Abdorrahman Boroumand Center

for Human Rights in Iran

https://www.iranrights.org
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One Person’s Story

Fo'ad Qadimi

About

Age: 39
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Presumed Muslim
Civil Status: Married

Case

Date of Killing: September 21, 2022
Gravesite location is known: Yes
Location of Killing: Divandareh, Kordestan Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Arbitrary Execution » Arbitrary shooting » Weapon loaded with metal pellets » targeting vital organs

About this Case

He loved soccer and he was a loyal fan of Esteqlal Soccer Team.  He hoped his son who was in the Tehran Railway Football Club would move up to Esteqlal team and that he would play for the National Iranian Soccer Team.

Information regarding the arbitrary execution of Mr. Fo’ad Qadimi, son of Abdullah and Hadiqeh, was obtained from an interview with two close friends of his family (September 21, 2025 and September 24, 2024); and with a doctor who works at Kowsar Hopital in Sanandaj (February 18, 2023).  Additional information was collected from websites of Islamic Republic of Iran News Agency – IRNA (September 20 & 22, 2022), Radio and Television News Agency (September 22, 2022), Kurdistan Human Rights Network (March 30, 2024), KURDPA Human Rights Organization (March 4, 2023), Hamshahri Online (September 23, 2022), Hengaw Human Rights Organization (September 21, 2022), Iran Wire (September 21, 2022), Human Rights Monitor (October 5, 2022).

Mr. Qadimi was born on February 20, 1984, in the village of Qale Reyhaneh, near Divandarreh in Kurdistan Province.  His family are Kurdish and they are Sunni.  He was married and he had two children.  Due to financial hardship, he was not able to stay in school past fifth grade.  He knew how to sew, and he had a dry cleaners shop in Divandarreh since he was 17.  According to two close friends of the family, he was a “calm person with a sense of humor.  He was generous, responsible, and he loved his family.  He liked to travel, and he loved nature and hiking.”  Mr. Qadimi was very fond of soccer, and he was an avid fan of Esteqlal Soccer Team.  He hoped his son who played for the Tehran Railway Football Club, would move up to Esteqlal Team and that he would play for the National Iranian Soccer Team someday. (Boroumand Center Interview with two close friends of his family (September 20 & 24, 2024).

According to two knowledgeable sources, Mr. Qadimi was quite distressed by the news of Ms. Mahsa (Jina) Amini being killed, and he went to her funeral in Saqqez.  As popular protest demonstrations against the killing of Ms. Mahsa Amini on September 16, 2022, spread across Iranian cities, including Divandarreh, he participated in the anti-government demonstrations in this city on September 21, 2022 (Center Interview, September 20 & 24, 2024).

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.

Since the start of the nationwide protests, and particularly after reports in late September 2022 that a police commander in Rask had raped a 15-year-old Baloch girl, Sistan and Baluchestan Province became the scene of deadly demonstrations. Unlike in other provinces, security forces in Balochistan relied exclusively on live ammunition.

On September 30, 2022 (Zahedan’s Bloody Friday), worshippers at Makki Mosque demanded a transparent investigation into the sexual assault and accountability from officials. A small group of them marched toward Police Station No. 16 while chanting protest slogans, where they were met with direct gunfire from security forces and plainclothes agents. Armed forces even fired into the mosque itself. At least 97 people were killed in Zahedan that day. In the aftermath, cities across Balochistan, including Khash, Saravan, and Rask, witnessed further protest gatherings.

On November 4, 2022 (Khash’s Bloody Friday), security forces again responded with extreme violence. After Friday prayers, they opened fire with live ammunition on protesters and even bystanders. At least 18 people, including two children, were killed and many others were wounded.

The Zahedan protests continued every Friday for months. Under pressure, the Armed Forces Judiciary eventually indicted 11 members of the security forces on charges of “fatal and injurious shootings” and 15 others on charges of “abuse of authority and unlawful use of firearms.” The closed-door proceedings ended, after two years, with only a handful of low-ranking officers sentenced to ten years in prison. Families of the victims were offered blood money. None of the commanders or senior officials responsible for the massacre were prosecuted.

