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

Aida Rostami

About

Age: 36
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Presumed Muslim
Civil Status: Single

Case

Date of Killing: December 12, 2022
Gravesite location is known: Yes
Location of Killing: Azadi Square, Tehran, Tehran Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Other extrajudicial method
Age at time of alleged offense: 36

About this Case

Aida Rostami had volunteered to help the victims of Kermanshah earthquake and treating without charges those who could not afford to pay her. She used her medical skills to tend secretely to the wounded protesters in the Women, Life, Freedom protests, her last patients.

Information regarding the extrajudicial execution of Aida Rostami, daughter of Nosrat and Maryam, 36 years old, unmarried, and a physician residing in Tehran, was obtained from an interview with an informed source. (Interview by Abdorrahman Boroumand Center with an informed source, 26 July 2023). News of this extrajudicial execution was also reported on websites like IranWire (16 December 2022) and BBC Persian (17 December 2022). Additional details for Dr. Rostami’s memorial were drawn from Mizan Online (16 December 2022), Bahar News (16 December 2022), Rooidad24 (18 December 2022), HRANA News Agency (28 September 2023), Manoto TV (20 March 2023 and 17 July 2023), Iran International TV (20 December 2022 and 20 January 2023), Kayhan Newspaper (17 December 2022), Iranian Medical Council (9 December 2022), and Rokna News Agency (18 December 2022).

Dr. Aida Rostami was born on 16 July 1986 in Tehran. She lost her father at the age of 11. She was unmarried and lived with her mother and brother in the Afsarieh district of Tehran until her death (Boroumand Center interview - 26 July 2023). Dr. Rostami was a general practitioner at Shahid Chamran Hospital in Tehran. She was highly active in charitable work related to her medical profession. According to the non-governmental charity organization “Imam Ali Society,” Dr. Rostami had collaborated with the group for years, providing aid to patients in need. She also participated in humanitarian efforts treating earthquake victims in Kermanshah and underprivileged children (Rooidad24 website - 18 December 2022).

After the death of Mahsa Amini and the onset of public protests in Tehran, Dr. Rostami actively participated in these protests. She reportedly told concerned family members that she couldn’t remain indifferent, as there was no difference between her family and the families of Nika Shakarami and other protesters. On her Instagram page, she shared medical advice and home treatment guidelines for those injured in the protests, voluntarily assisting and secretly treating injured individuals outside of hospital settings (Boroumand Center interview - 26 July 2023).

Dr. Rostami had completed the necessary procedures to obtain a permit for her private medical practice in Tehran. Her medical office permit was delivered to her home on the day of her death. (Boroumand Center interview - 26 July 2023). According to the Iranian Medical Council website, Dr. Rostami’s medical practice license was issued on 9 December 2022, just three days before her death (Iranian Medical Council - 9 December 2022).

The Telegram channel "Ekbatan Complex," associated with residents of a Tehran neighborhood, released an audio clip where Dr. Rostami is heard saying, “Be patient, the door will open, this night will end” (BBC Persian - 17 December 2022).

Background of the 2022 Protests Following Mahsa Amini's Death

The nationwide protests in 2022 in Iran began on 16 September following the death of Jina (Mahsa) Amini, a 22-year-old Kurdish woman. Amini was arrested by the so-called Morality Police in Tehran on 13 September and was transferred to the hospital in a comatose state a few hours later. Her death, along with public outrage against the Morality Police and mandatory hijab, as well as misleading official statements about the cause of her death and the impunity granted to police officers, sparked widespread protests. Initially starting on social media, the protests escalated into physical gatherings, first in front of Kasra Hospital in Tehran and then in Saqqez, Kurdistan Province, where Amini was buried. The slogan “Woman, Life, Freedom,” first chanted at Amini’s funeral, quickly became the central motto of these protests, widely embraced by young people. While the protests began with women burning their hijabs and shouting "Woman, Life, Freedom," they quickly expanded to demand the overthrow of the Islamic Republic.

