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

Borhan Karami

About

Age: 32
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Islam (Sunni)
Civil Status: Married

Case

Date of Killing: November 16, 2022
Location of Killing: Sina Hospital, Kamyaran, Kordestan Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Arbitrary shooting

About this Case

The Karami family went to the hospital when they heard their son had been injured. They showed their son’s picture and “begged” for information about him. A nurse gave them a signal, and they realized he had been taken to the morgue.

Information regarding the arbitrary execution of Mr. Borhan Karimi, son of Mahmud and Ameneh, was taken from an interview conducted by Abdorrahman Boroumand Center with one of his relatives (February 21, 2023). News regarding the arbitrary execution of Mr. Karami has also been published by Human Rights Organizations and even by state run news agencies. In addition to news content published on social media and Boroumand Center archives, additional information on Mr. Karami has been collected from Hengaw (November 17, 2022 and August 19, 2023), HRANA (December 9, 2022), Kurdistan Human Rights Network (November 16, 2022), Akhbar – Rooz (November 16, 2022), Voice of America Youtube Channel (November 2, 2023), Fars News Agency (November 20, 2022), and Mizan News Agency (November 21, 2022).

Mr. Borhan Karami was born on October 28, 1990, in “Chersaneh”, one of the villages of Kamyaran, in Kurdistan Province. His family are Kurdish and they are Sunni Moslem. He continued his high school education in this village and at the same time he was working on the farm and with farm amimals. In 2016, after he was married, Mr. Karami moved to Kamyaran and worked as a plasterer. He had a young child (Interview with a relative, February 21, 2023; Hengaw, November 17, 2022).

According to one of Mr. Karami’s relatives he had left the country illegally when he was a teenager and he had joined the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran. After about a week, he had changed his mind and returned to Iran. He was aware of the events going on around him and he paid attention to these. He was opposed to injustice and inequality and he believed in equal rights for women and men. According to this same source, Mr. Karami was not a political activist, and he did not actively participate in the demonstrations in reaction to the death of Zina (Mahsa) Amini in 2022. He had gone to the streets at least once with his relatives and they had shouted slogans against the officials (Interview with a relative, February 21, 2023).

Borhan Karami liked soccer and mountain climbing. He would go to the Shaho mountains (in north western Kermanshah and southern Kurdistan Province). Sometimes he would stay there for several days (Interview with a relative, February 21, 2023).

2022 (Mahsa Amini) Protest background

Nationwide protests were sparked by the death in custody of 22-year old Kurdish woman Jina (Mahsa) Amini on September 16, 2022. Amini had been arrested by the morality police in Tehran for improper veiling on September 13 and sent brain dead to the hospital. The news of her death triggered protests, which started with a widespread expression of outrage on social media and the gathering of a large crowd in front of the hospital,continued in the city of Saqqez (Kordestan Province), where Mahsa was buried. Popular exasperation over the morality patrols and the veil in general, aggravated by misleading statements of the authorities regarding the cause of Mahsa’s death and the impunity generally granted to state agents for the violence used against detainees led to months of nationwide protests. Initially led by young girls and women who burned their veils, and youth in general, protesters adopted the slogan “Women, Life, Freedom,” chanted during Amini’s burial. The protest rapidly took on a clear anti-regime tone, with protesters calling for an end to the Islamic Republic. 

The scope and duration of the protest was unprecedented. State efforts to withdraw the morality police from the streets and preventative arrests of journalists and political and civil society activists did not stop the protests. By the end of December 2022, protests had taken place in about 164 cities and towns, including localities that had never witnessed protests. Close to 150 universities, high schools, businesses, and groups including oil workers, merchants of the Tehran bazaar (among others), teachers, lawyers (at least 49 of whom had been arrested as of February 1st, 2023), artists, athletes, and even doctors joined these protests in various forms. Despite the violent crackdown and mass arrests, intense protests continued for weeks, at least through November 2022, with reports of sporadic activity continuing through the beginning of 2023.

The State’s crackdown was swift and accompanied by intermittent landline and cellular internet network shutdowns, as well as threats against and arrests of victims’ family members, factors which posed a serious challenge to monitoring protests and documenting casualties. The security forces used illegal, excessive, and lethal force with handguns, shotguns, and military assault rifles against protesters. They often targeted protesters’ heads and chests, shot them at close range, and in the back. Security forces have targeted faces with pellets, causing hundreds of protesters to lose their eyesight, and according to some reports women’s genitalia. The bloodiest crackdown took place on September 30th in Zahedan, Baluchestan Province, where a protest began at the end of the Friday sermon. The death toll is reported to be above 90 for that day. Security forces shot protesters outside and worshipers inside the Mosala prayer hall. Many injured protesters, fearing arrest, did not go to hospitals where security forces have reportedly arrested injured protesters before and after they were treated.

