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

Alireza Eshraqi

About

Age: 27
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Islam (Shi'a)
Civil Status: Married

Case

Date of Killing: September 18, 1981
Gravesite location is known: Yes
Location of Killing: Mudar Mountain, Arak, Markazi Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Execution » Shooting
Charges: Corruption on earth; Armed rebellion against the Islamic Republic; Membership of anti-regime guerilla group
Age at time of alleged offense: 27

About this Case

Alireza loved his hometown Golpaygan.  He believed being a teacher was a way for him to connect with people and particularly with children, and that it was the best way to serve his country.

Information regarding the life and the execution of Mr. Alireza Eshraqi, son of Alieh and Fathollah, was obtained from an interview conducted by Abdorrahman Boroumand Center with one of his relatives (April 9, 2025); receipt of an electronic document sent by one of his relatives to Boroumand Center (March 3, 2025); Kayhan Newspaper (September 19, 1981); Ettela’at Newspaper; and a notice published by the public relations office of the Chief Public Prosecutor of the Islamic Revolution in the Jomhouri-e Eslami Newspaper (September 20, 1981). 

Mr. Alireza Eshraqi is 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.  

According to available information, Mr. Eshraqi was born in Golpaygan, in Esfahan Province, and he was 27 years old. He grew up in an intellectual family and went to the Business School in Tehran for higher education after he finished his secondary education. Upon getting his Bachelor’s degree, he was hired by the Ministry of Education to teach high school. He taught for a while at Doctor Shari’ati High School in Golpaygan, but then he was fired. In 1976 he got married, and he had a child. He loved his wife and his daughter. According to an informed source, “One of his salient characteristics was that he was very kind, caring, courteous, and well spoken. He was very responsible about his family. Alireza really loved his home town Golpaygan and he believed that being a teacher was a way for him to connect with people and particularly with children, and that the best way to serve your country is to be a teacher. (Abdorrahman Boroumand Center Interview, April 9, 2025) 

After the “Military Phase” of the Mojahedin Khalq Organization was begun, Mr. Eshraqi was a member of this organization. He was in charge of the finances of the organization in the town of Arak (Abdorrahman Boroumand Center Interview, April 9, 2025). 

Mr. Eshraqi and his family had given refuge to some comrades in their own home and they lived communally. 

Mr. Eshraqi’s case has to do with his membership in the Mojahedin Khalq Organization, maintaining a safe house, and providing necessary equipment for this organization in Arak. 

The Mojahedin Khalq Organization 

The Mojahedin Khalq Organization (MKO) was founded in 1965. This organization adapted the principles of Islam as its ideological guideline. However, its members’ interpretation of Islam was revolutionary and they believed in armed struggle against the Shah’s regime. They valued Marxism as a progressive method for economic and social analysis but considered Islam as their source of inspiration, culture, and ideology. In the 1970s, the MKO was weakened when many of its members were imprisoned and executed. In 1975, following a deep ideological crisis, the organization refuted Islam as its ideology and, after a few of its members were killed and other Muslim members purged, the organization proclaimed Marxism as its ideology. This move led to split of the Marxist-Leninist Section of the MKO in 1977. In January of 1979, the imprisoned Muslim leaders of the MKO were released along with other political prisoners. They began to re-organize the MKO and recruit new members based on Islamic ideology. After the 1979 Revolution and the establishment of the Islamic Republic, the MKO accepted the leadership of Ayatollah Khomeini and supported the Revolution. Active participation in the political scene and infiltration of governmental institutions were foremost on the organization’s agenda. During the first two years after the Revolution, the MKO succeeded in recruiting numerous sympathizers, especially in high schools and universities; but its efforts to gain political power, either by appointment or election, were strongly opposed by the Islamic Republic leaders. *

Arrest and detention

According to the person who was interviewed, immediately following the explosion in the prime minister’s office in Tehran, on August 30, 1981, the Islamic revolutionary guards’ forces arrested Mr. Eshraqi and eight of his comrades at his home in Arak, without showing an arrest warrant. According to a knowledgeable source, the agents broke the door and entered the home: “The people who arrested them were all revolutionary guards. There were 12-14 of them. When they attacked the home they were in plain clothes and they were armed. They violently entered the apartment, attacked individuals, sat on them, and proceeded to put them in handcuffs.”

Islamic revolutionary guard forces detained Mr. Eshraqi’s wife and child in their home for hours threatened them with a gun, and forced them to answer phone calls from his comrades so they could also be entrapped and arrested. After several hours of interrogation, they were transferred to Seh Pelleh prison at the Arak Police Station. The agents confiscated some cash and his personal vehicle and took these with them. Mr. Eshraqi was detained in the revolutionary guard prison in Arak and during his detention, he did not meet his family. He was able to contact some family members by phone.

On September 17, 1981, Mr. Eshraqi was transferred from the Revolutionary Guard Prison to Seh Pelleh Prison in the Arak Police Station, where in the presence of revolutionary guards, he was able to meet with his wife in the prayer room of this prison. During this meeting, although Mr. Eshraqi’s eyes were swollen and he couldn’t tolerate the light, he was in very good spirits. During the meeting with his wife, he talked with interest about the details of her life and about the education of their daughter. (Abdorrahman Boroumand Center Interview, April 9, 2025)  

Trial

The Islamic Revolutionary Tribunal of Arak tried Mr. Eshraqi and eight of his comrades within less than 20 days after their arrest (Kayhan Newspaper – September 19, 1981) but no detailed information is available on the proceedings of their trial.

