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

Ali Asghar Badiran

About

Nationality: Iran
Religion: Presumed Muslim
Civil Status: Unknown

Case

Date of Killing: September 26, 1987
Location of Killing: Tehran, Tehran Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Hanging
Charges: Addiction; Drug trafficking

About this Case

About this Case

The execution of Mr. Ali Asghar Badiran, son of Ali, along with fifteen others, was reported in the Kayhan newspaper on September 26, 1987.

Arrest and detention

The circumstances of Mr. Badiran’s arrest and detention are not known.

Trial

There is no information regarding this trial.

Charges

According to the newspaper, Mr. Badiran was charged with “being highly and continuously active in supplying and distributing drugs since 1965, drug addiction, [and] buying heroin in 50-gram packages and selling it in smaller packages.”

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’s authorities have brought trumped-up charges against their political opponents and executed them for drug trafficking, sexual, and other criminal offences. Thousands of alleged drug traffickers have been sentenced to death following judicial processes that fail to meet international standards. The exact number of people convicted based on trumped-up charges is unknown

Evidence of guilt

The newspaper reports that Mr. Badiran had been previously “convicted of drug related offences and 17 counts of robbery” and that based on “his own confessions, he has spent most of his life in prison.”

International human rights organizations have repeatedly condemned the government of the Islamic Republic of Iran for its systematic use of severe torture and solitary confinement to obtain confessions from detainees and have questioned the authenticity of confessions obtained under duress. In the case of political detainees, these confessions are, at times, televised. The National Television broadcasts confessions during which prisoners plead guilty to vague and false charges, repent and renounce their political beliefs, and/or implicate others. Human rights organizations have also pointed to the pattern of retracted confessions by those prisoners who are freed.

Defense

No information is available concerning Mr. Badiran’s defense.

Judgment

The Islamic Revolutionary Tribunal to Combat Drugs declared Mr. Badiran a “corruptor on earth” and sentenced him to death. He and two other men were publicly hanged at dawn on September 26, 1987, on Khaki Street in Tehran.

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