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

Amin Bazrgar

About

Age: 28
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Presumed Muslim
Civil Status: Single

Case

Date of Killing: October 16, 2022
Location of Killing: Derak Mountain, Shiraz, Fars Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Unspecified extrajudicial method

About this Case

Mr. Bazrgar: "Our silence is betrayal!"

Information regarding the extrajudicial execution of Mr. Amin Bazrgar, son of Mas'ud, was obtained from an interview conducted by the Abdorrahman Boroumand Center (ABC) with Ebrahim Es'haqi, a fellow athlete and friend of Mr. Bazrgar (July 24, 2023). Additional details were gathered from the following sources: Radio Farda website (October 14, 2022, November 30, 2023), Iran International TV YouTube channel (July 20, 2023), 1500 Tasvir X account (January 24, 2022, February 25, 2022), Sardar Pasha'i X account (January 24, 2022), BBC Persian (October 14, 2022), Radio Zamaneh (May 6, 2024), IranWire (October 16, 2022, August 9, 2023), Kayhan London (October 14, 2022), and IRIB News Agency (November 17, 2018).

Amin Bazrgar was born in Shiraz on February 5, 1994. (Interview with Ebrahim Es'haqi, July 24, 2023). He took over some of the family's financial responsibilities after losing his father at a young age. Mr. Bazrgar was a carpenter and worked in a wood factory.

He started wrestling as a teenager and became a professional wrestler. Since 2015, he has represented Fars Province in national team selection competitions (Interview with Ebrahim Es'haqi, July 24, 2023; Radio Farda, November 30, 2023) and won a bronze medal in the 66 kg weight class at the 2018 national wrestling championships (IRIB News Agency, November 17, 2018; Interview with Ebrahim Es'haqi, July 24, 2023). He last competed in the 2021 Takhti International Cup, where he placed third in the 67 kg weight class (Radio Farda, November 30, 2023).

Mr. Bazrgar was a friend and training partner of Navid Afkari, a protester during the Iranian demonstrations in August 2018, who was later executed by the Islamic Republic.  Navid Afkari's execution had a deep impact on Amin Bazrgar. According to Ebrahim Es'haqi, a wrestler and close friend of Amin Bazrgar, after Navid's execution, Amin frequently talked about him on social media and in sports communities. He even set Navid's photo as the wallpaper on his cell phone. (Interview with Ebrahim Es'haqi, July 24, 2024; Iran International TV YouTube channel, July 20, 2023). Amin Bazrgar's last Instagram post was also from the days after Navid Afkari's execution. He shared a photo of Navid with the caption, "Silence is betrayal" (Amin Bazrgar's Instagram page, ABC's archive). Amin's last Instagram story showed a clenched fist rising from flames, and he tagged Navid Afkari's account. (Radio Farda, November 30, 2023)."

According to Ebrahim Es'haqi, "Everyone knew that he was a close friend of Navid Afkari. After Navid's tragic destiny, Amin was the only athlete in Shiraz who consistently supported Navid through his posts and statements." (IranWire, August 9, 2023). Reports indicate that in the months following Navid Afkari's execution, Mr. Bazrgar often carried a can of spray paint in his backpack. He used it to write slogans protesting Afkari's execution on the street walls. His slogans emphasized one phrase: "Our silence is a betrayal - Navid Afkari.”

These activities had a significant impact on Amin Bazrgar's daily life. He stopped attending wrestling practice and stopped going to work. In addition to professional wrestling, Mr. Bazrgar was interested in other sports such as hiking and bodybuilding. (Interview with Ebrahim Es'haqi, July 24, 2024).

Mr. Morteza Hadidi, another friend and club-mate of Mr. Bazrgar, described Amin's character, emphasizing his supportive nature: "You were a champion, always embodied honesty, knowledge, and selflessness; you were and always will be our captain. (Radio Zamaneh, May 6, 2024). Ebrahim Es'haqi also described him as a "cheerful" person who enjoyed "dancing and singing" and someone who remained loyal to his friends. According to Es'haqi, "Amin was not a religious person, but he believed in God and his religion was humanity; he considered nothing above humanity. (Interview with Ebrahim Es'haqi, July 24, 2024)".

