against any of them, including Mr. Kiumars Mohammadi. Even the interrogations produced nothing but confession to two instances of distributing Kurdistan Democratic Party leaflets. According to their statements, none of the four defendants had any knowledge of the Revolutionary Guards member (Mr. Nasser Biglari’s) killing by PEJAK, and the only reason such an accusation was leveled against them was that one of the defendants lived in the same neighborhood as the victim and had a personal enmity against him. Since all four defendants were very close friends, they were all accused of conspiring to kill the Guards member (ABF Interview). 

The court did not allow Mr. Mohammadi the opportunity to mount an effective defense. He was deprived of the right to retain an attorney of his own choosing, and met his court-appointed lawyer on the day of the trial. The court allowed the court-appointed attorneys to read the 1300-page case file, just two hours prior to the start of the hearing.

Mr. Mohammadi’s court-appointed attorney made reference to the indictment having called the Iranian Kurdistan Democratic Party “defunct”, and stated that, to try the defendants based on the charge of belonging to a party which, according to the indictment, did not exist, was meaningless. He was warned by the Information Ministry representative against defending an opposition party. Another court-appointed lawyer objected to the brevity of the trial, given a voluminous 1300-page case file, and to the hurried adjournment of the hearing, which was met with the judge’s very harsh reply (ABF Interview).

Mohammadi complained to the judge and objected to the torture he had undergone during interrogations, which, in one instance, had lead to a head injury; the objection was met with the judge’s utter indifference (ABF Interview).

Mr. Mohammadi’s court-appointed attorney made reference to the indictment having called the Iranian Kurdistan Democratic Party “defunct”, and stated that, to try the defendants based on the charge of belonging to a party which, according to the indictment, did not exist, was meaningless. He was warned by the Information Ministry representative against defending an opposition party. Another court-appointed lawyer objected to the brevity of the trial, given a voluminous 1300-page case file, and to the hurried adjournment of the hearing, which was met with the judge’s very harsh reply (ABF Interview).

The Iranian Kurdistan Democratic Party leaders denied the commission of any terrorist acts by the party and its members and declared that they were against all terrorist activities, including those against political and military leaders of the Islamic Republic (BBC, October 18, 2007).

Decision

On August 4, 2007, the Sanandaj Islamic Revolutionary Court Branch Two sentenced Mr. Kuamars Mohammadi to death by public hanging. According to one of the defendants, they were served with the court decision while in solitary confinement, were shown only the last page thereof, and were told that they had been asked by their attorneys to sign their objection [to the ruling]. On September 16, 2007, this decision was upheld by the Supreme Court Branch 32. On October 6, 2007, the defendants were served with the final judgment while at the Information Ministry detention center solitary confinement cells (ABF Interview). Mr. Mohammadi was not given the opportunity for a legal second appeal. Four days later, on October 10, 2007, he was hanged in a prison adjacent to the Sanadaj military barracks, along with his cousin Kiumars Mohammadi, in the presence of a number of agents and their families.

The officers in charge of implementing Mr. Mohammadi’s sentence did not heed his repeated requests to see his family and he was executed without ever having contacted and/or visited them. In protesting the denial of his visitation requests, he began chanting slogans and epic songs (ABF Interview). His body was not turned over to his family. He was buried by [security] agents at Behesht-e-Mohammadi cemetery’s parcel number 10 (Association for the Defense of Women, October 12, 2007). The agents poured concrete on his grave before informing his family of the place of his burial (ABF Interview).

Correct/ Complete This Entry