Charges 

The public relations office of the Islamic Revolutionary Chief Public Prosecutor described the charges against Mr. Eshraqi as “Maintaining a safe house, being responsible for acquisition of explosive materials, [three-way?], etc. and giving these materials to opposition forces in order to incite and encourage them to cause explosions and to set fires.”  In this press release, Mr. Eshraqi has been introduced as a “mercenary agent of criminal America”. (Jomhouri-e Eslami Newspaper, September 20, 1981) 

According to a knowledgeable source, the charge against Mr. Eshraqi was “membership in the Mojahedin Khalq Organization”, but his family were not given an official document or a formal description of charges against him. Interrogators described his and his co-defendants’ charges orally. (Abdorrahman Boroumand Center Interview, April 9, 2025) 

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

There is no information about the details of the evidence used in court against him.

Defense 

There is no information available on Mr. Eshraqi’s defense. 

Judgement

The Islamic Revolutionary Tribunal of Arak judged Mr. Alireza Eshraqi “Waging war on God, spreading corruption on Earth, and disobedient to the Islamic Republic Regime” and sentenced him to execution.

At dawn on Friday, September 18, 1981, Mr. Eshraqi and 9 other people*** were executed by firing squad on the slopes of “Mudar” mountain in Arak.

During the meeting with his wife, Mr. Eshraqi intended to give his will to his wife, but the guard who was there prevented this and grabbed the paper from his hand.

On September 17, 1981, when he met his wife, Mr. Eshraqi knew he was going to be executed. He told her, “We are getting ready for flight tomorrow.”

According to a knowledgeable source, after the relevant authorities notified the family by phone and told them that their son had been executed, Mr. Eshraqi’s uncle and his father went to the medical examiner’s office and identified him in the morgue. They also saw a gunshot to his head that had been the coup de grace. The family was not allowed to hold a funeral and the authorities interred the body themselves. Later on, his family found out that the bodies of Mr. Eshraqi and his comrades had been laid to rest next to the mortuary in Garden of Heaven Cemetery in Arak. Years later, the custodian of the mortuary told the family of Mr. Eshraqi that nine of the executed people had been laid to rest according to Islamic rites, and that one other person from a leftist group had been interred separately in a different place 

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*The exclusion of MKO members from government offices and the closure of their centers and publishing houses, in conjunction with to the Islamic Republic authorities’ different interpretation of Islam, widened the gap between the two. Authorities of the new regime referred to the Mojahedin as “Hypocrites” and the Hezbollahi supporters of the regime attacked the Mojahedin sympathizers regularly during demonstrations and while distributing publications, leading to the death of several MKO supporters. On June 20, 1981, the MKO called for a demonstration protesting their treatment by governmental officials and the government officials’  efforts to impeach their ally, President Abolhassan Banisadr. Despite the fact that the authorities called this demonstration illegal, thousands came to the streets, some of whom confronted the Revolutionary Guardsmen and Hezbollahis. The number of casualties that resulted from this demonstration is unknown but a large number of demonstrators were arrested and executed in the following days and weeks. The day after the demonstration, the Islamic Republic regime started a repressive campaign – unprecedented in modern Iranian history. Thousands of MKO members and sympathizers were arrested or executed. On June 21, 1981, the MKO announced an armed struggle against the Islamic Republic and assassinated a number of high-ranking officials and supporters of the Islamic regime. 
In the summer of 1981, the leader of the MKO and the impeached President (Banisadr) fled Iran to reside in France, where they founded the National Council of Resistance. After the MKO leaders and many of its members were expelled from France, they went to Iraq and founded the National Liberation Army of Iran in 1987, which entered Iranian territory a few times during the Iran-Iraq war. They were defeated in July 1988 during their last operation, the Forugh Javidan Operation. A few days after this operation, thousands of imprisoned Mojahedin supporters were killed during the mass executions of political prisoners in 1988. Ever since the summer of 1981, the MKO has continued its activities outside of Iran. No information is available regarding members and activities of the MKO inside the country. 
In spite of the “armed struggle” announcement by the MKO on June 20, 1981, many sympathizers of the organization had no military training, were not armed, and did not participate in armed conflict. 
**An explosion occurred at the Prime Minister’s Office of the Islamic Republic of Iran on August 30, 1981, at 3 pm, during a meeting of the Supreme National Security Council, attended by President Mohammad Ali Rajaee, then prime minister Javad Bahonar, and other council members. In this explosion, eight people died, including the president and the prime minister of Iran at the time. 
***Amirreza Pur Hashem Tabrizi, Hamidreza Hassankhani, Seyedreza Safa’i, Hassan Tabibipur, Hasan Heydari, Mahmud Akbari, Mohammad Taqavi, Mohammadreza Qalavand, all members and supporters of the Mojahedin Khalq Organization of Iran; and Javad Sajadi [Qa’em Maqam Farahani] from The Revolutionary Workers’ Organization of Iran (Rah Kargar).

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