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

Mohsen Shekari

About

Age: 23
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Presumed Muslim
Civil Status: Single

Case

Date of Killing: December 8, 2022
Location of Killing: Raja’i Shahr (Gohardasht) Prison, Karaj, Alborz Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Hanging
Charges: War on God
Age at time of alleged offense: 22

About this Case

“We have been through hell, now we are in purgatory, be sure that we will get to heaven and we will talk to the God of freedom!” These were the last words of Mohsen Shekari, to one of the customers of the café where he worked -the words of a young man who saw in the name Dante a Persian-language acronym: "Enemy of humanity, your destruction is my only goal."

News of the execution of Mr. Mohsen Shekari, son of Massoud, has been taken from an interview by the Abdorrahman Boroumand Center (ABC) with an informed source (March 23, 2023) and one of his cellmates in Evin Prison’s Ward 142 (March 20, 2023), a cellmate's report to the Boroumand Center, a collection of speeches made by Mr. Shekari’s cellmates in Evin prison posted on the internet (May 30, 2023), Mizan News Agency websites (November 21, December 8 and December 10, 2022), HRANA - Human Rights Activists in Iran (December 8, 2022), Tasnim News Agency (November 21, December 8 and 10, 2022), ISNA-Iran Students News Agency (December 8, 2022), Mashreq (December 10, 2022), Iran Azadi (December 2022), and Radio Zamaneh (Mr. Farzad Saifikaran)’s interview with Mr. Shekari's uncle (December 14, 2022) was also obtained. 

According to the available information, Mr. Shekari was 23 years old and a resident of Tehran. He began his education at Sajad Primary School, continued it at Kamil High School in the Narmak neighborhood, and earned a mathematics diploma.

Mr. Shekari spent his childhood with his grandmother due to family disputes, lived alone since he was sixteen years old, and started working at an early age. 

According to the available information, he had mental problems, had attempted suicide twice, and according to his cellmates, he did not have many friends. He worked in cafes and restaurants and slept at his workplace. He was a cook and had attended various culinary courses. According to one of his cellmates, he wanted to open his own cafe. According to one of his relatives: "He loved his family. He was an athlete. He went to work, took care of his sister and mother. He had the charms of his age and loved computer games" (Boroumand Center interview with an informed source – March 23, 2023).

One of his cellmates told the Boroumand Center that Mr. Shekari "didn't know much about political issues." But it seemed that he ultimately wanted the Islamic Republic to end and the return of the Pahlavi family to Iran was in his mind. His views on republicanism or anything else were not very prominent (Evin Prison Ward 142 cellmate- March 20, 2023). 

According to a person who met Mr. Shekari at his workplace in a cafe in Haft Hoz, Narmak, he became interested in Dante's Divine Comedy. After his customer explained about the book, he borrowed it to read it (Iran Azadi). Mr. Shekari participated in the 2022 nationwide protests, which began in protest against the killing of Mahsa Amini, who was detained by the morality police on the charge of "bad hijab." According to the same customer who had lent him the Divine Comedy, one day in September/October, he saw him in front of Abul Fazl Mosque in Sattar Khan and Mr. Shekari said to him: "I really looked at your book, we have been through hell, now we are in purgatory, be sure that we will get to heaven and we will talk to the God of freedom!” But Mr. Shekari emphasized: "Now is not the time to read books, it's time to act... Do you really know what Dante means? ...It means [as an acronym in Persian] enemy of humanity, your destruction is my only goal!” (Iran Azadi). 

The case of Mr. Shekari is related to blocking the street and possessing cold weaponry on September 25, 2022 in Najari alley near Sattar Khan Street in Tehran, during the fall 2022 nationwide protests. This case attracted attention from many lawyers and religious authorities.

The execution of Mr. Shekari received many reactions inside and outside Iran, including from European and American authorities. 