 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.”

Mr. Qadimi’s Arbitrary Execution

On Monday, September 21, 2022, Mr. Fo’ad Qadimi was wounded by a military bullet fired from a guard tower on the IRGC base nearby.  He was taken to Kowsar Hospital in Sanandaj, where he passed away (Center Interview, September 20 & 24, 2024; IRNA, September 22, 2022; Hengaw, September 21, 2022; KURDPA, March 4, 2023).

In the morning of Monday, September 19, 2022, as protest demonstrations against the government were starting in Khomeini Square in Divandarreh, Mr. Qadimi left his shop which is in that area, and he joined the demonstrators.  Sometime later, he was hurt when security forces fired teargas.  Mr. Qadimi called his wife and told her about this.  She told him to come back home, but he went to the store, changed his clothes and rejoined the demonstrators (KURDPA, March 4, 2023).

According to two knowledgeable sources, Mr. Qadimi had rejoined the demonstrations in front of the IRGC Divandarreh Base, on Khomeini Blvd.  At about 11:45 am, he was shot on his right side by an SVD (Dushka) weapon which was fired from a guard tower on the IRGC base.  The bullet entered his torso on the right side, exited his left side and hit his left hand (Center Interview, September 20 & 24, 2024; KURDPA, March 4, 2023).

The demonstrators took Mr. Qadimi to the hair salon where his wife worked, but she was not there.  One of her coworkers bound the wound with a scarf.  At this point, three masked persons forcibly took Mr. Qadimi out of the shop and put him on the sidewalk, opposite the registry office and Khomeini Hospital.  A passerby who knew Mr. Qadimi, took him to Khomeini Hospital in Divandarreh.  He was still conscious (Center Interview, September 20 & 24, 2024).  According to available information, Mr. Qadimi arrived at the hospital several hours after being shot, having lost a lot of blood, at about 1 pm (KURDPA, March 4, 2023).

At Divandarreh Hospital, Mr. Qadimi underwent surgery, but he did not get better.  His father, who is a retired IRGC guardsman, went to the governor of Divandarreh and said, “Since you ordered the shooting, please order my son to be taken to Sanandaj or to Tehran.” (Center Interview, September 20 & 24, 2024; KURDPA, March 4, 2023)

At this point, Mr. Qadimi was taken by ambulance to the football club in Divandarreh, where a helicopter picked him up and took him to Kawsar Hospital in Sanandaj.  According to two knowledgeable sources, he wasn’t seen to properly at Kawsar Hospital.  According to available information security forces “threw” Mr. Qadimi on the hospital bed, “with no consideration”, paying no attention to the pleas of his family.  Initially they had told the family he would be transferred to the Critical Care Unit, but they did not do this (Center Interview, September 20 & 24, 2024; KURDPA, March 4, 2023).

According to available information, on the way to Kawsar Hospital, Mr. Qadimi’s family had asked an acquaintance to take care of the hospital formalities.  This person had taken some pictures of Mr. Qadimi to attach to his file.  In the elevator he was confronted with security agents.  They deleted the pictures he had taken, and they even wiped clean his cell phone, so that a file could not be organized.  When the family arrived at the hospital, they realized a file had not been made.  That was when CT scanning and MRIs were hastily done (KURDPA, March 4, 2023).

According to a knowledgeable person, when Mr. Qadimi was transferred to Kawsar Hospital, the whole facility was under tight security.  The doctors and nurses were so afraid of the security agents that they were not paying much attention to his well-being.  The agents were wearing white coats, and it was difficult to tell the difference between them and the hospital staff.  Mr. Qadimi’s family were under surveillance (Center Interview, September 20, 2024).

