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

Rahim Mohammadpur

About

Age: 36
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Islam (Sunni)
Civil Status: Married

Case

Date of Killing: November 7, 2016
Location of Killing: Mahabad Prison, Mahabad, Azarbaijan-e Gharbi Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Hanging
Charges: Drug possession
Age at time of alleged offense: 33

About this Case

Due to a complaint, the judge had enmity with Mr. Rahim Mohammadpur. Even the officers and employees of the prison were mightily dismayed by his execution.

News and information about the execution of Mr. Rahim Mohammadpur, son of Fatemeh and Ahmad, was obtained through an interview conducted by the Abdorrahman Boroumand Center (ABC) with one of his relatives (January 21, 2019) and an employee of Mahabad Prison during the time his death sentence was carried out (February 20, 2019), the documents available at the Boroumand Center, including the verdict issued by Branch 1 of the Islamic Revolutionary Court of Sardasht (November 2, 2013), and Kordpa News Agency (October 22, 2016). Iranian authorities did not announce Mr. Mohammadpur and three others’ executions.

Mr. Mohammadpur, a Sunni Kurd, born on February 20, 1981, was a resident of Boyuran-e Sofla village, Sardasht County in Azarbaijan-e Gharbi Province. He was married and had two children. Mr. Mohammadpur had a seventh-grade education and made his living through agriculture and cab driving. He had a criminal record (Interview with ABC, January 21, 2019).

According to one of his relatives, Mr. Mohammadpur was an "excellent and honorable" individual (ABC interview, February 5, 2017). One of the prison guards also referred to him as a good fellow who minded his own business (ABC interview, March 26, 2017).

Mr. Mohammadpur's case was related to drug offenses.

Arrest and detention

Twelve plainclothes agents of the law enforcement’s Headquarters for Combatting Illicit Drugs arrested Mr. Mohammadpur and his co-defendant with "insults and use of force" at 6 pm on August 23, 2013, in his orchard house in Boyuran-e Sofla village, Sardasht in the presence of his wife, mother and daughter (ABC interview, January 25, 2019).

The agents arrested Mr. Mohammadpur and searched his house on the same day. He was taken to the Sardasht Information Administration detention center After one night, he was transferred to "Khaneh Mo’alem", the city’s Central Prison. According to his family, he was beaten during his detention (ABC interview, January 25, 2019).

According to one of his relatives, although Mr. Mohammadpur had been transferred to prison, the authorities would not allow him to visit with his family for 27 days and prohibited him from getting a lawyer for four months after his arrest. The first time he saw his family in person was for no more than 15 minutes, and during the one year and six months he spent in detention in Sardasht Prison, they allowed him to see his family only three or four times and with difficulty. The authorities also denied him the right to make phone calls without a clear explanation. After 18 months, Mr. Mohammadpur was transferred to Mahabad Prison, where he visited his family once a month (ABC interview, January 25, 2019).

According to one of the prison guards, Mr. Mohammadpur worked in the cultural unit of Mahabad Prison, where he gave books to the prisoners, wrote petitions and prisoner requests, and was engaged in sewing and ironing (ABC interview, March 18, 2019).

Trial

The Branch 1 of the Islamic Revolutionary Court of Sardasht City tried Mr. Mohammadpur across two sessions on October 1 and December 19, 2013 (Court document, December 19, 2013). He had access to a lawyer in court (ABC interview, January 25, 2019).

According to an informed person, each session of Mr. Mohammadpur's trial was brief and lasted about 20-30 minutes; the judge did not treat him well and would not permit him or his lawyer to speak (ABC interview, January 21, 2019).

There is no further information available about the details of Mr. Mohammadpur's court hearings.

Charges

The charge brought against Mr. Mohammadpur was "participating in the production, transportation, and storage of narcotic drugs in the amount of one kilogram, 580 grams, and three liters of acetone" (Court document, December 19, 2013).

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 have drawn attention to reports indicating that the Islamic Republic authorities have brought trumped-up charges, including drug trafficking, sexual, and other criminal offences, against their opponents (including political, civil society activists, as well as unionists and ethnic and religious minorities). Thousands of alleged drug traffickers have been sentenced to death following judicial processes that fail to meet international standards. Scores of them were executed based on a 1989 law imposing mandatory death sentences on drug traffickers found in possession of specified amounts of prescribed narcotics (5 kg of hashish or opium, and more than 30 grams of heroin, codeine or methadone). The exact number of people convicted based on trumped-up charges is unknown.