 By February 1, 2023, the Human Rights Activists News Agency reported the number of recorded protests to be 1,262. The death toll, including protesters and passersby, stood at 527, of whom 71 were children. The number of arrests (including of wounded protesters) was estimated at a minimum at 22,000 , of whom 766 had already been tried and convicted. More than 100 protesters were at risk of capital punishment, and four had been executed in December 2022 and January 2023 without minimum standards of due process. Authorities also claimed 70 casualties among state forces, though there are consistent reports from families of killed protesters indicating authorities have pressured them or offered them rewards to falsely register their loved ones as such. Protesters, human rights groups, and the media have reported cases of beatings, torture (including to coerce confessions), and sexual assaults. Detainees have no access to lawyers during interrogations and their confessions are used in courts as evidence.

Public support and international solidarity with protesters have also been unprecedented (the use of the hashtag #MahsaAmini in Farsi and English broke world records) and on November 24, 2022, the UN Human Rights Council adopted a resolution calling for the creation of a fact finding mission to “Thoroughly and independently investigate alleged human rights violations in the Islamic Republic of Iran related to the protests that began on 16 September 2022, especially with respect to women and children.”

Kamyaran’s Event 

During the widespread protests of 2022 and the extensive calls for demonstrations on the anniversary of the bloody protests in November 2019, the people of Kamyaran also held protests on November 24 and 25. These gatherings turned violent due to the intervention of military and security forces. Following the death of Foad Mohammadi, a number of residents in Kamyaran gathered in front of his family home to show solidarity. Security forces attacked this crowd as well, resulting in another fatality, a man named Borhan Mohammadi, who was shot dead. The deaths of these two protesters heightened tensions in Kamyaran and led to an escalation of anti-government protests. (BBC Persian, November 25, 2022). During these protests, in addition to the deaths of Foad Mohammadi and Borhan Karami, several protesters were also injured. Meanwhile, state media reported the death of a member of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) during the protests in Kamyaran. The Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) quoted the public relations office of the IRGC in Kurdistan, identifying the deceased member as "Reza Azarbar," a local force from Kamyaran. (IRNA, November 24, 2022). The body of this IRGC member, referred to in state media as a "defender of security," was buried in Kamyaran on November 25. (Tasnim News Agency, November 25, 2022).

Mr. Karami’s Arbitrary Execution 

According to available information, Mr. Borhan Karami was shot to death by a plain cloths agent on “Zarneh” Street in Kamyaran, on Wednesday November 16, 2022. He had just been to the funeral of one of the demonstrators who had been killed the day before (Center Interview, February 21, 2023; Hengaw, November 17, 2022; Kurdistan Human Rights Network, November 16, 2022; and HRANA, December 9, 2022).

According to one of his relatives, Mr. Karami went to work at 6 am on Wednesday, but he came back home two hours later, in solidarity with the general strikes (Interview with a relative, February 21, 2023). This came about in response to a call to strike encompassing many Kurdish parties, organizations, groups, and political figures, in order to honor the victims of the protests of November 2019. According to reports, the town of Kamyaran was also on strike on that day (Akhbar – Rooz, November 16, 2022).

Mr. Karami left the house at about 12 noon that day, in order to attend the funeral of Fouad Mohammadi, who had been killed during the protests, the day before. He was a resident of Kamyaran, Mr. Karami’s relative and neighbor. Mr. Karami returned home a few minutes later, donned his Kurdish shawl and left the house again. According to Mr. Karami’s relatives, he called and talked to his wife twice that day. First call was at 1:30 pm, when he told her he was downtown. Second call came in at about 2 pm. He said he was at Mr. Mohammadi’s funeral and that he would be returning home in a few minutes. At 3 pm, when his relatives tried to call him, both of his mobile phones were turned off. Minutes after these unanswered calls, an unknown man answered Mr. Karami’s mobile phone. Once he had made sure he was talking to a relative, he let them know Mr. Karami had been injured in his leg, and that he had been taken to “Sina” Hospital. When the family went to the hospital, they found out Mr. Karami had passed away due to the severity of his injuries and he had been transferred to the morgue (Interview with a relative, February 21, 2023).

