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Protester Mostafa Salehi Accused Of Killing Paramilitary Member Executed In Iran

Mostafa Salehi
Mostafa Salehi who was accused of shooting a paramilitary member has been executed in Iran.

The news agency of Iran's Judiciary on Wednesday announced that Mostafa Salehi, one of the protesters arrested after nationwide December 2017-January 2018 protests, has been executed in Najafabad, Isfahan Province.

Mostafa Salehi was arrested following the protests in Kahriz-Sang in Isfahan Province and was accused of shooting Sajjad Shah-Sanaei, a member of the Basij militia, with a hunting gun.

Very little is known about Salehi's trial, court proceedings and even the name of the lawyer who defended him against the murder charge. 

The Judiciary statement announcing his execution does not reveal any details except the charges brought against him.

On Tuesday the Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) quoted Salehi's family members as saying that they were worried he was put on death row as his contact with his family had ceased.

In December 2017 and early 2018 large-scale anti-government protests engulfed the country which many believed was a revolt against the entire ruling system. 

Unlike the post-election protests in 2009, these protests did not reflect factional fighting within the political groups inside the system.

Human rights observers have repeatedly said that the most fundamental rights of defendants including the right to legal representation are grossly ignored in the Islamic Judiciary. They also allege that many verdicts are based on forced confessions extracted through psychological and physical torture.

The Judiciary staunchly refutes such allegations and has repeatedly underlined that they will not "give in to such pressures".

Iran, after China, has the highest number of executions. Judges pass the death penalty on defendants on vague charges such as "acting against national security" after summary trials held behind closed doors.

In security-related cases, defendants' chosen lawyers are often not allowed to participate in the trial, leaving their role to court-appointed lawyers.

The news of the imminent execution of three young men for participating in November 2019 in July raised international concern and many Iranians joined a very successful online campaign to stop executions. The death sentences have been put on hold for the time being.

Currently there are serious concerns about the execution of five more protesters whose families rallied in front of the Justice Department of Isfahan on July 30 to protest.

Source: radiofarda.com, Staff, August 5, 2020


Iran Executes Man Arrested in December 2017 Protests in Isfahan


Political prisoner Mostafa Salehi, detained for participating in late 2017, early 2018 protests was hanged at dawn today in a prison in Isfahan, central Iran.

Mostafa Salehi was one of the protesters arrested during the nationwide protests in 2017-18 in the city of Kahrizsang, in Isfahan province.

He was accused of killing a member of the Revolutionary Guards using a “hunting rifle” during the protests in 2017-18, the judiciary’s Mizan News Agency reported.

“Mostafa Salehi, who had murdered Sajad Shahsanayi with a bullet during the riots of (December 2017-January 2018), was executed this morning upon the request of the victim’s family,” Mizan said.

Salehi had constantly denied the charges raised against him of killing the member of the regime’s IRGC Basij forces.

According to a source who is one of Mustafa Salehi’s relatives, the 30-year-old construction worker pleaded not guilty to murder and was acquitted of the charges nearly 1 year after his arrest.

“Under pressure from IRGC intelligence, the case was reopened and he was sentenced to death,” the source said.

“He is innocent, he was forced to confess in front of the camera against himself, he did not plead guilty in court, there was no evidence. They executed him at the request of Shahsanayi’s family,” the source added.

Source: Iran Human Rights, Staff, August 5, 2020


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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed,
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted." -- Oscar Wilde

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