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 Akbar Baharali

About

Nationality: Iran
Religion: Presumed Muslim
Civil Status: Married

Case

Date of Killing: December 3, 1984
Location of Killing: Qasr Prison, Tehran, Tehran Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Hanging
Charges: Drug possession; Drug trafficking

About this Case

The execution of Mr. Ali Akbar Baharali, along with 24 other individuals, was announced in a communiqué from the public relations office of the Anti-Narcotics Section of Tehran’s Public Prosecutor’s Office. The communiqué was reported in the Jomhuri Eslami Daily on December 9, 1984. Additional information has been sent to Omid by an individual familiar with this case via an electronic form.

The official communiqué stated: “The Anti-Narcotics Section of Tehran’s Public Prosecutor’s Office declared 25 international professional drug traffickers corruptors on earth and issued a firm and revolutionary death sentence against them. These sentences were issued following the repeated warnings by the Public Prosecutor’s Office to the drug smugglers, these traders of death and partisans of the universal arrogance, to repent from their hideous acts and return to the humane, Islamic society of Iran. Moreover, the community of the party of God had recurrently asked the Islamic Revolution’s Tribunals for severe punishment of such persons who consciously corrupted the young in this country.”

Mr. Baharali was born in Haji Abad village, near Neyshabur (in today’s Khorasan Razavi province) and was not affiliated with any political party or group. He worked in a car dealership (electronic form).

Arrest and detention

Mr. Baharali was arrested in his house in Mashhad in 1983. At the time of arrest, 30,000 tumans cash was found in his house. He was, then, transferred to Tehran (electronic form). No further information is available regarding his arrest and detention.

Trial

There is no information regarding this trial.

Charges

According to this communiqué, Mr. Baharali was charged with “establishing an international drug-trafficking gang, possessing 5.408 kg of heroin and 6.332 kg of opium when arrested, selling 35 kg of heroin, making contacts with Afghans to supply heroin, having a previous criminal record for supplying, distributing and transporting drugs, supplying 30 kg of heroin and transporting it to Mashhad.”

The validity of the criminal charges brought against this defendant cannot be ascertained in the absence of the basic guarantees of a fair trial.

Evidence of guilt

The electronic form mentions confessions of an unnamed person and 30,000 tumans cash that was found in the defendant’s house at the time of arrest. No further information is available about the evidence of guilt.

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. Baharali’s defense.

Judgment

The Anti-Narcotics Islamic Revolutionary Tribunal declared Mr. Baharali a “corruptor on earth” and sentenced him to death. The Supreme Court approved the sentence and Mr. Ali Akbar Baharali was hanged in Qasr prison at dawn on December 3, 1984.

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