The protests were marked by their scale and persistence. Even initial government measures, such as removing Morality Police vehicles and preemptively arresting journalists and civil activists, failed to suppress the demonstrations. By mid-December, protests had spread to 164 cities and counties, including locations without prior protest histories, as well as 150 universities and high schools. Participants included various sectors of society, such as academics, high school students, professionals, and labor groups like oil workers, bazaar merchants in Tehran and other cities, teachers, lawyers (49 of whom were arrested by 1 February 2023), artists, athletes, and doctors, many of whom were detained.

The government eventually quashed the protests by employing extreme violence, including widespread arrests, shutting down mobile networks and internet access, and deploying heavily armed forces using tear gas, pellet guns, handguns, and even military-grade weapons. Reports documented that security forces targeted protesters’ heads and chests, often shooting them at close range or from behind. Many protesters injured by pellet guns and paintball rounds suffered eye injuries, blindness, or, in some cases, gunshot wounds to the genital area.

One of the deadliest crackdowns occurred on 30 September 2022 in Zahedan, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, after Friday prayers. Security forces opened fire on Sunni worshippers inside a mosque compound and protesters outside, resulting in over 90 deaths. Many injured protesters avoided hospitals out of fear of arrest, as security forces reportedly detained wounded protesters seeking medical treatment.

Ms. Rostami, one day before her death, told a friend in a message that she had narrowly escaped arrest twice during the Tehran protests. She believed she had miraculously survived those incidents and suspected that security forces were targeting her. (Interview with the Boroumand Center - July 17, 2023)

The IranWire news website, citing a knowledgeable source, reported that on Monday, December 12, 2022, Aida Rostami went to Ekbatan Town to treat injured protesters who avoided hospitals out of fear of arrest. When she left the home of one of the injured to get medical supplies such as sterile gauze and bandages, she never returned. (IranWire - December 16, 2022)

Police Station 135 Azadi arrested an individual named "Erfan" in connection with Aida Rostami’s murder. In his initial statements, this individual claimed that Aida Rostami contacted him on the evening of December 12, and they arranged to meet in the Ekbatan neighborhood. According to his initial claims, when he arrived at the scene, he found Aida Rostami’s body lying on the street and immediately contacted the police and emergency services. However, in subsequent statements, he completely changed his account, stating that Ms. Rostami visited his workplace near Ferdowsi Street around 5–6 p.m. They then went together to Ekbatan Town, allegedly discussing emotional matters.

The suspect’s claims conflict with Ms. Rostami's bank transaction records, which show that her bank card was used at 6:03 p.m. in the Ekbatan neighborhood.

A source close to Ms. Rostami’s family denied the judiciary’s claim that she had an emotional relationship with the man reportedly present with her on the night of her death. The source told the Boroumand Center that Aida’s connection to the man was related to the protests. A friend of this man had been injured during the protests, and Ms. Rostami had secretly treated him. Their friendship began at that time. Ms. Rostami had accompanied him to visit and treat several protesters at their homes. After the family received her body from the coroner's office, she was buried on December 16, 2022, at Imamzadeh Abdullah in Gorgan. (Interview with the Boroumand Center - July 17, 2023)

Memorial ceremonies marking the seventh and fortieth days of Ms. Rostami’s death were held on December 20, 2022, and January 20, 2023, at her gravesite. These gatherings were attended by a large crowd and closely monitored by security forces. Protest slogans against the government were chanted during the ceremonies. (Iran International TV - December 20, 2022, and January 20, 2023)

According to an informed source, some of Ms. Rostami’s acquaintances discovered long after her death that emotional messages they had sent to her were marked as read. However, they were never able to retrieve her mobile phone from the relevant authorities. (Interview with the Boroumand Center - July 17, 2023)

According to available information, Dr. Aida Rostami disappeared on 12 December 2022 after leaving her workplace at Chamran Hospital in Tehran. In her last phone call to her mother, she mentioned she was heading home but never arrived.