2022 (Mahsa Amini) Protest background 

Nationwide protests were sparked by the death in custody of 22-year old Kurdish woman Jina (Mahsa) Amini on September 16, 2022. Amini had been arrested by the morality police in Tehran for improper veiling on September 13 and sent brain dead to the hospital. The protests, which started in front of the hospital and continued in the city of Saqqez (Kordestan Province), where Mahsa was buried, were triggered by popular exasperation over the morality patrols, misleading statements of the authorities regarding the cause of Mahsa’s death and the resulting impunity for the violence used against detainees, as well as the mandatory veil in general. This protest, initially led by young girls and women who burned their veils and youth in general who chanted the slogan “Women, Life, Freedom,” rapidly took on a clear anti-regime tone, with protesters calling for an end to the Islamic Republic. The scope and duration of the protest was unprecedented. State efforts to withdraw the morality police from the streets and preventative arrests of journalists and political and civil society activists did not stop the protests. By the end of December 2022, protests had taken place in about 164 cities and towns, including localities that had never witnessed protests. Close to 150 universities, high schools, businesses, and groups including oil workers, merchants of the Tehran bazaar (among others), teachers, lawyers (at least 49 of whom had been arrested as of February 1st, 2023), artists, athletes, and even doctors joined these protests in various forms. Despite the violent crackdown and mass arrests, intense protests continued for weeks, at least through November 2022, with reports of sporadic activity continuing through the beginning of 2023. 

The State’s crackdown was swift and accompanied by intermittent landline and cellular internet network shutdowns, as well as threats against and arrests of victims’ family members, factors which posed a serious challenge to monitoring protests and documenting casualties. The security forces used illegal, excessive, and lethal force with handguns, shotguns, and military assault rifles against protesters. They often targeted protesters’ heads and chests, shot them at close range, and in the back. Security forces have targeted faces with pellets, causing hundreds of protesters to lose their eyesight, and according to some reports women’s genitalia. The bloodiest crackdown took place on September 30th in Zahedan, Baluchestan Province, where a protest began at the end of the Friday sermon. The death toll is reported to be above 90 for that day. Many injured protesters, fearing arrest, did not go to hospitals where security forces have reportedly arrested injured protesters before and after they were treated. 

By February 1, 2023, the Human Rights Activists News Agency reported the number of recorded protests to be 1,262. The death toll, including protesters and passersby, stood at 527, of whom 71 were children. The number of arrests (including of wounded protesters) was estimated at 19,603, of whom 766 had already been tried and convicted. More than 100 protesters were at risk of capital punishment, and four had been executed in December 2022 and January 2023 without minimum standards of due process. Authorities also claimed 70 casualties among state forces, though there are consistent reports from families of killed protesters indicating authorities have pressured them to falsely register their loved ones as such. Protesters, human rights groups, and the media have reported cases of beatings, torture (including to coerce confessions), and sexual assaults. Detainees have no access to lawyers during interrogations and their confessions are used in courts as evidence. 

Public support and international solidarity with protesters have also been unprecedented (the use of the hashtag #MahsaAmini in Farsi and English broke world records) and on November 24, 2022, the UN Human Rights Council adopted a resolution calling for the creation of a fact finding mission to “Thoroughly and independently investigate alleged human rights violations in the Islamic Republic of Iran related to the protests that began on 16 September 2022, especially with respect to women and children.” 

Arrest and detention 

Mr. Shekari was arrested by security and law enforcement officers along with one of his friends on September 25, 2022 in Najari alley near Sattar Khan Street in Tehran. 

His cellmate quoted Mr. Shekari about his arrest: "He was coming back from work at the end of September (September 25), his friend Ali told him, let's go out. Then they go together to his friend Ali's house, Ali goes and gets two knives, he says let's put them in our pockets, the streets are crowded and dangerous. They go by motorbike from Enghelab St. to west Tehran and enter Sattar Khan St. The street was crowded and there was a lot of traffic! They parked the motorcycle on the side of the street, they wanted to cross the street, a barricade had been erected in the middle of Sattar Khan street, Mohsen reaches the barricade, realizes that Ali is not next to him, he turns around and sees Ali in the middle of the street, raising his hand and waving (showing support for the people); at that moment, some plainclothes officers grabbed Ali and started beating him, Mohsen took out the knife and goes forward and makes a line on his left arm. At that same moment, the plainclothesmen left Ali, grabbed Mohsen, beat him, and then he was arrested." One of Mr. Shekari's cellmates told the Boroumand Center that he was beaten after his arrest (Cellmate’s report to the Boroumand Center – May 30, 2023). 