One of the doctors at Kawsar Hospital in Sanandaj, who had seen Mr. Qadimi, said in an interview with Boroumand Center, “I saw him in the ICU.  As soon as I went into the ICU, it was as if I had entered a military installation.  There were plain clothes men everywhere and it was quite chaotic.  The bullet had hit him in his abdomen and his back.  One of Mr. Qadimi’s kidneys had been taken out at Divandarreh Hospital.  He had been hit by a military bullet.  At Kawsar Hospital, he was taken to the operating room three times, and they took out several feet of his intestine, but he eventually died.” (Boroumand Center Interview, February 18, 2023)

After much insistence and perseverance, the family of Mr. Qadimi were able to see him after his operation, and to talk to him.  At that time, he asked his brother to take care of his children (Center Interview, September 20, 2024).  

Mr. Qadimi passed away at 4 am on September 21, 2022.  His body was released to his family at 1 am on Thursday, September 22, 2022.  This was done after his father was forced to appear in a videotaped interview, stating that “hostile and anti-revolutionary forces” had killed him.  He was threatened that if he did not agree to do this interview, his other children would be in danger.  At 3 am that same morning, Mr. Qadimi was laid to rest in the old section of Behesht e Mohammadi Cemetery in Divandarreh, although his family wanted him interred in the new section of the cemetery.  The funeral was attended by the family, was overseen by security forces, and was carried out in “complete silence”.  The forced interview with Mr. Qadimi’s father was aired on the Kurdistan provincial network, and as a result, some of the people of Divandarreh did not attend the funeral in protest to his statements (Boroumand Center Interview, September 20 & 24, 2024; KURDPA, March 4, 2023).

On his Death Certificate, the cause of death of Mr. Qadimi is stated “unknown” (Iran Wire, September 21, 2022). 

Regulations on Controlling Protests

There have been numerous reports of deaths during critical demonstrations in Iran. In many of these cases, armed forces have used firearms to suppress protests. Iranian law provides certain regulations regarding the use of firearms by armed forces during demonstrations. In addition, there are legal provisions in Iran for the punishment of officials who act unlawfully by firing weapons, as well as rules for the compensation of victims. This brief overview will review these provisions.

The law allows armed forces officials to use firearms in certain situations, including to prevent riots and disorders. However, the law does not provide a clear definition of what constitutes riots and disorders. The Law on the Use of Firearms by the Armed Forces in Essential Cases, enacted in 1994, outlines specific conditions for the use of firearms. The main principle established by this law is that of necessity, meaning that armed forces officers may fire their weapons only in emergencies. Regarding protests, Articles 4 and 5 of this law allow officials to use their weapons under certain conditions to restore order and prevent riots. Article 4 states: "Police officers are authorized to use firearms to restore order and control illegal demonstrations, suppress riots and disorders that cannot be controlled without the use of weapons, upon the order of the commander of the operation, if the following conditions are met:".

a) Other measures must have been tried first and proven ineffective.

b) There must be a final warning to the rioters and insurgents before the use of firearms.

Note 1: The determination of riots under Article 4 is the responsibility of the heads of the provincial and district security councils. In their absence, it is the responsibility of their deputies. If the governor has no political deputy, this responsibility is assigned to a member of the Security Council. Note 2: In cases where armed forces are assigned the task of restoring order and security under this article, they are also subject to the provisions of this article regarding the use of firearms. This article clearly states that armed personnel must first use non-lethal methods and only resort to firearms if those methods fail to control the situation. They must also warn the demonstrators. The law does not specify what other non-lethal methods should be used, but logically they would include things like water cannons, tear gas, and batons. This article refers to unarmed protests. For armed demonstrations, Article 5 states: "Military and police officers are authorized to use firearms to restore order and security during illegal armed demonstrations, riots and armed rebellions. Such forces are required to act immediately upon orders of the commander to restore order, disarm and collect weapons and ammunition, and arrest those to be handed over to the judicial authorities".

