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 Jelokhani

About

Age: 26
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Presumed Muslim
Civil Status: Single

Case

Date of Killing: January 14, 2017
Gravesite location is known: Yes
Location of Killing: Karaj County, Central Prison (Nedamatgah), Karaj, Alborz Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Execution » Hanging
Charges: Drug related offense
Age at time of alleged offense: 24

About this Case

Information regarding the execution of Mr. Mohsen Jelokhani, along with Omid Garshasbi who was on the same case file, and ten other people, including two women, was published by HRANA News Agency (January 14, 2017), Iranian Human Rights Organization (January 14, 2017), and Kurdpa Organization (January 15, 2017).  Additional information about this file was collected from Boroumand Center research (January 14, 2017) and an interview conducted by Boroumand Center with an informed source (February 23, 2021).

According to research and the interview conducted by Boroumand Center, Mr. Mohsen Jelokhani, also known as Mohsen Kalleh Panj Hezari, was born in1990 and he was single.  Mr. Jelokhani lived in Fardis, Karaj, and he had a clothing boutique.  Mr. Jelokhani’s family were low-income, and for years he provided housing and living expenses for five sisters and a brother by selling clothing in his store and in a sidewalk stall.

Two days before the sentences were carried out, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch organizations issued a joint statement, asking the Islamic Republic of Iran to immediately halt the execution of 12 male prisoners at Karaj Central Prison (penitentiary) on illegal drugs charges (Human Rights Watch, January 12, 2017).

Also, members of the Islamic Parliament of Iran had written a letter to the head of the judiciary and had asked him to halt the execution of about 5,000 prisoners who had received death sentences due to illegal drugs charges, until the plan to amend the laws having to do with drugs offenses could be reviewed (HRANA News Agency, January 14, 2017).

Arrest and detention

According to an interview conducted with Boroumand Center with an informed person, Mr. Mohsen Jelokhani was incarcerated in Karaj Central Prison for about two years (Boroumand Center Interview, February 23, 2021).

According to this informed person, Mr. Mohsen Jelokhani was not a producer nor a user of illegal drugs.  He did not even buy or sell illegal drugs.  The reason he was arrested was the friends and neighbors he hung out with.  When police raided the area to arrest a group of people, he was also arrested because he was there.

According to this informed source, Mr. Mohsen Jelokhani was a quiet person in prison.  Prison officials had told him that if he could memorize the Quran and teach it to the other prisoners, he would qualify for pardon.  He was active in the prison Husseiniyyeh.  He had memorized at least five sections of the Quran, and he had taught several prisoners reading and writing and he had taught them about the Quran.  Prison officials were pleased with him, and they said he had changed a lot, and he was calmer.  That was why they had put him in charge of the cultural activities of the section.  He tried very hard to qualify for pardon.

Trial

No information is available on Mr. Mohsen Jelokhani’s trial.

Charges

According to the informed source’s conversation with Boroumand Center, the charges brought against Mr. Mohsen Jelokhani was “possession of crystal meth” (Boroumand Center interview, Feb 23, 2021).

Under conditions where minimal safeguards are not provided in legal proceedings, and the accused are deprived of a fair trial, the veracity of charges brought against them are neither absolute nor certain. International human rights organizations refer to reports showing that in some cases, officials of the Islamic Republic of Iran have brought false charges such as smuggling illegal drugs, or committing public or sexual offences, against people who oppose them (such as political, civic, or trade union activists, ethnic and religious minorities) and have subsequently executed them along with regular offenders sentenced to death.  Working within a legal system that is out of step with international standards, thousands of people accused of illegal drug trafficking have been sentenced to execution.  Many of them have been hung according to the Law of 1989.  This law stipulates that drug smugglers who had a certain amount of illegal drugs on them (5 kilograms hashish or opium, more than 30 grams heroin, codeine, or methadone) will be automatically sentenced to death.  It is not clear how many people have been executed because of false accusations.

Evidence of guilt

The report of this execution does not contain information regarding the evidence provided against Mr. Mohsen Jelokhani.

Defense

No information is available on the defense of Mr. Mohsen Jelokhani.

Judgment

Mr. Mohsen Jelokhani was sentenced to death by hanging with the charge of possession of illegal drugs (crystal meth).

On January 8, 2017, at least 12 prisoners who were sentenced to death, including Mr. Mohsen Jelokhani, were transferred to solitary cells at the Central Karaj Penitentiary, prior to the execution of their sentences.  Their execution was delayed because of the death of Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, former president of Iran (Human Rights Watch, January 2, 2017; and HRANA News Agency, January 8, 2017).

According to an interview conducted by Boroumand Center with an informed person, Mr. Mohsen Jelokhani had used illegal drugs before his execution.  He was very calm and normal.  He smiled, gave all his belongings to other people in the section and said goodbye to all his fellow prisoners.  Then he was transferred to solitary.  According to this informed source, before the people sentenced to death were taken to solitary, prison officials would give them narcotics and sleep-inducing medications through the advocate of the section and other trusted prisoners, so that they would go quietly and not put up any resistance (Boroumand Center interview with an informed person, February 23, 2021).

At dawn on January 14, 2017, after many days of uncertainty following the death of Hashemi Rafsanjani and government shutdown in Iran, Mr. Mohsen Jelokhani and 11 other prisoners, including two women, were executed by hanging (News published by Boroumand Center, January 14, 2017; HRANA News Agency, January 14, 2017; Iranian Human Rights Organization, January 14, 2017; Boroumand Center Interview with an informed person, February 23, 2021).

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