Mr. Shekari called his family on the night of his arrest and informed them that he had been arrested and taken to Evin prison. 

According to the available information, after his arrest, Mr. Shekari was transferred to Evin Prison, Ward 209, of the Information Ministry Detention Center, and then he was sent to Ward 241, Hall 2. He spent the last days of his detention in Evin prison in Ward 350, Rooms 6 and 7. According to one of his cellmates: "At first, he did not talk much with others. He was without hope. After a few days, he began to converse little by little about the details of his case and the difficult conditions of his life”(Evin Ward 142 cellmate - March 20, 2023). No one visited him in Evin prison. 

Mr. Shekari was transferred to Ward 10 of Gohardasht Prison (Rajai Shahr) in Karaj on November 30. His father visited him in Gohardasht prison on Tuesday, December 6, 2022, and brought him clothes. He talked to his son via phone with a glass window separating them. Mr. Shekari said then that his case was still in legal limbo. "He called his mother on Wednesday [December 7] and said, ‘Mom, come here, my sentence has been confirmed.’ He understood on Wednesday” (Boroumand Center interview with an informed source – March 23, 2023). Mr. Shekhari's mother and aunt visited him that Wednesday. 

Mr. Shekari was in prison for 74 days and his interrogation and investigation process was carried out in haste. He did not have access to an attorney of his choosing. According to his cellmate, he had an unsuitable court-appointed lawyer and his case was sent to trial quickly (Evin Ward 142 cellmate - March 20, 2023). 

Trial 

Branch 28 of the Islamic Revolutionary Court of Tehran Province, presided over by Judge Mohammad Reza Amoozad, adjudicated Mr. Shekari’s case with a judge and a consultant on November 1 and 20, 2022. He had a court-appointed lawyer. According to one of his cellmates, he was taken to court twice, once when he was in Ward 241 and another time when he was in Ward 350 of Evin Prison (Evin Ward 142 Cellmate - March 20, 2023). 

Charges 

Tehran's Islamic Revolutionary Court charged Mr. Shekari with "moharebeh (war against God) by drawing a weapon with the intent to kill, create terror and deprive citizens of their freedom and security, resulting in an insecure environment, and the disruption of societal order and security" (Tasnim News Agency - November 20, 2022). 

According to information from security and intelligence sources, Mr. Shekari "with one of his friends, with the aim of participating in the riots, traveled from one geographical point of Tehran to another point where there were riots underway, and at 8:00PM, he blocked a street under the Sattar Khan Bridge and, by congesting and cutting off the path, caused severe traffic(Mizan, Sharq and Tasnim news agencies). 

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 evidence against Mr. Shekari was stated to have been "the defendant's explicit confessions regarding his actions, his friend's confessions: (we had gone there to kill agents), possession of a cold weapon, the plaintiff’s testimony, witness statements." A video of Mr. Shekari's confession was shown on Iran's Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting, in which he says that he hit an officer with a knife, and a knife is also visible in his hand. However, it was often said in government media and even in court that he had a "dagger" in his hand. In the confession that Mr. Shekari made and was released by Information officers, he displayed a knife and said that it was with that knife. 

A Basij member and plaintiff against Mr. Shekari said in court, "There were a large number of cars, 100 to 150, stuck in the traffic, and two large men who were at the Behboudi intersection and tried to block the street, one of them had a dagger in his hand, and he threatened people to collaborate and chant slogans. I got off my motorcycle and went up to the defendant. I said to him, what are you doing? He attacked me intending to hit me, he struck at me with the dagger once but he missed, the accused then hit me a second time, in my shoulder." According to another witness, people in the area were "very scared" of the defendant, who had a dagger in his hand and did not allow anyone to pass by (Mizan News Service, December 8, 2022). 

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. 

Defense 

According to the available information, Mr. Shekari's confession was obtained under duress, and according to him, the accusations were not true, but he made a confession after being persuaded by the court-appointed defense attorney and Intelligence interrogators who promised him a reduced sentence (Boroumand Center interview with an informed source – March 23, 2023). Lawyers and some religious authorities inside Iran do not consider the charge of moharebeh (war against God) to have been justified for the act attributed to Mr. Shekari. 