Evidence of guilt

The complaint mentions the discovery of "approximately one kilogram of drugs of the crystal meth-type in the house (belonging to Mr. Mohammadpur) which was drying on a tray" as well as "his criminal history regarding alcoholic beverages." The complaint also referred to the discovery of a plastic package containing one kilogram and 580 grams of crystal meth-type drugs and three liters of acetone acid outside the house and to the Sardasht Narcotics Control Police report regarding the cooking and production of crystal meth in Mr. Mohammadpur's house (Court document, December 19, 2013).

Defense

Mr. Mohammadpur stated in court that the materials discovered in his garden and garden house did not belong to him, but rather to a person from Iraqi Kurdistan. He stated that "this person brought the discovered materials to the orchard in a bag and said that he would collect them later, and because I knew him and trusted him, I did not look inside the bag" (Court document, December 19, 2013).

Judge: "If God does not kill you, I will."

In the document, the judge mentioned Mr. Mohammadpur’s criminal history concerning alcoholic beverages. According to one of Mr. Mohammadpur's relatives, he complained to the judge during the investigation of this case, and because of this, the judge had a grudge against him. The court judge told Mr. Mohammadpur and his father, "If God doesn't kill you, I will kill you”Mohammadpur (ABC interview, January 25, 2019).

A Summary of the Defects of Mr. Rahim Mohammadpur’s Proceedings

According to the available information, Mr. Mohammadpur was tortured in the Intelligence Division offices. In Article 578 of the Islamic Penal Code, harassment and abuse of an accused person is criminalized. Furthermore, according to Article 38 of the Constitution, a confession resulting from torture is invalid. If Mr. Mohammadpur or his lawyer raised the issue of torture in court and the court did not pay attention to it, the court indubitably acted against the regulations.

Mr. Mohammadpur said in different stages of the proceedings that the recovered drugs belonged to an Iraqi citizen. The court did not investigate in this regard or use the legal assistance agreement between Iran and Iraq to find that person. It was necessary to conduct an investigation into the validity of Mohammadpur's claim. In other words, the court completely ignored the defendant's claim and rejected it without investigating its truth.

In the court ruling, it is noticeable that a large part of the defendant's property, including his car and orchard, had been seized and confiscated for the government's benefit. For the government to confiscate the property, it is necessary for it to investigate how the property was obtained. In other words, it had to be proven that Mr. Mohammadpur bought the orchard and the car through the drug trade. The petition does not mention how this property was obtained, and there is no evidence in the file to prove this. For this reason, the confiscation of the orchard and the car was done unlawfully.

Judgment

On December 19, 2013, Branch 1 of the Islamic Revolutionary Court of Sardasht City sentenced Mr. Rahim Mohammadpur to "execution by hanging inside Mahabad prison" on charges of producing, preparing and possessing crystal meth-type drugs (Court document, December 19, 2013).

According to the verdict, the court considered the charges against him to be substantiated based on the "existing documents and evidence and the unacceptable defenses of Mr. Mohammadpur and his lawyer" and because the police did not identify the Iraqi person who, according to Mr. Mohammadpur, was the owner of the discovered drugs during their investigation. By "observing the provisions of Article 131* of the Islamic Penal Code regarding the multiplicity of crimes‌, with reference to Paragraph 6 of Article 8 of the Amendment of the Anti-Narcotics Law** and Article 40*** of the amendment of said Law and Paragraph Three of Article 5 of the 2011 Anti-Narcotics Law with Amendments and Additions, and equal to the list of Table Number 2 of the Law of Accession to the United Nations Convention to Combat Narcotics and Psychotropic Substances Trafficking, Paragraph 6 of Article 8 of the Anti-Narcotics Law drug****” and by changing the contents of the indictment from "participation to being a principal," the court issued his death sentence (Court document, December 19, 2013).

The court also sentenced Mr. Mohammadpur to "serve 40 months of penal servitude, endure 40 “ta’zir” lashes and pay a fine of four million tomans  to the government" for storing and preparing three liters of acetone acid. Also citing Article 38 of the Property Management Law and Article 215 of the new Islamic Penal Code, a sentence of "confiscation of narcotics and exposed acids from his house, confiscation of his property, including a station wagon and a piece of the orchard" to the benefit of the government was also issued (Court document, December 19, 2013).

According to an employee of Mahabad Prison, the prison authorities called the condemned prisoner in the morning before carrying out the death sentence under the pretext of administrative and medical work and then took him to a room in the prison's infirmary, which is usually used to isolate patients with contagious diseases. Mr. Mohammadpur's father and brother saw him in person for 20 to 30 minutes in the evening of the same day. Still, according to one of his relatives, the authorities of Mahabad Prison did not tell them that they would execute him and by giving a letter to the authorities of Sardasht Court to stop his sentence, "they deceived them to send them on their way so that they could execute Rahim" (ABC interviews, February/March 2018 and March 18, 2019).