There are videos showing Mr. Karami being shot. He was walking on a relatively quiet street when he was shot and fell to the ground. Eye witnesses can be heard talking on the video. One of them says, “They are shooting at the windows”, and another one says with surprise, “They have killed somebody!”. In a video shot from the opposite direction, a group of passersby can be seen moving Mr. Karami’s body (Social Media, Boroumand Center Archives).

Mr. Karami was laid to rest in the village of “Chersaneh”, where he was born, on the evening of November 17, 2022, with many people from Kamyaran in attendance. A memorial meeting was held the next day in his family home (Interview with a relative, February 21, 2023; Kurdpa, November 16, 2023).

Officials’ Reaction 

Following the shooting on November 16, 2022, security agents were at the hospital and they prevented hospital officials giving information to families who had come to find out about their injured relatives. They had told the nurses, “Don’t give out details and don’t create problems for yourselves.” (Interview with a relative, February 21, 2023)

The head of the Ministry of Justice in the Province of Kurdistan accepted the fact that Borhan Karami had been killed with a “military gun”. Then he asserted that there had “been no agents in that area when he was shot”, therefore he must have been killed by the “rioters”. He said a “judicial file had been opened in Section 2 of the prosecutor’s office of the Ministry of Justice of the town of Kamyaran”, and that they had started to investigate the circumstances of this incident (Mizan News Agency, November 21, 2022; Tasnim News Agency, November 21, 2022).

According to a relative and according to available accounts, prior to releasing the body, security officers took Mr. Karami’s brothers to a security agency. They told them they would release Borhan Karami’s body on the condition that they guarantee “the funeral will be held in the village of Chersaneh”, this event would not be widely publicized, and that “anti-revolution slogans” would not be chanted. Eventually, the officers released the body to the family, telling them, “He should be buried within the half hour, as quietly as possible.” (Interview with a relative, February 21, 2023; Hengaw, November 17, 2022).

After the funeral, the family was summoned to a security agency. They told them they would declare Borhan Karami a “martyr”, and that they would be supported by the “Martyrs’ Foundation**” (Interview with a relative, February 21, 2023).

On the anniversary of Mr. Karami’s murder, security agents arrested two of his brothers named Hessam and Sirvan Karami. According to later reports, Mr. Sirvan Karami was released after “having been severely beaten and assaulted, and also having had his mobile phone and his social media accounts confiscated” (Hengaw, August 19, 2023). 

Family’ Reaction 

When they heard about their son being injured, the Karami family went to the hospital, “pleaded” with the officials, and showed them Mr. Karami’s picture, so that they could get find him. At this time, one of the nurses gestured to them that he had been taken to the morgue (Interview with a relative, February 21, 2023).

Mr. Karami’s family filed a complaint with Section 2 of the Kamyaran Judicial Investigation Office, to ascertain what had happened to Borhan Karami. According to a relative, they are worried that in view of the biases of the judiciary, their case will not be investigated justly, and that in the end, “they will find someone and say he has killed Borhan, and not the agents of the Islamic Republic.”  According to this same source, his family are “proud” of the “direction” of Mr. Karami, and they have rejected the government’s offer to declare him a “martyr” and to enroll them in the “Martyrs’ Foundation” (Interview with a relative, February 21, 2023).

At the Forty Day Ceremonies following the death of his brother, Mr. Bahman Karami denied the rumor that his family had been trying to register Borhan in the government’s “Martyrs’ Foundation” and said that he has no knowledge of this “odious news” (Kurdpa, November 16, 2023).

At the anniversary of his brother’s death, Mr. Bahman Karami published a video of his gravesite, and said the gravestone had been broken by unknown people. He said, “They think by doing this we will be weakened or we will be frightened. [But] no. We will become stronger.” (Voice of America Youtube Channel, November 2, 2023). 

Impacts on Family 

According to Mr. Karami’s relatives, they “miss” their family member, but they are proud that “he sacrificed himself for the people of Iran” and that he “brought them honor”. They say nobody used to know them in town, but now, wherever they go, they are greeted with respect (Interview with a relative, February 21, 2023).

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*  “Martyr” is a religious term and is used to describe someone who has given their life for God. In the literature of the Islamic Republic, this term is used to describe the death of the sympathizers of the government. “Martyrs’ Foundation” was set up during the Iran-Iraq war and its mandate was to support families who had lost a relative in the war effort or while defending the Islamic Republic Government.

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