Mr. Shekari told one of his cellmates: "I saw [in court] that they were talking nonsense, they were saying I had done things that I hadn't done. I got up and walked out." The lawyer followed him out and told him, just write, “I made a mistake, I’m sorry!" The court-appointed attorney persuaded Mr. Shekari to make a confession, saying that he could do something for him using his family situation, past history, and medical records. But Mr. Shekari decided to reject the "fake confessions" in court and replace two lawyers who had been introduced by one of his cellmates (Evin Ward 142 Cellmate - March 20, 2023). 

Although he had asked for a lawyer of his own choosing, Mr. Shekari’s court-appointed lawyer did not pay any heed to his request and did not take any action in this regard. An informed source also said: "He told the family that Mohsen did not have the right to choose a lawyer. He said the case is heavy, don’t go following up on it. You are not allowed to get a lawyer for him. He is only allowed to have a court-appointed attorney. They said the kid did something he didn’t, after they said his case is weighty, and you can't pursue it." The court-appointed attorney rarely contacted his family, did not answer them and asked them not to publicize their son's arrest because authorities were harassing him in prison (Boroumand Center interview with an informed source – March 23, 2023). 

Ayatollah Mohammad Soroush Mahalati, a seminary professor, wrote: "In moharebeh, the ruler defends ‘public security’ from the person with a weapon in his hand, but here, on the contrary, he is not acting against the people, but he is in conflict with the ruler, and the ruler, with his punishments, defends his own ‘security.’ In Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh), these are considered different crimes and their punishments are different” (Insaf News). 

In an interview, Mr. Ali Mojtahedzadeh, a lawyer, called the charge of moharebeh against Mohsen Shekhari unfair: "The issue of moharebeh was not instantiated in Mohsen Shekari's case" and "the highest charge that could be considered against Shekari was intentional assault" (Etemad newspaper). 

Nemat Ahmadi, a jurist, wrote about moharebeh in regard to the case of Mohsen Shekari and his execution: “Moharebeh is drawing a weapon with the intention of harming or threatening (people’s) life, property or honor, or creating fear - Article 279 of the Penal Code emphasizes that officers are considered differently than ordinary people. Article 157 states that if officers’ operations result in murder, injury or assault on honor or property, defense is permissible. Conflict with officers is not moharabeh, let the jurists comment. All current rulings are based on Article 279. The clarification to Article 279 emphasizes the difference between officers and ordinary people. The legislator has consciously legislated the difference between ordinary people and officers in Article 279 and Article 157 of the Islamic Penal Code. During the protests, the courts cannot consider the protesters as enemies. The nature of protest is confrontation between the protesting people and the officer” (Insaf News). 

A cellmate: “It was very  strange that Mohsen went to court first, as if they had hand-picked the best!”

Mr. Shekari's cellmate’s comments about the court process and his trial: "He thought that the overall process of the case was positive. The person who was stabbed was not seriously injured and a dieh payment of 5 or 7 million tomans was imposed. The injury was minor and Mohsen was only defending his friend. They gave him promises in court." The cellmate also said in this regard: "The second session, when he returned to court, he had good energy, etc. I went to talk to him, ask him how he was, he said that they told him he would not be executed, if things went really badly, he’d get a sentence of several years, maybe five or six years" (Cellmate’s report to the Boroumand Center – May 30, 2023). 

Another cellmate of Mr. Shekari ‘s said: "Mohsen lived with me for about 65 days. He was not the kind of person who would just go out and stab someone like that, he was not a bad person who would want to do something like that. He was defending himself and his friend” (Cellmate’s report to the Boroumand Center – May 30, 2023). Mr. Shekari told his cellmate about the events of the day of his arrest. On the day of the incident, he had gone to Sattar Khan Street with one of his friends for a walk: "The argument was that, for example, the officer had gone to hit Alireza [Ali], Mohsen, in support of Alireza, attacked and hit the officer and then hit the officer’s shoulder or lower in the waist with a knife. Anyway, the guy received a number of stitches, and Mohsen himself gave me all this information, which means I have no source other than Mohsen” (Evin Ward 142 Cellmate- March 20, 2023). 

