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

Sarina Esma'ilzadeh

About

Age: 16
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Presumed Muslim (Shi'a)
Civil Status: Single

Case

Date of Killing: September 23, 2022
Gravesite location is known: Yes
Location of Killing: Karaj County, Mehrshahr, Karaj, Alborz Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Arbitrary Execution » Blunt Force Weapon
Age at time of alleged offense: 16

About this Case

Sarina: "The Iranian teenager today is not the same as twenty years ago; they are aware of what’s happening in the world and ask themselves: What do I lack compared to an American teenager that our concerns should be so different?"

Information regarding the arbitrary execution of Sarina Esma'ilzadeh, the daughter of Aref and Masumeh Hamidipur, was obtained from Radio Farda's website on October 13, 2022, and Radio Zamaneh's website on November 1, 2022. Additional information was gathered from IRNA (October 7, 2022), Tasnim (October 9, 2022), Mashregh (October 12, 2022), and Child Rights Watch (November 21, 2022).

Sarina Esma'ilzadeh was born on July 2, 2006, in Mehrshahr, Karaj. She was a gifted student who attended the Farzanegan School for Academically Talented Girls in Karaj. (Radio Farda, October 13, 2022; Child Rights Watch, November 21, 2022).

Her father passed away in 2013. Since then, she lived with her older brother, Sina, and their mother, who had been suffering from a brain tumor for a long time, in the Haft Tir neighborhood of Karaj. (Radio Farda, October 13, 2022; Radio Zamaneh, November 1, 2022).

Like many of her peers, Sarina’s life was deeply intertwined with social media, the internet, and the pursuit of freedom. She launched YouTube and Telegram channels through which she shared videos of family and friends, as well as her personal and social concerns, including compulsory hijab, economic hardship, and civil liberties. (Radio Zamaneh, November 1, 2022).

In a YouTube video published on May 22, 2022, Sarina stated: "Iranian teenagers today are not the same as they were twenty years ago. They are aware of what’s happening in the world and ask themselves: What do I lack compared to an American teenager that our concerns should be so drastically different?" (Radio Zamaneh, November 1, 2022).

Speaking out against the repression and difficult living conditions in Iran, she said, "What can people expect from their own country? Comfort, comfort, comfort... nothing else. Our economy is a mess, our culture is a mess, and our identity is a mess. We face all kinds of restrictions, especially women, like compulsory hijab. Many bans don't apply to boys. For example, women can't even go to a stadium. It’s such a basic issue that we’ve heard about it so often, it’s exhausting for all of us...” (Radio Zamaneh, November 1, 2022).

In addition to her social and cultural engagement, Sarina wrote poetry. She recited and shared some of her poems on her Telegram channel, often accompanied by music, photos of herself, or images of her handwritten texts. Her channel had a large following. (Radio Zamaneh, November 1, 2022).

Following the death of Mahsa (Jina) Amini in the custody of the morality police, Sarina wrote a protest poem condemning the killing and violence against women and shared it on her Telegram channel on September 20, 2022. She participated in the protests and criticized her family for being afraid to join the demonstrations.

In addition to the poem, on September 10, 2022, Sarina posted a photo showing heavily armed police officers clad in riot gear confronting protesters. Across the image, she wrote in English: "The Islamic Republic 'against' Iran."

"My homeland smells like exile..."

This was the last message she shared on her Telegram channel on September 21, 2022. (Radio Zamaneh, November 1, 2022).

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 news of her death triggered protests, which started with a widespread expression of outrage on social media and the gathering of a large crowd in front of the hospital,continued in the city of Saqqez (Kordestan Province), where Mahsa was buried. Popular exasperation over the morality patrols and the veil in general, aggravated by misleading statements of the authorities regarding the cause of Mahsa’s death and the impunity generally granted to state agents for the violence used against detainees led to months of nationwide protests. Initially led by young girls and women who burned their veils, and youth in general, protesters adopted the slogan “Women, Life, Freedom,” chanted during Amini’s burial. The protest 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. Security forces shot protesters outside and worshipers inside the Mosala prayer hall. 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 a minimum at 22,000 , 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 or offered them rewards 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.”

Ms. Sarina Esma'ilzadeh’s arbitrary execution 

According to available information, Sarina Esma'ilzadeh died on September 23, 2022, in Mehrshahr, Karaj, after sustaining severe, multiple blows to the head with batons during protests.

