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

Khalilollah (Sa’dollah) Zare’i

About

Nationality: Iran
Religion: Islam (Sunni)
Civil Status: Unknown

Case

Date of Killing: March 3, 2009
Location of Killing: Central Prison, Zahedan, Sistan Va Baluchestan Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Hanging
Charges: War on God; Participating in clashes with revolutionary guards and or Bassij brothers; Membership of anti-regime guerilla group; Bombing; Corruption on earth

About this Case

News of the execution of Mr. Khalilollah Zare’i, also known as Sa’adollah, child of Nur Mohammad, and his co-defendants was published by numerous sources, including Fars News Agency (March 3, 2009), Kayhan newspaper (March 4, 2009), Iranian Students News Organization - ISNA (March 3, 2009), the Sunni news outlet Sunni Online (March 5, 2009), and Taftan News Agency (May 29, 2009). Additional information about this case was obtained from the BBC Persian website (May 29, 2009), and an interview conducted by the Boroumand Center (Boroumand Center interview) with one of Mr. Khalilollah Zare’i’s co-defendants’ relatives.

Baluchestan Popular Movement (Jondollah) issued a statement following the execution of Mr. Zare’i and his co-defendants claiming responsibility for the suicide attack on Bassiji ceremonies being held at Imam Ali Hosseinieh on May 27, 2009, which led to the killing of 25 individuals, and declared it a retaliatory operation meant to avenge the blood of Mr. Zare’i and three other Sunni clerics in Sistan and Baluchestan Province as well as the blood of more than 1,000 Baluch youth executed in that Iranian year. (Taftan, May 29, 2009).

Arrest and detention

On June 16, 2008, at 2 PM, the city of Iranshahr’s Information Administration forces arrested Mr. Zare’i and several other individuals at his home in Iranshahr’s Mohammadabad village, without showing an arrest warrant. Security forces beat and arrested Mr. Zare’i, who was hosting several of his co-defendants at home, and took him to the Iranshahr Information Administration Detention Center where he was kept for two days (Boroumand Center Interview).

According to a person with knowledge of the case, at the time of the arrest, Information agents severely beat Mr. Zare’i in front of his wife and children for objecting to the beating of his guests, and picked him up and carried him away unconscious (Boroumand Center Interview).

Mr. Zare’i subsequently spent four months in solitary confinement cells at Zahedan’s Information Administration Detention Center, and was then transferred to Zahedan Central Prison’s Ward 3, known as the political prisoners’ ward, where he was kept for five months (Boroumand Center Interview).

According to another published report, Mr. Zare’i was arrested along with a group of 27 individuals in the course of skirmishes with the Police Force, the Revolutionary Guards Corps, and the Bassij, in May-June 2008 (Kayhan, March 4, 2009).

Trial

A Branch Court in Iranshar tried Mr. Zare’i and 27 other co-defendants (Kayhan, March 4, 2009). There is no precise information regarding the court session/s.

Charges

The Court brought mass charges against Mr. Zare’i and his co-defendants, charging them with “support, membership, and making effective financial and military efforts to advance the causes of the Abdolmalek Rigi terrorist group in order to combat the Islamic Republic of Iran; gathering a considerable number of weapons, ammunition, and explosive materials and instruments; exploding a bomb on the police patrol’s path; participation in the failed assassination attempt on the life of a Sunni citizen; and attacking the Road Police car in the town of Iranshahr”. No information is available, however, about charges brought against them individually (Fars News Agency, March 3, 2009).

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 allude to reports according to which, in certain cases, the Islamic Republic of Iran’s officials bring false charges against their opponents (including political, civil, and union activists, as well as ethnic and religious minorities) such as drug trafficking or commission of public or sexual crimes, and execute them along with other regular criminals. Hundreds of people are sentenced to death in Iran every year; however, the number of those who are sentenced to death based on these false charges is not known.

Evidence of guilt

Based on available information, Mr. Zare’i’s TV confession and that of another defendant in the case, which were broadcast on the Sistan and Baluchestan center provincial television network, were among the evidence presented against him in court (Sunni Online, March 5, 2009). The details of the evidence presented against him in court are not available.

International human rights organizations have repeatedly condemned the government of the Islamic Republic of Iran for its systematic use of severe torture and solitary confinement to obtain confessions from detainees and have questioned the authenticity of confessions obtained under duress.

Defense

No information is available on Mr. Zare’i’s defense.

A Summary of the Defects in Mr. Khalilollah Zare’i’s Judicial Proceedings

Based on available information regarding this case (such as the Boroumand Center’s interview with a person with knowledge thereof) Mr. Zare’i was severely tortured at the time of his arrest and in the preliminary investigations phase. Under Iranian laws, subjecting a defendant to torture and duress are illegal and considered to be a crime. Furthermore, any confessions or admissions so obtained are without legal credence. Principle 38 of the Iranian Constitution, as well as certain Iranian laws and other international documents to which the Iranian government is a signatory, expressly refer to the matter and even consider obtaining confessions under torture to be a criminal act and individuals who resort to such acts to be criminals (Islamic Penal Code Article 578). Therefore, the court’s reliance on a confession obtained under duress and torture was in complete violation of the laws. The court should have conducted the necessary investigations in this regard and only then relied on the confession as a basis for its ruling.

Judgment

A Branch Court in Iranshar sentenced Mr. Zare’i and one of the other co-defendants to death on the charge of “Moharebeh and Efsad fel-Arz”. The sentence was upheld by the Supreme Court. (Fars News Agency, March 3, 2009, Kayhan newspaper, March 4, 2009).

On the morning of March 3, 2009, Mr. Zare’i and his co-defendant were hanged at Zahedan Central Prison.

The court also sentenced three other defendants in this case to exile (Kayhan newspaper, March 4, 2009).

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 *The Hanafi sect is a branch of Sunni Islam that follows the teachings of Abu Hanifeh Na’man Bin Sabet, one of the four Imams of Islam’s Sunnat and Jama’at. The Hanafi religion has the most followers among the four Sunni branches and follows the teachings of Mohammad, Abu Bakr, Omar, Osman, and Ali.

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