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

Behzad Bahadoripur

About

Age: 37
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Presumed Muslim
Civil Status: Married

Case

Date of Killing: July 11, 2006
Location of Killing: 3 Rahe Malekshahr, Esfahan, Esfahan Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Hanging
Charges: Rape
Age at time of alleged offense: 35

About this Case

News of the execution of Mr. Behzad Bahadoripur was reported by Fars and Mehr News Agency websites (July 11, 2006).  Additional information on this case has been collected from Sharq newspaper (July 9, 2006), Javan newspaper, Khabar-e-Jonub site, and Hamshahri newspaper (July 10, 2006).

Mr. Bahadoripur was married, lived in Bam, had grown up in Zahedan, and had gone to school through grade 11.  His and his wife’s case was related to kidnapping and rape. 

Arrest and detention

Mr. Bahadoripur and his wife were arrested by Esfahan Police officers, on the Esfahan-Tehran road, near the town of Murcheh Khort, on November 4, 2004.  This was in response to a complaint from the family of a kidnapped young girl in the town of Natanz.  Investigating officers noticed that many people in different towns had gone to the police and reported that their daughters had been kidnapped by a young couple.  For that reason, the Esfahan police force designated a special team for the arrest of these two people.  They immediately put all the entrances and exits to the town of Natanz under surveillance, and they arrested these two on the road from Esfahan to Tehran, near the town of Murcheh Khort (Javan newspaper).  He was in prison for nearly two years.  The latter part of this incarceration was spent in Section 7, Penitentiary #3, Esfahan Prison (Hamshahri newspaper).

Trial

Branch 102 of the Tehran Criminal Court tried Mr. Bahadoripur and his wife.

No information is available on this trial.

Charges

The charge brought against Mr. Bahadoripur was “rape and kidnapping”.

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 Islamic Republic authorities have brought trumped-up charges against their opponents (including political, civic, and trade union activists, and ethnic and religious minorities) and executed them for alleged drug trafficking, sexual, and other criminal offences.  Every year hundreds of people are sentenced to death by hanging in Iranian courts, but the exact number of people convicted based on trumped-up charges is unknown.

Evidence of guilt

Evidence against Mr. Bahadoripur was “complaints from 157 victims, identification of the accused by kidnapped children, possession of six and a half million Tumans cash, and confessions of the accused”.  In their confessions, they said they had decided to do this in the spring of 2002.  In different towns, they would lure young girls into their car on the pretext of asking for directions, and then they would steal their gold jewelry while threatening them with a knife.  They confessed to more than 300 counts of child abduction and gold jewelry theft.

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.

Defense

Mr. Bahadoripur said he had committed these crimes because of financial difficulties and that the verdict issued to him was cruel and unjust.  He said he had not hurt anybody and that his wife new all about the things he had done (Hamshahri newspaper).

No information is available on other aspects of his defense.

Judgment

Branch 102 of the Esfahan Criminal Court sentenced Mr. Behzad Bahadoripur to public execution, 10 years prison, and 74 lashes, and payment of damages to plaintiffs, for rape and kidnapping.  This sentence was approved by the Supreme Court. 

He was hung in public in Esfahan, at the intersection of Kaveh Street and Malek Shahr, on July 11, 2006.  The other defendant was sentenced to 10 years prison, 74 lashes, and payment of damages to the plaintiffs.

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