Human Rights in Iran  
 
A project of the Abdorrahman Boroumand Foundation

One person's story
Mr. Shahriar Shafiq

About

Age 34

Nationality Iran

Religion Islam (Shi'a)

Civil status Married

Education university diploma

Occupation high ranking official, armed forces

Rank/Position Before the Islamic Revolution, Mr. Shahriar Shafiq was serving as a captain in Iran's Imperial Navy.

Affiliation

Affiliation army, former regime


Case

Date of execution December 7, 1979

Location Paris, France

Mode of execution extrajudicial-shooting

Charges Corruption on earth

About this Case

The information about the killing of Mr. Shahriar Shafiq was drawn from the Memoirs of Ayatollah Khalkhali, the first religious judge appointed by Ayatollah Khomeini to preside over the Islamic Revolutionary Tribunal. Mr. Shahriar Shafiq, the nephew of the late Shah of Iran, had fled Iran in March 1979. He was living in exile in Paris at the time of his extrajudicial execution.

Arrest and detention

The victim was never arrested.

Trial

Whether the victim was tried in abstentia is not known. There is no evidence that his case was examined in a public trial.

Charges

The name of Mr. Shahriar Shafiq was in a list of people ordered by Mr. Khalkhali to be executed. According to Mr. Khalkhali these people were all charged with "corruption on earth," which he defined in the following terms: "A corruptor on earth is a person who contributes to the spreading and expanding corruption on earth. Corruption is what leads to the decline, destruction, and the deviation of society from its nature. People who were executed had striven to spread corruption and prostitution, circulating heroin, opium and licentious behavior, atheism, murder, betrayal, flattery, and, in sum, all these vile qualities. These people’s problems were aggravated by the fact that they did not repent once they witnessed the people’s revolution."

Evidence of guilt

The report of this execution does not contain any information regarding the evidence provided against the victim.

Defense

The victim was denied the right to defend himself. He was not aware of being prosecuted by Iran's judicial authorities

Judgment

The afternoon of December 7, 1979, a young man, later identified as a certain Boghraie, pulled out a 9-millimeter pistol and shot him in the back of the head. As Mr. Shafiq fell, the gunman bent over him, fired a second bullet into his head, and then vanished among the crowd in the Rue Pergolese (Paris).




 
 

Human rights violations in this case

The legal context

Read about the courts, the judges, and the procedure.

read...

Extrajudicial killings and the Islamic Republic: A decades-long pattern

Read more about the pattern of extrajudicial killings ordered by the Islamic Republic authorities.

read...


 

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