In all of the above situations, officers must first have no alternative but to use their firearms. In addition, they must follow the following sequence, if possible: a) Warning shots; b) Shots aimed at the lower body; c) Shots aimed at the upper body. (Note 3, Article 3)

If an officer shoots following the above regulations and the victim is not found to be innocent, neither the officer nor the officer's organization will be held responsible (Article 12). However, if the officer violates these rules, shoots without following the rules, and someone is injured or killed as a result, the officer may face retaliation, compensation, or imprisonment, depending on the case. Article 41 of the Armed Forces Crimes Law states: "Any armed forces personnel who, while on duty or operations, intentionally shoot in violation of rules and regulations will be sentenced to imprisonment for three months to one year, and will also have to pay blood money. If the shooting results in death or injury, the officer will be sentenced to the above punishment, in addition to retaliation or payment of blood money, as the case may require. If the case falls under Articles 612 or 614 of the Islamic Penal Code (enacted on May 23, 1996), the officer will be subject to the penalties specified in those articles."

The law also addresses a situation where an officer follows all required protocols for the use of firearms, but the victim is still found innocent in court.

Note 1:If the shooting was conducted according to regulations, the officer will not be punished or required to pay blood money. If the victim is found innocent, the blood money will be paid from public funds. According to Article 13 of the Law on the Use of Firearms by the Armed Forces in Essential Cases: "If officials use firearms under this Law and an innocent person is killed or injured, as determined by the courts, or if there is financial damage, the responsibility for paying financial compensation and covering the damage falls on the relevant organization. The government is required to allocate a budget for this purpose each year and to provide it to the armed forces as necessary".

Officials’ Reaction

There were numerous security agents and plain clothes men at Khomeini Hospital in Divandarreh and Kawsar Hospital in Sanandaj.  When Mr. Qadimi passed away, they forced his father to give an interview against the anti-government forces in which he would hold them responsible for the killing of his son.  Otherwise, they threatened to arrest his other children and to not release the body to the family.  Although he was in a bad mental state, due to these threats, Mr. Qadimi’s father was forced to give an interview which was broadcast over the Kurdistan Province Network (Center Interview, September 20 & 24, 2024).

The governor of Kurdistan Province called the death of protesters such as Mr. Qadimi in 2022 “suspicious”, and he said this was “the Killing Project of Hostile Groups”.  The governor of Kurdistan said, “According to the Medical Examiner and a weapons expert, the person (Mr. Qadimi) who was shot in Divandarreh, was shot at close range by a military weapon and bullet.  He was shot from behind and it is clear that unfortunately he was killed by anti-social and anti-government elements.” (IRNA, September 20, 2022)

Security forces threatened Mr. Qadimi’s family and forced them to hold the funeral in complete silence and without any attendants (KURDPA, March 4, 2023).  Plain clothes men attended the memorial service at his home and at the mosque (Boroumand Center Interview, September 24, 2024).  

At the ceremonies for the third day after the passing of Mr. Qadimi, a group of government officials, including the governor and the chief of police, went to his home and immediately started filming.  Mr. Qadimi’s brother reacted and objected sharply and they were forced to delete the film (KURDPA, March 4, 2023).

According to a knowledgeable source, security forces did not allow Mr. Qadimi’s family to visit his grave for the ceremonies for the third day after his passing.  The family were also severely pressured to forgo visiting his grave for the ceremonies performed forty days after his passing.  Security forces contacted Mr. Qadimi’s father several times, a couple of days before the ceremonies for the fortieth day after his passing.  They threatened him and told him he did not have permission to perform these ceremonies at his grave site.  His father responded, “My children will not accept this, and they will go.”  The night before the fortieth day after the passing of Mr. Qadimi, at 11 pm, his father and family members of another person who had been killed the same day, during the demonstrations in Divendarreh, were summoned to the governor’s office in Divandarreh.  They were told that the two families could not be at the cemetery at the same time.  They were given certain time frames when they could go there.  Mr. Qadimi’s family was given 1-2 pm to be there.  His family announced on Instagram that they were going to visit his grave on the fortieth day after his passing.  On the day of this ceremony for Mr. Qadimi and the other killed demonstrator, many people showed up.  After the ceremony, they started chanting anti-government slogans and started a protest demonstration.  Security forces fired warning shots, shotguns, and teargas in dealing with the protesters (Center Interview, September 24, 2024).

