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

Kobra Sheikheh Saqa

About

Age: 52
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Presumed Muslim (Sunni)
Civil Status: Married

Case

Date of Killing: October 27, 2022
Gravesite location is known: Yes
Location of Killing: Karegar Street, Mahabad, Azarbaijan-e Gharbi Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: targeting vital organs

About this Case

Ms. Sheikheh’s child asked her many times to come back inside the house, but her mind was made up. “When the young people are in the streets, I cannot stay at home.” 

Information regarding the life of Ms. Kobra Sheikheh Saqa, known as “Nanny Kobra”, daughter of Karim and Ayesheh, and regarding her arbitrary execution was obtained from an Abdorrahman Boroumand Center Interview with an informed source (January 16, 2023). In order to complete the Hope Memorial for Ms. Sheikheh, information has been taken from Kurdpa Website (October 27 and November 5, 2022), Radio Farda (August 24, 2023), BBC Farsi (September 2, 2023), and her Death Certificate (November 5, 2022).

According to available information, Ms. Sheikheh Saqa was born in the village of Molla Kandi, in the environs of Miandoab, West Azerbaijan Province, on July 25, 1963. She was married at 13, and she gave birth to four children. Ms. Sheikheh was a housewife and she helped her husband on their farm with agriculture and animal husbandry. She participated in the Literacy Campaign, and she lived with her family on Kargar Street in Mahabad (Boroumand Center Interview, January 16, 2023).

One of Ms. Sheikheh Saqa’s relatives described her as a hardworking and long-suffering woman, who nevertheless always had a loving smile on her lips (Radio Farda, August 24, 2023).

According to her relatives, in following the news about the death of Mahsa Amini, Ms. Sheikheh had said many times, “Would that God would ordain such a death for one. Look what people are doing for her.”

Ms. Sheikheh Saqa attended the protests following the death of Mahsa Amini on October 27, 2022.

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.”

Background on the Demonstrations in Mahabad

On October 27, 2022, later known as “The Bloody Day of Mahabad”, following the funeral ceremony of Mr. Ismail (Samko) Moludi, one of the people killed during the “Woman, Life, Freedom” demonstrations in Mahabad, the crowd of protestors started to move towards Shahrdari Square. At this time, security forces intervened and shot into the crowds, killing four people and injuring many more. Angry demonstrators then proceeded to attack city offices and started to chant strong slogans against the government and the local revolutionary corps forces.

Arbitrary Execution of Ms. Kobra Sheikheh Saqa

According to available information, on Thursday, October 27, 2022, during popular demonstrations in the town of Mahabad, Ms. Sheikheh Saqa was shot by security forces Kalashnikov rifles in front of her house on Iran Peyma Street and she lost her life. On October 27, 2022, one of the protestors who had lost his life a few days earlier was laid to rest. After this funeral, several groups of people went to the streets and the demonstrations gradually expanded. Ms. Sheikheh’s house on Kargar Street was one of the places where demonstrators would gather. She went out with her children to participate in the protests. At 12:30 pm, clashes between protestors and security forces reached its height (Center Interview, January 16, 2023). She shouted slogans and collected rocks for the protestors to defend themselves with. Witnesses say she engaged government forces from a short distance. When her son tried to take her back inside her home, Ms. Sheikheh Saqa resisted and said, “How can I stay indoors when the young people are out there?”  Just then, security forces opened fire on the protestors, Ms. Sheikheh Saqa was hit, and she fell to the ground. The bullet hit her in the neck. The force of the bullet tore open her back. The bullet exited her body and lodged in the door of the house. Her son took her into the front yard and wrapped her neck with a piece of cloth. An eyewitness saw four men in green military clothes fire on people from a distance of 30 meters away from Molla Jami Square in Mahabad; “There was so much gunfire that you couldn’t look at the street easily.” (Center Interview, January 6, 2023). Her husband also said, “From the balcony I saw people in military clothes firing on our street and on our house. I know my wife’s murderers.” (Kurdpa, November 5, 2022)

The family immediately took Ms. Sheikheh to “Imam Khomeini” Hospital. The medical team at the hospital determined that she had passed away, and since they were worried that her body might be taken away by security agents, they advised the family to take her away and to arrange for her burial without waiting for the customary paperwork to be done. Ms. Sheikheh’s body was taken home in the back of a personal pickup truck. Ms. Sheikheh’s husband, Mr. Vahed Soltani, was standing over her body all the way home, shouting slogans against the government. Family members were accompanying him. On their way home, a group of armed motorcycle agents who were stationed at Molla Jami Square attacked the funeral cortege and fired at them with shotguns. In this attack, several members of the entourage were hit by shotgun pellets, as was Ms. Sheikheh’s body. When this group got to their home, agents threatened the family and forced them to take the body inside (Radio Farda, August 24, 2023).