Background of Extrajudicial Killings by the Islamic Republic of Iran

The Islamic Republic of Iran has a long history of politically motivated violence in Iran and around the world. Since the 1979 Revolution, Islamic Republic operatives inside and outside the country have engaged in kidnapping, disappearing, and killing a large number of individuals whose activities they deemed undesirable. The actual number of the victims of extrajudicial killings inside Iran is not clear; however, these murders began in February 1979 and have continued since then, both inside and outside Iran. The Abdorrahman Boroumand Center has so far identified over 540 killings outside Iran attributed to the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Dissidents have been assassinated by the agents of the Islamic Republic outside Iran in countries such as the Philippines, Indonesia, Japan, India, and Pakistan in Asia; Dubai, Iraq, and Turkey in the Middle East; Cyprus, France, Italy, Austria, Switzerland, Germany, Norway, Sweden, and Great Britain in Europe; and the United States across the Atlantic Ocean. In most cases, there has not been much published, and local authorities have not issued arrest warrants. But documentation, evidence, and traces obtained through investigations conducted by local police and judicial authorities confirm the theory of state committed crimes. In some instances, these investigations have resulted in the expulsion or arrest of Iranian diplomats. In a few cases outside Iran, the perpetrators of these murders have been arrested and put on trial. The evidence presented revealed the defendants’ connection to Iran’s government institutions, and an arrest warrant has been issued for Iran’s Minister of Information.

The manner in which these killings were organized and implemented in Iran and abroad is indicative of a single pattern which, according to Roland Chatelin, the Swiss prosecutor, contains common parameters and detailed planning. It can be ascertained from the similarities between these murders in different countries that the Iranian government is the principal entity that ordered the implementation of these crimes. Iranian authorities have not officially accepted responsibility for these murders and have even attributed their commission to internal strife in opposition groups. Nevertheless, since the very inception of the Islamic Republic regime, the Islamic Republic officials have justified these crimes from an ideological and legal standpoint. In the spring of 1979, Sadeq Khalkhali, the first Chief Shari’a Judge of the Islamic Revolutionary Courts, officially announced the regime’s decision to implement extrajudicial executions and justified the decision: “ … These people have been sentenced to death; from the Iranian people’s perspective, if someone wants to assassinate these individuals abroad, in any country, no government has any right to bring the perpetrator to trial as a terrorist, because such a person is the implementing agent of the sentence issued by the Islamic Revolutionary Court. Therefore, they are Mahduroddam and their sentence is death regardless of where they are.” More than 10 years after these proclamations, in a speech about the security forces’ success, Ali Fallahian, the regime’s Minister of Information, stated the following regarding the elimination of members of the opposition: “ … We have had success in inflicting damage to many of these little groups outside the country and on our borders.”

At the same time, various political, judicial, and security officials of the Islamic Republic of Iran have, at different times and occasions, confirmed the existence of a long term government policy for these extrajudicial killings and in some cases their implementation.

Read more about the background of extrajudicial killings in the Islamic Republic of Iran by clicking on the left hand highlight with the same title.

Mr. Amin Bazrgar’s threats and extrajudicial execution

According to available information, the exact date of Amin Bazrgar's death is unknown. However, his family noticed his disappearance around July 2021. In May 2022, Criminal Investigation Department officials informed the Bazrgar family that local people had discovered the remains of a body, along with a cell phone and a gym bag, on Derāk Mountain near Shiraz. (Radio Farda, November 30, 2023)

Mr. Bazrgar's activities in protesting the execution of Navid Afkari attracted the attention of the security officials. On at least one occasion, he was summoned to explain his social media posts and pressured to remove content related to Navid Afkari. In addition, the Shiraz Intelligence Office, known as Detention Center No. 100, summoned him and demanded that he sign a written pledge to cease his online activities regarding Navid Afkari. He was also forced to remove posts related to Afkari from his social media. One of the posts he was forced to remove was a video of Navid's grave shortly after the execution, which had received considerable attention on social media. (1500 Tasvir X account, February 25, 2022; Interview with Ebrahim Es’haqi, July 24, 2024)

Before his disappearance, Mr. Bazrgar had told a friend, "For the past week, he has had the feeling that he is being followed. (Interview with Ebrahim Es'haqi, July 24, 2024). In addition, Sardar Pasha'i, a former coach of the Iranian Greco-Roman wrestling team, mentioned on X that there had been no news of Amin Bazrgar and the officials were following him. He wrote: "Plainclothes officers went to the wrestling federation and asked for him. (Sardar Pasha'i X Account, January 24, 2022).