Security forces threatened and pressured the family several times and in various ways, including telephoning them and placing a camera on Mr. Qadimi’s grave.  They wanted them to be quiet and to refrain from posting on social media.  They were also told not to go to the cemetery and not to have ceremonies there, such as commemorating his birthday.  Security forces changed Mr. Qadimi’s headstone four times.  It said “Martyr Fo’ad”.  They threatened the family not to use the term “martyr” (Center Interview, September 24, 2024).

On September 6, 2023, agents of the Intelligence Organization of the IRGC arrested Mr. Qadimi’s brother on his way to work and held him at Shahramfar Detention Center in Sanandaj for 20 days.  He was freed on bail (Center Interview, September 24, 2024).

On December 20, 2023, the Revolutionary Court of Divandarreh tried Mr. Qadimi’s brother with benefit of counsel.  In mid-March 2024, he was charged with “Membership in Komala”, “Teaching activities against the government”, and “Broadcasting false rumours in order to cause anxiety in the public”.  He was sentenced to 40 months imprisonment and payment of 8.5 million toumans cash fine (Kurdistan Human Rights Network, March 30, 2024).

Family’s Reaction

On September 22, 2022, after the killing of Mr. Qadimi, his father appeared in an interview with Central Kurdistan Province Radio and Television which was aired by the Kurdistan Province Television Network.  Two knowledgeable people close to the family Mr. Qadimi confirmed in an interview with Boroumand Center that this interview was done against the wishes of his father, in response to threats and pressure from security forces (Center Interview, September 20 & 24, 2024).

In this interview, Mr. Qadimi’s father said, “I implore people not to send their children to the streets and to be careful of their security.”  He said his 40 year-old son had been killed during the upheavals, without security forces being there.  He said he believed these incidents had been fomented by the enemies of Islam; the Islamic Revolution was established and would not be harmed by these kinds of incidents. (Radio and Television News Agency, September 22, 2022)

After the death of Mr. Qadimi, his brother started to work at his dry cleaners shop.  In protest to his killling, he wrote on the window, “We do not accept military clothes.” (Center Interview, September 24, 2024)

Mr. Qadimi’s family confronted the pressures and the threats brought by the security forces and the government agents many times.  During his memorial service and when agents came to their home, they would engage with them verbally and physically. Following his killing, Mr. Qadimi’s brother had an altercation with security agents and he hit one of them in the mouth with his fist.  This agent fired at his face with a shotgun and broke three of his teeth.  Mr. Qadimi’s mother confronted a security agent who was working undercover, posing as a city cleaner.  She told him, “I know you are a security agent, even though you say you work as a cleaner for the city.  If I see you here one more time, I will hit you over the head with all these stones so you can join the dead.” (KURDPA, March 4, 2023)

Impacts on Family

In an interview with Boroumand Center, a source who knows about the impact of the killing of Mr. Qadimi on his family said, “His death greatly affected his sister who has MS.  The illness has gotten worse and she has become housebound.  All the members of his family have been affected.  His brother has left his own job in order to work at Mr. Qadimi’s shop.  His son left professional soccer and did not return to the club.  His other child has no peace of mind and he has become agitated.” (Boroumand Center Interview, September 24, 2024)

“His death destroyed the family.  His sister, who had MS, is now housebound, and his children have no peace and no one to rely upon.”

According to available information, after the death of Mr. Qadimi, one of his brothers had a mental episode, and he could not speak from 6 am until 4 pm. (Human Rights Monitor, October 5, 2022).

On October 24, 2022, Mr. Qadimi’s son wrote an essay, and referring to the killing of his father, he wrote, “I always liked autumn, but his year I do not.  I lost my father at the beginning of this season.  This year I see the multi-colored leaves on the autumnal trees as red, the color of my father’s blood.  I wish that people will no longer fall like the leaves in autumn.”

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