According to witnesses, things became so agitated at her funeral that Ms. Sheikheh’s body fell on the ground. Several people kneeled before the government forces, raised their hands in supplication, and implored them to allow the burial to be concluded.

Ms. Sheikheh’s body was washed for burial at the local mosque. The entry wounds from shotgun pellets that had hit her on the way back from the hospital could be seen on her leg. Ms. Sheikheh’s family took her body to be buried at the Ferdows Garden Cemetery in Mahabad (Center Interview, January 6, 2023). The friends attending the funeral ceremony chanted slogans such as “Kobra, may your martyrdom be victorious!”, “Death to Khamene’i”, “Death to the Dictator”, “Martyrs do not die!”, and “Woman, Life, Freedom”. Security forces attacked the people attending the funeral with shotguns and tear gas. At least 50 people were injured by government agents’ gunfire and assault (Kurdpa, November 5, 2022).

According to witnesses, the funeral became so disorganized that Ms. Sheikheh’s body was on the ground and had not been buried. Some of the attendees kneeled in front of the agents, raised their hands, and pleaded with them to let the funeral ceremony be concluded (Radio Farda, August 24, 2023).

Ms. Sheikheh’s body was finally interred at Ferdows Garden Cemetery in Mahabad, on October 27, 2022. According to a photostat of the Death Certificate, the cause of death was “being hit by hard or sharp objects”. The hospital certified that the cause of death was “gunshots”. (Center Interview, Jan 16, 2023)

Officials’ Reaction

On October 27, 2022, security forces attacked the attendees at the funeral of Ms. Sheikheh Saqa at Ferdows Garden Cemetery in Mahabad with shotgun pellets and tear gas, injuring at least 50 people (Center Interview, January 16, 2023).

Hospital officials told the family the bullet had been fired from a Kalashnikov weapon or from a single shot rifle. Security officials from the Information Ministry and from the County Governorship of Mahabad, who came to the home of Ms. Sheikheh Saqa to investigate the scene, announced that the bullet had come from a “single shot” rifle, but that they had not been able to ascertain who had fired that rifle (Center Interview, January 16, 2023).

The County Governor and security officials of the time, pressured Ms. Sheikheh Saqa’s family to hand over her identification forms and to have her registered as a “Martyr of the Islamic Revolution”. The Islamic Broadcasting System of Western Azerbaijan Province and Judiciary Officials went to Mr. Soltani’s home unannounced and filmed him. After he was interviewed, Mr. Soltani’s statements were distorted, censored, and published (Kurdpa, November 5, 2022).

After Ms. Sheikheh Saqa was killed, security officials contacted her husband and asked him to announce that his wife had been shot and killed by some people from an unidentified car in front of their home (BBC Farsi, September 2, 2023).

A few days after the funeral of Ms. Sheikheh Saqa, the governor at that time, the mayor at that time, the Imam Jom’eh at that time, and several members of the police force of Mahabad went to her family home and offered their condolences. The judiciary officials of the city of Mahabad did not investigate the complaint filed by the family regarding the murder of Ms. Sheikheh Saqa (Center Interview, January 16, 2023).

Family’s Reaction

Mr. Soltani, the husband of Ms. Sheikheh Saqa, who had witnessed agents shooting his wife from the balcony where he was standing, filed a complaint against the security forces who had murdered his wife with the criminal court of Mahabad, and told them the only forces present that day were the forces of the Islamic Republic. (Center Interview, January 26, 2023). 

Impacts on Family

According to available information, the death of Ms. Sheikheh has had a devastating and irreparable effect on the family. Her husband, Mr. Soltani suffers from multiple illnesses and is lonely after the death of his wife (Center Interview, January 26, 2023).

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