According to Mr. Shekari's cellmates, he did not think that he would be executed until the last minute: "Even in prison, he said to himself that he was studying there, he always said that he wanted to study management. He said that he would go to prison and study management. He did not think about execution. Mohsen was not in a good mental state. But he always tried to make life better for himself" (Cellmate’s report to the Boroumand Center – May 30, 2023). 

According to Mr. Shekari's uncle: "No one knew anything about Mohsen's court proceedings, the family was never allowed to attend the trial, and the authorities did not allow his chosen attorney to represent him and appear in court. The non-transparent and illegal process in the Revolutionary Courts of issuing heavy prison sentences and executions for the opponents of the Islamic Republic has a long precedent” (Radio Zamaneh - Mr. Shekari's uncle). 

Mr. Shekari's court-appointed attorney filed an appeal, but the request was rejected by the Supreme Court. 

Judgment 

Branch 28 of the Islamic Revolutionary Court of Tehran Province sentenced Mr. Mohsen Shekari to death on November 20, 2022. This sentence was upheld by the Supreme Court and they rejected Mr. Shekari's appeal. In rejecting the appeal of Mr. Shekari's lawyer, the Supreme Court said: "The lawyer’s appeal against the conviction of Mohsen Shekari is not relevant or justified in regard to the issued sentence because the perpetrator's actions, namely, his presence in a crowd of rioters, his attempt to block the street, threatening people with a weapon, engaging with security forces and injuring them with a weapon, are examples (i.e. Shahr al-Islah Lakhafa al-Nas) of moharebeh, and the judgment issued in this regard is in accordance with the Shari'a and legal standards. Therefore, it is approved and accepted based on paragraph A of Article 469 of the Criminal Procedure Code." 

Mr. Shekari was executed at dawn on Thursday, December 8, 2022, in Gohardasht Prison (Rajai Shahr). 

Mr. Shekhari's family was not informed of his execution. "They didn't inform the family, they didn't even call, the 8:30 AM TV news showed that the rioter of Sattar Khan Street was executed. The family went to Rajai Shahr prison (Gohordasht) to collect the body, but his body was not there. They went to Behesht’e Zahra, and they took over the body on Friday morning. They wanted to take him and bury him as a missing person. A letter had come from Rajai Shahr (Gohardasht) that said take him and bury him as a missing person. The family also said that if they didn’t hand over the body, they would make a fuss about not handing over the body to the family. By noon, they had quickly buried the body, with security officers watching over them, and gone home. They didn’t let them stay by the grave." They did not give Mr. Shekhari's death certificate to the family. "The family was not given a green card to cancel his birth certificate. They didn't even return his clothes and belongings to the family" (Boroumand Center interview with an informed source – March 23, 2023). 

Mr. Shekari's body was buried by his family in Behesht’e Zahra cemetery, plot 92, row 13, number 35, next to his grandmother. 

Security officers pressured Mr. Shekari's family, and did not allow them to have a ceremony. "At the time of Mohsen's burial, officers were standing watch over the family. They didn't let anyone go there even for his 40th day ceremony, they beat anyone they saw there with a nightstick. They did not allow the 40th day ceremony, nor the 7th. On the 7th day, the family was only allowed to stand there for ten minutes. In the afternoon, the agents came in and grabbed everyone,  they didn't even allow the 40th day ceremony to be held, either. They didn’t let anyone go to Mohsen's grave." The pressure on the family has not subsided and officers do not allow the family to mourn over their child's grave (Boroumand Center interview with an informed source – March 23, 2023). 

After Mr. Shekari’s execution, there were many protests against his sentence and execution on social media, and even by Western governments. This was to such an extent that a judiciary spokesperson was forced to respond to the protests: "I will not go into the examples that are raised by this question. Sometimes there may be some academic disagreements, and in this situation, and during a time of chaos, the law has foreseen what is necessary." He further stated: "Continuation of riots and depriving people of public security with continuing contrived foreign media scenarios will lead to the deviation of public opinion, and this issue of questioning the law and legal institutions and discrediting the principle of law will only embolden the rioters” (Mizan, December 10, 2022). 

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