Despite her brother’s objections, Sarina joined the protests that day. According to an informed person, someone accompanying Sarina during the demonstration took her to the hospital after security forces violently beat her with batons. (Radio Zamaneh, November 1, 2022).

In the early hours of September 24, Sarina’s family was informed of her condition in a phone call from Qaem Hospital in Karaj. At around 2 a.m., her mother, two uncles, and grandmother went to the hospital and identified her. Due to brain death, her family consented to organ donation, including her corneas and kidneys. (Radio Zamaneh, November 1, 2022).

Her death certificate cited the cause of death as “shock due to trauma,” “multiple blows (multiple fractures, hemorrhage, etc.),” and “blunt force trauma (fall from height).” (Death Certificate, September 24, 2022).

Around 10 a.m. that morning, the family went to the mortuary at Behesht-e Sakineh Cemetery in Karaj, where they were handed Sarina’s body, which had already been washed and wrapped in a shroud, for burial. Security officials did not allow the family to see her. Moments before the burial, Sarina’s mother briefly pulled back the shroud to see her daughter’s face. Sarina was buried in a heavily secured atmosphere in the second tier of her father’s grave. (Radio Farda, October 13, 2022).

Eyewitnesses reported a heavy presence of female security officers at Sarina’s grandmother's home before the burial. They also saw Sarina’s mother, who was visibly shocked and distressed, repeatedly say, without being asked, "My daughter fell from the rooftop." (Radio Farda, October 13, 2022).

Sarina’s seventh-day memorial ceremony was held under pressure from security forces and was attended only by her family and a few relatives. Ahead of the fortieth-day memorial, Sarina’s classmates held a tribute at school by replacing the photo of Iran’s Supreme Leader in their classroom with her portrait. On the classroom board, they wrote, "Bring me home." This phrase had become symbolic of Sarina, featured in the bio section of her Instagram page. (Radio Zamaneh, November 1, 2022) 

According to available information, Sarina Esma'ilzadeh died on September 23, 2022, in Mehrshahr, Karaj, after sustaining severe, multiple blows to the head with batons during protests.

Despite her brother’s objections, Sarina joined the protests that day. According to an informed person, someone accompanying Sarina during the demonstration took her to the hospital after security forces violently beat her with batons. (Radio Zamaneh, November 1, 2022).

In the early hours of September 24, Sarina’s family was informed of her condition in a phone call from Qaem Hospital in Karaj. At around 2 a.m., her mother, two uncles, and grandmother went to the hospital and identified her. Due to brain death, her family consented to organ donation, including her corneas and kidneys. (Radio Zamaneh, November 1, 2022).

Her death certificate cited the cause of death as “shock due to trauma,” “multiple blows (multiple fractures, hemorrhage, etc.),” and “blunt force trauma (fall from height).” (Death Certificate, September 24, 2022).

Around 10 a.m. that morning, the family went to the mortuary at Behesht-e Sakineh Cemetery in Karaj, where they were handed Sarina’s body, which had already been washed and wrapped in a shroud, for burial. Security officials did not allow the family to see her. Moments before the burial, Sarina’s mother briefly pulled back the shroud to see her daughter’s face. Sarina was buried in a heavily secured atmosphere in the second tier of her father’s grave. (Radio Farda, October 13, 2022).

Eyewitnesses reported a heavy presence of female security officers at Sarina’s grandmother's home before the burial. They also saw Sarina’s mother, who was visibly shocked and distressed, repeatedly say, without being asked, "My daughter fell from the rooftop." (Radio Farda, October 13, 2022).

Sarina’s seventh-day memorial ceremony was held under pressure from security forces and was attended only by her family and a few relatives. Ahead of the fortieth-day memorial, Sarina’s classmates held a tribute at school by replacing the photo of Iran’s Supreme Leader in their classroom with her portrait. On the classroom board, they wrote, "Bring me home." This phrase had become symbolic of Sarina, featured in the bio section of her Instagram page. (Radio Zamaneh, November 1, 2022) 

Officials’ Reaction 

Then Chief Justice of Alborz Province Hossein Fazeli Herikandi claimed that Sarina Esma'ilzadeh’s death was a “suicide caused by a fall from a great height.” He stated: "Shortly after midnight on September 24, 2022—around 12:20 a.m.—the on-call prosecutor at Karaj District 1 Court received a report of a fall from height via a phone call from Police Station No. 14 (Resalat Station). Preliminary investigations revealed that the deceased had been staying with her mother at her grandmother’s home that evening. She accessed the fifth-floor rooftop via the staircase, entered the adjacent building's rooftop, and jumped to her death. Initial assessments point to suicide." He also alleged that Sarina had a history of "a failed suicide attempt by overdosing on pills." (IRNA, October 7, 2022).

