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

Behruz Alkhani

About

Age: 30
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Presumed Muslim
Civil Status: Single

Case

Date of Killing: August 26, 2015
Location of Killing: Central Prison (Darya), Orumieh, Azarbaijan-e Gharbi Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Hanging
Charges: War on God; Attempt to assassinate or assassination of state dignitaries
Age at time of alleged offense: 24

About this Case

News of Mr. Behruz Alkhani’s execution along with five other individuals was published by multiple sources including Amnesty International (August 26, 2015), HRANA (August 25, 2015), and the Campaign to Defend Civil and Political Prisoners in Iran (August 26, 2015). Additional information about this case was obtained from the transcript of the official court decision, Abdorrahman Boroumand Center’s interview with two of his brothers and one of his ward mates (Boroumand Center interview), and other sources.*

Mr. Alkhani was a single, young ethnic Kurd, residing in the town of Salmas in Western Azarbaijan Province. He was a [mountain] porter but had been unemployed after the closing off of the border a year before his arrest, and had started transporting goods with his small truck. (Revolutionary Court Decision transcript). He was a supporter of Kurdistan Free Life Party (PJAK).

The Kurdistan Free Life Party (PJAK) is a leftist organization established in January 2004 with the aim of creating "a democratic-ecological and gender-equal society" within the framework of a democratic and federal government in Iran, where autonomy is granted to all ethnic minorities. It held its first congress on 25 April 2004. The party, led by Abdul Rahman Haji Ahmadi, has very close ties with the PKK Party in Turkey, and regards Apo "Abdullah Ocalan" as its spiritual leader. PJAK mostly has influence in the northern parts of Iranian Kurdistan, where it is engaged in an armed struggle against the Islamic Republic. PJAK refers to Iranian Kurdistan as East Kurdistan.

Mr. Alkhani’s case is related to the assassination of [the town of] Khoi prosecutor, Mr. Vali Haji Gholizadeh** on January 18, 2010. Iranian governmental and judiciary officials announced that PJAK had officially accepted responsibility for the assassination, but PJAK denied that claim, and, in an interview with Rooz Online, PJAK leader Abdorrahman Haji Ahmadi stated that he had no knowledge of the identity of those responsible for the Khoi prosecutor’s assassination. (Rooz Online, January 20, 2010).

Human rights organizations reacted to Mr. Alkhani’s execution. Amnesty International issued an announcement in which it stated that his execution while his case was still pending at the Supreme Court and under consideration, constituted “a serious breach of Iranian and international law and an affront to international justice.” (Amnesty International,

Mr. Alkhani had a prior record of arrest and conviction for trafficking in gas-oil, and for illegally crossing the border into Turkey (Criminal Court Decision transcript).

Arrest and detention

Salmas Information Administration forces arrested Mr. Alkhani in the town of Salmas on January 27, 2010. He spent 19 months in solitary confinement at Information detention centers in thetowns of Salmas, Khoi, and Orumieh. Mr. Alkhani’s family had no knowledge of his whereabouts after his arrest, and their efforts to locate and obtain information regarding their child’s condition bore no fruit. Security forces denied his arrest for a long time, and would not allow him to contact, or have visitations with, his family (HRANA, September 4, 2010). Mr. Alkahani was subjected to psychological and physical torture during his detention at the Information Administration. According to Mr. Alkhani’s brother, “he had been tortured during detention. They had drilled a hole into his ankle and broken his fingers. They gave my brother electric shocks and beat him up with a cable on numerous occasions”. (Campaign to Defend Civil and Political Prisoners in Iran). Amnesty International also reported that he had been under torture. According to Mr. Alkhani’s brother, Behruz had lost his mental stability because of the blows he had received to his head, so much so that one of his trial sessions was postponed because of the severity of his psychological condition. (Campaign to Defend Civil and Political Prisoners in Iran).

On Thursday, November 20, 2014, Mr. Alkhani and 28 other political prisoners at Orumieh Prison’s Ward 12 began a hunger strike that lasted 33 days, protesting the non-separation of prisoners according to their crimes, denying political prisoners their own independent ward, and in order to put an end to prison officials’ inappropriate treatment of prisoners and their families,. (Campaign to Defend Civil and Political Prisoners in Iran, August 25, 2015).

