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

Tavakol Asadian

About

Age: 33
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Non-Believer
Civil Status: Married

Case

Date of Killing: November 24, 1981
Location of Killing: Khoramabad, Lorestan Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Death in custody
Charges: Unknown charge

About this Case

The information about Mr. Tavakol Asadian, son of Sadeq Khan, is based on an interview with a person familiar with his case, an electronic form sent to Abdorrahman Boroumand Center by a relative, and an article about him in the Asre-No Website dated November 23, 2011. Mr. Asadian is also one of the 12028 individuals listed in an addendum to the Mojahed magazine (No 261), published by Mojahedin Khalq Organization in 1985. The list includes individuals, affiliated with various opposition groups, who were executed or killed during clashes with the Islamic Republic security forces from June 1981 to the publication date of the magazine.

Mr. Asadian was born in May 1948 in Gorzkol (a village near Khoramabad in the Western province of Lorestan) in a family of local notables and had eight sisters and brothers. He was married and had a very young daughter. Having earned a master’s degree in agriculture from Tehran University and worked in the Haft-Tappeh Sugarcane Company after the 1979 revolution. (Abdorrahman Boroumand Center Interview- Electronic Form) Mr. Asadian is remembered as a kind and sociable person and made friends wherever he went. He was popular and respected among the factory workers. He loved nature and classical and folk music. 

Mr. Asadian and his spouse, a high school teacher in Dezful, belonged to politically active families and were sympathizers of the Fadaiyan Khalq Organization. They spent 4 years in prison before the revolution. Following the revolution, Mr. Asadian was affiliated with the Fadayian Khalq (Minority). According to the available information, Mr. Asadian resigned from his engineering job in the winter of 1980 as leftist dissident were increasingly in danger and went into hiding in Tehran. He was responsible for the Tabriz branch of his organization until he was assigned to lead the Gorgan branch, but he never made it. Mr Asadian left his hiding place to attend the funeral and memorial held for his nephew Siamak Asadian in Gorzkol. The latter had been killed in October 1981, in a clash with the Revolutionary Guards.

The Fadaiyan Khalq Organization, a Marxist Leninist group, inspired by the Cuban Revolution and the urban guerilla movements of Latin America, was founded in 1971 by two communist groups opposed to the Pahlavi regime. After the 1979 Revolution, the organization, which renounced armed struggle, split over their support of the Islamic Republic and of the Soviet Union. The Fadaiyan Khalq (Minority) opposed the Islamic Republic and was active mainly in the political arena and the labor movement. The Fadaiyan Khalq (Majority) supported and considered the Islamic Republic as a revolutionary and anti-imperialist regime. After the spring of 1983, however, the Islamic Republic targeted the Fadaiyan Khalq (Majority) members solely because of their political beliefs.

Arrest and detention

Mr. Asadian was arrested at noon on November 11, 1981 at his family home in Gorzkol, along with scores of relatives and others who had travelled to Gorzkol to attend the ceremony held on the 40th day of the death of Siamak Asadian. (Boroumand Center Interview - Asre No Website) According to the interviewee, Mr. Assadian and the others were taken to a building in the center of Khoramabad. According to the inteviewee, eye witnesses have reported that Mr. Asadian was taken to be interrogated for long hours every day and returned to his cell with bruises and cigarette burns. The eye witness also reported that Mr. Asadian disappeared about ten days after their arrest.

Trial

Mr. Asadian was not tried.

Charges

The charge brought against the defendant is not known.

Evidence of guilt

No information is available regarding the evidence provided against Mr. Asadian.

Defense

No information is available on Mr. Asadian’s defense.

Judgment

Mr. Asadian died in detention. His family heard the news of his death from the local radio on November 24, 1981. The exact circumstances of his death remain unknown. Though the authorities claimed that he burned himself with an oil lamp, they did not return his body to the family and burried him in Khoramabad Cemetery. Further, three close relatives of Mr. Asadian, including his brother, and a number of other people who had gathered to attend Siamak Asadian's memorial ceremony were executed. The authorities also confiscated Mr. Asadian's property, leaving his spouse and young daughter, who also went into hiding, in hardship for years to come.

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