Citing the findings of the Forensic Medicine Organization, the Alborz judiciary stated that the cause of death was "shock due to trauma resulting from multiple injuries, fractures, and hemorrhaging caused by a fall from a great height." (IRNA, October 7, 2022).

Security authorities coerced Sarina’s mother, Masoumeh Hamidipour, into confirming the suicide narrative by threatening that she would never see her son, Sina, again if she failed to comply. She was made to repeat the official version of her daughter’s death on two separate occasions: first on October 8, 2022, in front of cameras affiliated with Tasnim News Agency (linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps), and again on October 11, 2022, during the 8:30 p.m. nightly news program aired on IRIB Channel Two. In the first video, Sarina’s mother is shown sitting in an interrogation room of the Criminal Investigation Department. Security forces conditioned the release of Sarina’s body on the family publicly acknowledging that she had “fallen from a rooftop” (Radio Farda, October 13, 2022).

The 8:30 p.m. news segment featured a document that listed Sarina’s cause of death as “fall from height and skull disintegration.” The report also identified the location of the incident as her mother’s residence. However, Tasnim’s report listed the location as her grandmother’s home in the Azimieh neighborhood of Karaj. Despite the judiciary’s assertion that emergency services arrived at the scene shortly after midnight following a neighbor’s call, the segment showed a photo of a young girl’s lifeless body on the ground in daylight. (Radio Farda, October 13, 2022)

The Chief Justice of Alborz stated that the area in which the incident occurred was "calm and unaffected by unrest" and dismissed independent reports regarding the deceased as "false narratives promoted by hostile media outlets." He further claimed that "the deceased’s family—her mother, brother, and uncle—had appeared at Branch 13 of the Karaj District 1 Court to express distress over the spread of false information and requested the issuance of an official denial." (IRNA, October 7, 2022).

Sarina’s legal guardian, her paternal uncle, and her maternal uncle were repeatedly summoned to Branch 13 of the Karaj District 1 Court and the Karaj Criminal Investigation Department. There, they were pressured and coerced into making forced confessions. Security forces demanded that they file complaints against individuals who challenged the suicide narrative and promoted alternative accounts of Sarina’s death.

The authorities refused to return Sarina’s mobile phone to the family. Her Instagram account was deleted without explanation, and several of her posts on the messaging app Telegram were either deleted or edited to include exaggerated and fabricated statements implying suicidal ideation (Radio Farda, October 13, 2022). (Radio Farda, October 13, 2022).

Security forces pressured the family to hold the third- and seventh-day memorial ceremonies at Sarina’s gravesite with only close family members present. (Radio Zamaneh, November 1, 2022). 

Familys’ Reaction

The Esma'ilzadeh family has not released any statements or made public comments about Sarina’s death.

Impacts on Family

According to available information, Sarina’s mother was deeply traumatized by her daughter’s death, remaining in a state of shock and disbelief. (Radio Zamaneh, November 1, 2022).

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 * The poem says:
"She took another step.
and with it, she crushed her honor beneath her feet.
She ran faster along the path, away from humanity.
A bullet struck her in the face with rage. 
I'm talking about the girl—
The one whose body is covered in scars.
But will those wounds ever heal? 
It drips.
It drips bitterly—
a red liquid scented like roses.
The sky over the city turns crimson.
The girl closed her eyes.
She was broken inside and out.
her body and her soul.
Her entire being was shattered. 
What was she telling herself?
What shade did her mind take on?
to fire the bullet so mercilessly? 
Would she continue living?
How many more bullets will she fire? 
But if there is such a thing as reincarnation—
—pity the body
that must host such a putrid soul?
It reeks from within. 
Who would help cleanse
such filth?
So vast?
So vile?"

Correct/ Complete This Entry