Trial

On October 15, 2011, Orumieh Revolutionary Court, Branch One, tried Mr. Alkhani (as the Principal Defendant) and three others, in a closed session (Revolutionary Court Decision transcript). The trial took place in the presence of Mr. Alkhani’s court-appointed attorney, the prosecutor’s representative, and the Orumieh Information Administration representative. (Kurdistan Human Rights Organization, April 23, 2014). After the Supreme Court overturned the trial court’s ruling, Orumieh Revolutionary Court Branch 16 tried him a second time. This time, the court session took place in the presence of an attorney of Mr. Alkhani’s own choosing. (Radio Zamaneh, August 30, 2015).

Another case was opened against Mr. Alkhani and one other individual, upon a complaint brought by Mr. Vali Haji Gholizadeh’s (the Khoi prosecutor) next of kin, where Orumieh Criminal Court tried Mr. Alkhani as the Principal Defendant in 2013-14. Mr. Reza Fatin Azar represented Mr. Alkhani in this case. (Criminal Court Decision transcript).

Charges

In the Revolutionary Court, Mr. Alkhani was charged with “Moharebeh (“waging war against Allah”) and Efsad fel-Arz (“spreading corruption on Earth”) through effective cooperation with the PJAK and PKK, conspiring in the procurement and delivery of PJAK’s necessities in the Salmas region, the assassination of the town of Khoi’s prosecutor, and the unauthorized keeping of one bomb, two Colt handguns, and one Uzi, in order to carry out terrorist activities.” (Revolutionary Court Decision). He was charged with “participation in the intentional murder of Martyr Haj Vali Gholizadeh (Khoi prosecutor)”. (Criminal Court Decision transcript).

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

Based on the court decisions; the police report; the report of Western Azarbaijan Province Information Administration experts; transcripts of Mr. Alkhani’s phone conversations; the defendant’s admissions to being in contact with PJAK and PKK, obtaining arms and ammunition to carry out bombing and assassinations of high profile persons in the town of Khoi; the statement of “one of PJAK’s members who had turned himself in”; and Defendant Number 2’s statement as to Mr. Alkhani being distraught and worried on the night of the Khoi prosecutor’s assassination; were the basis for the issuance of the sentence.

Defense

Based on available information, Mr. Alkhani was not given an opportunity to present an effective defense. Orumieh Revolutionary Court Branch One did not allow him to retain an attorney, and, according to his brother, he was represented at this trial by a “lawyer trusted by the Information Administration”. Mr. Alkhani was allowed to retain an attorney of his own choosing only after the trial court issued its ruling.

According to the Islamic Revolutionary Court Decision and the Criminal Court Decision transcripts, Mr. Alkhani and his attorney denied the charge of participation in the assassination of the Khoi prosecutor at both trials. Mr. Alkhani only admitted to cooperating with PJAK, but denied the charge of participation in murder. (HRANA, August 25, 2015). The deceased’s next of kin had not asked for Mr. Alkhani’s Qesas at the Criminal Court,. (Court Decision transcript).

According to Mr. Alkhani’s brother, “Behruz had only admitted in court that he had become a supporter of PJAK in the last few years, but had never either been an armed member of the Party nor had he participated in any armed operations… No weapons were discovered from him at the time of his arrest; that charge was brought against him only because they did not have sufficient evidence to prove the prosecutor’s murder.” According to his brother, Mr. Alkhani lacked mental stability due to the torture he had endured; his trial had taken place under such conditions. One of his trial sessions was postponed at the request of his attorney because of the severity of his psychological condition. (Campaign to Defend Civil and Political Prisoners in Iran).

Contrary to claims by the court, the government, and judiciary officials, PJAK leaders had denied that the Party had any role in the assassination of the Khoi Prosecutor, and stated they had no knowledge of the identity of the assassins. (Rooz Online, January 20, 2010).