According to the employee of Mahabad Prison, after being transferred to the meeting hall there, Mr. Mohammadpur expressed anguish for his family and insisted on his innocence. Mr. Mohammadpur gave his last will to a cleric praying for him there (ABC interview, March 18, 2019) and at 1:30 A.M. on November 7, 2016, he was hanged in the presence of the observing judge of Sardasht Prison and a clerk of the Mahabad court. After 20 minutes and with the confirmation of his death by the Forensic Medical examiner, he was transferred to Mahabad Hospital.

Mr. Mohammadpur's family learned of his execution on the way back to Sardasht to deliver the letter from Mahabad Prison to the Sardasht court. They took his body from Mahabad Hospital on the day of the execution and buried him in Boyuran-e Sofla village (ABC interview, January 25, 2019).

One of Mr. Mohammadpur's relatives said about the effect of his execution on his family: "Everyone is upset. Even now, they are cursing the person who brought this disaster on him. MohammadpurHis father never prayed, but now he always prays and prays that the person who brought this disaster on them will never rest with a clear conscience; his mother also asks God to avenge her son" (ABC interview, January 25, 2019).

An employee of Mahabad Prison, who witnessed the execution of Mr. Mohammadpur, stated in an interview with ABC that the execution had a terrible effect on him and his colleagues: “I was sick for a week, and even the prison soldiers were afraid and said they were afraid of going near the visiting room. Unfortunately, they often hand off those who are to be executed to the soldiers, which I strongly opposed because the soldiers were young. I said that they were afraid and should not be present. I remember one of my colleagues was in shock that night after the execution of Mr. Mohammadpur or another prisoner. His eyes were fixed on the cadaver, and he would not answer no matter how many times I called him. He was like the insane" (ABC interview, March 18, 2019).

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* Article 131 of the Islamic Penal Code:  In the cases of offenses punishable by ta’zir, if a single conduct falls under the title of multiple offenses, the offender shall be sentenced to the most severe punishment.
** Article 8 of the Anti-Narcotics Law Amendment Law: Anyone attempting to manufacture, produce, distribute, export, send, buy or sell, or exposes for sale, or has in their possession, hides or transports, according to the proportion and according to the amount of the material, heroin, morphine, cocaine and other chemical derivatives of morphine and cocaine or lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MD) MA or Oxtace), gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (GHB), flunitrazepam, amphetamine, methamphetamine (Crystal Meth) and other narcotics or industrial non-pharmacological psychoactive drugs whose list is approved by the Islamic Council will be punished as follows:
- Paragraph six: More than thirty grams leads to execution and confiscation of property resulting from the same crime.
*** Article 40 of the Anti-Narcotics Law Amendment Law: Anyone who knowingly and intentionally acts to convert or produce narcotics or industrial non-medicinal psychoactive substances, undertakes to manufacture, buy, sell, store, transport, import, export and supply industrial and chemical substances such as acetic anhydride, anthracenyl acid, phenylacetic acid, acetyl chloride and other substances listed in tables one and two of the appendix to Article 12 of the Convention on Combating Trafficking in Narcotic Drugs and Psychoactive Drugs approved in 1988 and its subsequent amendments and additions, also regarding the entry, buying, selling, manufacturing, consuming and possessing or export codeine and methadone, according to the proportion and according to the quantity of the substances, will be sentenced to the punishments prescribed in Article 5 of the Anti-Narcotics Law.
**** Article 5: In accordance with the proportionality and according to the amount of substances and the note under the same article, anyone who buys, possesses, hides or transports opium and other substances mentioned in Article 4 (cannabis, cannabis, grass, opium, sap, burnt, opium residue, or other narcotics or non-medicinal industrial psychotropic substances) will be sentenced to the following punishments:
- Clause Three: More than five hundred grams to five kilograms, fifteen million (approximately $350 US) to sixty million Rials ($1500 US) fine, 40 to 74 lashes and two to five years imprisonment.
**** Article 8 of the Law on Amending the Law on Combating Narcotic Drugs and Added Substances: Anyone importing into the country or undertaking to manufacture, produce, distribute, export, send, buy or sell, or expose for sale, or keep, hide, or transport, in compliance with the appropriateness and according to the amount of heroin, Morphine, Cocaine and Other Chemical Derivatives of Morphine and Cocaine or Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (LSD), Methylene D Oxymethamphetamine (MDMA or Oxtace), gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (GHB), flunitrazepam, amphetamine, methamphetamine (vial) or other narcotics or industrial non-pharmacological psychotropic substances listed in the approval of the Islamic Council of Ministers will be punished as follows.
- Clause Six: More than 30 grams, execution and confiscation of property resulting from the same crime.

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