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

Abdollah Tajzadeh

About

Age: 19
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Non-Believer
Civil Status: Single

Case

Date of Killing: June 26, 1984
Location of Killing: Evin Prison, Tehran, Tehran Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Unspecified execution method
Charges: Unspecified counter-revolutionary offense

About this Case

The information below regarding Mr. Abdollah Tajzadeh is based on an electronic form sent to the Boroumand Foundation by one of his relatives. According to this information, Mr. Tajzadeh, son of Mehdi, was born in Qods city (formerly known as Hassan Khan castle) in 1965. He was a high school graduate and owned a small bookstore where he had a copy machine and copied political pamphlets. He was a non-religious person who believed in social justice and leftist ideology and was a sympathizer of the Komala party.

Mr. Tajzadeh is one of the individuals who name and date of execution is published in the Komala’s List of Martyrs.

Komala: Several remaining members of the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran established the Revolutionary Organization of this party in Iraq in the mid 1960s. Esma’il Sharifzadeh, Abdollah Mo’ini, and Molaavareh were among the leaders of this organization who, inspired by the Cuban Revolution, began an armed guerrilla struggle in Kurdistan. When this group was defeated in 1969 and several of its members were arrested, armed struggle was criticized and the Maoist trend overcomes. When some of its leaders were released in 1978, the Revolutionary Organization of Working People in Kurdistan – Komala was established. Based on Marxist theory, Komala was against the capitalists and landlords and encouraged workers and peasants in Kurdistan to an armed uprising against them and the central government. This organization considered the Kurdish Democratic Party of Iran (PDKI) as the rich party and campaigned against it, resulting in several armed conflicts and hundreds dead. In 1982, Komala joined another Marxist group, Sahand, which was basically a theoretical group, and established the Communist Party of Iran. Then it became called the Kurdistan Organization of the Communist Party of Iran – Komala. Years later, this organization separated from the Communist Party of Iran and faced several schisms. The Komala Party of Iranian Kurdistan, led by Abdollah Mohtadi, Komala, and the Kurdistan Organization of the Communist Party of Iran led by Ebrahim Alizadeh are some of these factions.

Arrest and detention

According to the electronic information that was sent to the Boroumand Foundation, Mr. Tajzadeh was arrested at the age of 17 in his father’s house in Qods city in the spring of 1982. The agents of the regime entered the house without a warrant and forcefully placed him under arrest. They also arrested his father, an old man who was a Gonabadi dervish, but released him three weeks later. Mr. Tajzadeh, however, was immediately transferred to the Evin Prison where he was denied any visitations for a year. Later he was allowed monthly visitation with his parents and sometimes with his two sisters. The visitations were suddenly discontinued in the Spring of 1984. Upon the inquiry, Mr. Tajzadeh’s family were told that he was executed. During Mr. Tajzadeh’s last visitation with his family, he told them that his shoulder was broken and that he had kidney problems. Mr. Tajzadeh’s family believe that he suffered these injuries under torture.

Trial

No information is available on the defendant’s trial.

Charges

No information is available on any charges against the Mr. Tajzadeh

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

Evidence of guilt

According to the information provided to the Boroumand Foundation, Mr. Tajzadeh’s family did not see any evidence of a case against him and that he was not involved in any militia or other armed activities. However, when the regime agents were searching his house, they found a weapon that was hidden inside the television. It is possible that Mr. Tajzadeh acquired that weapon from the army garrisons during the revolution and hid it in his house.

Defense

According to the electronic information, Mr. Tajzadeh was denied the right to have an attorney.

Judgment

According to the information sent to the Boroumand Foundation, Mr. Tajzadeh was condemned to death and the sentence was carried out in the Evin Prison in June of 1984. The exact date of his execution according to the Komala’s List of Martyrs is June 26, 1984. Mr. Tajzadeh left behind a one-page will that he wrote before his execution. His will was very emotional and touching. The location of Mr. Tajzadeh’s grave is unknown. In 2003, one of his relatives attempted to find out the location of his grave, per his mother’s request. However, as a result of the inquiry, the relative was summoned to the Ministry of Intelligence. After a two-hour interrogation, the Intelligence agents warned the relative to stop looking for Mr. Tajzadeh’s grave.

International laws have strictly prohibited capital punishment against those who were under the age of 18 at the time of committing the crime. As a party to the Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, Iran has the obligation to avoid capital punishment for an offence committed before the age of eighteen.

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