A Summary of the Legal Defects in the Adjudication of Mr. Behruz Alkhani’s Case

According to available information, including court rulings, it is clear that Mr. Behruz Alkhani was arrested in connection with the assassination of [the city of] Khoi’s Prosecutor. All of the investigations revolved around the Prosecutor’s assassination. Subsequent to the Defendant’s denial of the charges in the investigation stage and in the course of the proceedings, and after no evidence was found to the effect that he had anything to do with said assassination, the case took a turn toward implicating Mr. Behruz Alkhani for membership in terrorist organizations. Ultimately, even though the Court Decision accuses him, in a way, of assassinating the Prosecutor, the content of the Decision shows, however, that he was convicted based on Article 186 of the Islamic Penal Code. Said Article defines membership in armed groups as a crime. For that reason, the totality of the Decision seems to show that even the Court did not consider the evidence sufficient to prove the assassination of the Prosecutor [by the Defendant]. Therefore, the lengthy interrogations of the Defendant at the Information Administration with a view to prove the assassination of the Prosecutor were conducted without any reliable evidence. Furthermore, based on the Court Decision in Mr. Behruz Alkhani’s case, he admitted to working with PEJAK, which conducted armed activities in the region. Pursuant to Article 186 of the Islamic Penal Code, if a person has effective cooperation with an armed group, said person shall be considered Mohareb (“one who wages war against God”). There is no clear rule as to what constitutes effective cooperation; therefore, the ambiguity of laws has given adjudicating officials great leeway in charging the defendant with the crime of Moharebeh.

According to available information, Mr. Behruz Alkhani was tortured in the course of interrogations. The torture was most probably inflicted to force him to confess to having been involved in the assassination of the Prosecutor, whereas, pursuant to Iranian law, including Principle 38 of the Constitution and Article 578 of the Islamic Penal Code, torture is strictly prohibited.

According to Mr. Behruz Alkhani’s brother, Mr. Alkhani was not allowed to retain an attorney of his own choosing in parts of the proceedings, and the court had designated an attorney trusted by the Information Administration as his court-appointed attorney. In accordance with Iranian law, a defendant can retain the services of a lawyer and have the lawyer present at all stages of adjudication. However, Mr. Alkhani was strictly prohibited from having an attorney during his detention at the Information detention center, and was deprived of retaining an attorney of his own choosing in the course of the proceedings at the prosecutor’s office and at trial.

Judgment

On October 15, 2011, Orumieh Revolutionary Court, Branch One, sentenced Mr. Alkhani to death. The ruling was upheld by Western Azarbaijan Province Court of Appeals, Branch 10, but the Supreme Court overturned the decision and remanded the case for a new trial. Orumieh Revolutionary Court Branch 16 re-tried and sentenced Mr. Alkhani to death once again; the case was referred to the Supreme Court upon lodging of an appeal. In the other case, considering that the next of kin had not asked for Qesas, Orumieh Criminal Court sentenced Mr. Alkhani to ten years in prison “for the public aspect of the crime”, which ruling was upheld by the Province Court of Appeals. (Criminal Court Decision transcript).

Mr. Alkhani was executed at Orumieh Prison on Wednesday, August 26, 2015, along with four other individuals, while his case was still under consideration by the Supreme Court. According to his brother, neither his attorney nor his family, were served with notice of Mr. Alkhani’s final sentence. (Campaign to Defend Civil and Political Prisoners in Iran, August 26, 2015). On the morning of the day before his execution, Mr. Alkhani had asked his family by phone to go and see him for the last time. (Campaign to Defend Civil and Political Prisoners in Iran, August 25, 2015).

The day before his execution, Mr. Alkhani’s family had gathered in front of Orumieh Prison in protest of the implementation of the sentence prior to the issuance of a final judgment on the case by the Supreme Court, when they were attacked by security forces. (Campaign to Defend Civil and Political Prisoners in Iran, August 25, 2015). Security forces did not turn Mr. Alkhani’s body over to his family.

On the charge of illegal possession of a firearm, Orumieh Revolutionary Court, Branch One, sentenced Mr. Alkhani to 10 years in prison. (Revolutionary Court Decision transcript).

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*Sources: HRANA (January 19, 2010, September 4, 2010, November 7, 2010), Radio Zamaneh (August 30, 2015), Rooz Online (January 20, 2010), Campaign to Defend Civil and Political Prisoners in Iran (August 25, 2015), Kurdistan Human Rights Organization (April 23, 2014), ISNA (January 20 and 27, 2010, March 8, 2010) Western Azarbaijan Province Judiciary Website (January 19, 2010), ISKA News (January 19, 2010), Human Rights Documentation Center (May 21, 2012).

**Vali Haji Gholizadeh was born in 1965 in the town of Khoi, Western Azarbaijan Province. He held the post of investigating judge in Khoi for 10 years starting in early 1995, and was appointed Khoi General and Revolutionary Prosecutor in 2005. On January 18, 2010, Mr. Haji Gholizadeh was assassinated in front of his home in the town of Khoi, shot twice to the neck.

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