The next day, on 13 December 2022, officers from Police Station 135 Azadi informed her family that she had died in a "car accident" and asked them to collect her body from the forensic medical facility. Visible bruises and fractures were evident on her body, and her left eye had been stitched shut. According to the medical examiner’s report, the cause of death was “brain injuries and skull fractures caused by blunt force trauma” (Boroumand Center interview - 26 July 2023).

Judicial Case

On December 13, 2022, the family of Ms. Rostami filed a complaint at Police Station 135 Ekbatan against an individual named "Erfan," who had been arrested there, over the death of their daughter. Less than three months later, the case was closed by an investigator from the Sixth Branch of Tehran’s Criminal Prosecutor’s Office without providing a clear answer as to which bridge their daughter had allegedly "committed suicide" from. In March 2023, the investigator ruled the death a suicide, citing statements from Aida’s mother and brother about her alleged use of sedatives. However, a knowledgeable source stated that the Rostami family denied ever making such claims about her mental health history. Judicial authorities also confiscated Ms. Rostami’s mobile phone, which was never returned to her family, and no information from the phone was included in the investigation into her death. (Interview with Boroumand Center - July 17, 2023)

Official Reactions

Security forces insisted that Ms. Rostami’s body be buried in Tehran’s Behesht Zahra Cemetery. However, her family resisted, and her remains were transferred to her hometown of Gorgan. During her fortieth-day memorial ceremony, security agents attacked attendees, arresting several participants, including Ms. Rostami’s brother, who was beaten and detained for several hours. (Iran International - December 20, 2022, and January 20, 2023)

After news of Ms. Rostami’s death as a doctor assisting injured protesters gained public attention, official and pro-government media outlets released contradictory reports. The judiciary-affiliated Mizan News Agency claimed that her death was a suicide. The agency published a report alleging that Ms. Rostami, following an argument with a man accompanying her, had thrown herself off a pedestrian bridge. It also aired video confessions from the suspect, who claimed that on the night of the incident, Ms. Rostami, under the influence of medication, argued with him and then jumped from the bridge. (Mizan News Agency - December 17, 2022)

The Kayhan newspaper dismissed Ms. Rostami’s death as a new media fabrication by "anti-regime" outlets for propaganda purposes. It claimed she had an emotional relationship with the accompanying man, who, according to the paper, told investigators he had grown suspicious of her relationship with another person. (Kayhan Newspaper - December 17, 2022) Meanwhile, the Rokna News Agency reported that Ms. Rostami had confronted the suspect over his involvement with another individual, leading to an argument. (Rokna News Agency - December 18, 2022)

Security agencies pressured Ms. Rostami’s family to remain silent and accept suicide as the official cause of death.

On September 13, 2023, security agents arrested Armin Rostami, Aida's brother, after he issued a public appeal to doctors on the anniversary of her death. He was transferred to Gorgan Prison the following day. On September 27, 2023, he was released on bail. On November 14, 2023, the First Branch of the Revolutionary Court in Gorgan sentenced Armin Rostami to eight months in prison, which was later converted to a fine of 15 million tomans, on charges of propaganda against the regime. (HRANA News Agency - November 14, 2023) Additionally, Armin Rostami’s Instagram account was shut down.

Family Response

On July 4, 2023, Armin Rostami, Ms. Rostami’s brother, shared a video on his Instagram account calling on the medical community to provide free services in honor of his sister’s birthday on July 16. He described his sister as a doctor who sacrificed her life for the oath she had taken. (IranWire - July 4, 2023)

Impact on the Family

In a video released in honor of her daughter’s birthday, Ms. Rostami’s mother addressed her late daughter, saying:"Aida, your choice was light, and how brightly you shine in the luminous galaxy of our nation's honor. We are proud of you."(Manoto TV - July 17, 2023)

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