After 10 days of no news, his family went to his workplace and discovered that he had neither received his wages nor picked up his personal belongings. (1500 Tasvir X account, February 25, 2022; Radio Farda, November 30, 2023). A few days after Amin Bazrgar's disappearance, his family, with the help of friends, reported his disappearance to the Shiraz Criminal Investigation Department. (Interview with Ebrahim Es'haqi, July 24, 2024).

During the approximately 9 months of absence, Amin Bazrgar's family first suspected that he was being held by the Ministry of Intelligence in Shiraz's Detention Center No. 100 because of his frequent summonses. According to one of his friends, "a reliable source who was transferred from No. 100 to Adelabad Prison" informed them that during his detention he had learned that "a Shirazi wrestler" was imprisoned in No. 100 in connection with Navid Afkari. According to Sa'id Afkari, Navid Afkari's brother, while investigating Amin's disappearance, found that he had been detained for more than six months in Shiraz's Detention Center No. 100 (a detention center affiliated with the Ministry of Intelligence). (IranWire, August 9, 2023)

Five months after discovering the remains, security officials informed Mr. Bazrgar's family that DNA tests confirmed that the bones belonged to their son (BBC Persian, October 14, 2022).

Under pressure from security officials, Mr. Bazrgar's body was buried in Shiraz's "Dar-al-Rahmeh Saadi cemetery" on October 16, 2022, one day earlier than the family had originally planned. (Radio Farda, October 14, 2022).

Mr. Bazrgar's family set October 16, 2022, the day of his burial, as the date of the death, since the exact date of his death is unknown. (Amin Bazrgar's gravestone).

Ebrahim Es'haqi, quoting Bazrgar's brother who followed his disappearance and murder, states that the two individuals who found Amin's bones were officials from the Shiraz Criminal Investigation Department. The brother had seen them several times in their police uniforms when he visited the department to follow up on Amin’s disappearance. (Interview with Ebrahim Es'haqi, July 24, 2024).

Officials’ Reaction

Mr. Bazrgar's arrest was denied by the Shiraz Intelligence Department. (Radio Farda - November 30, 2023). Criminal Investigation Department officials told Mr. Bazrgar's family that the bones allegedly belonging to Amin, along with his cell phone and gym bag, were found by local people. After five months, security officials finally claimed that the bones found were indeed the remains of Amin Bazrgar. (IranWire - October 16, 2022; August 9, 2023)

After Mr. Bazrgar's friends published his disappearance, the Shiraz Criminal Investigation Department immediately inquired about the source of the videos and informed them that they would receive updates about him shortly. (Interview with Ebrahim Es'haqi, July 24, 2024).

It is not yet confirmed by official sources that Mr. Bazrgar has indeed disappeared and that his remains have been identified. (Radio Farda, November 30, 2023; BBC Persian, October 14, 2022).

Mr. Bazrgar's family and friends planned to hold his funeral on Monday, October 17, 2022, at the Dar-al-Rahmeh cemetery in Shiraz. On the night of Saturday, October 15, 2022, security officials informed the Bazrgar family that they would have to collect the body by the next day, or there was no assurance that they would be able to retrieve Mr. Bazrgar's remains. The funeral was held a day earlier, on October 16, 2022, with only a few friends and family members present under severe security restrictions. (IranWire, August 9, 2023).

Furthermore, security officials have forbidden Mr. Bazrgar's family from holding any online or in-person memorial ceremonies for him. (Radio Farda, November 30, 2023).

Familys’ Reaction

Amin Bazrgar's family reported him missing to the Criminal Investigation Department after the disappearance. (IranWire, August 9, 2023).

Despite requests from the Bazrgar family, the Criminal Investigation Department flatly refused to provide them with a DNA sample from the discovered remains for independent testing (IranWire, August 9, 2023).

Following the death of Mohammad Bazrgar, who was the only family member actively pursuing the case, the investigation into Mr. Bazrgar's case was closed. Mohammad Bazrgar died in a fire at his home, the cause of which is unknown.

Impacts on Family

Mr. Es'haqi shared the impact of Mr. Bazrgar's death on his family in an interview with the Abdorrahman Boroumand Center: "Amin was a carpenter and was responsible for his family's financial expenses, including caring for his mother. His brother, who had previously struggled with drug addiction, experienced a worsening of his substance abuse due to the mental pressure of Amin's death". (Interview with Ebrahim Es'haqi, July 24, 2002).

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