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

Mohammad Soleimani

About

Age: 30
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Presumed Muslim
Civil Status: Married

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

About this Case

Information regarding the execution of Mr. Mohammad Soleimani and 11 other people, including two women, was published by Boroumand Center (January 14, 2017), HRANA News Agency (January 14, 2017), Iranian Human Rights Organization (January 14, 2017), and Kurdpa Organization (January 15, 2017).

Mr. Mohammad Soleimani was from Kermanshah.  He was married and he had three children, ages one, two, and six (Human Rights Watch, January 12, 2017; and Iranian Human Rights Organization, January 10, 2017).

On January 12, 2017, 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).

Arrest and detention

Mr. Mohammad Soleimani was arrested in March 2015 (Human Rights Watch, January 12, 2017).

At the time of arrest, Mr. Soleimani did not have any illegal drugs on him.  His arrest was based on the confessions of two other men, who had been in possession of illegal drugs at the time of their arrest.  They had named Mr. Soleimani as the culprit in this case.  The other accused persons, who had been carrying a total of 820 grams illegal drugs, had confessed that they had received the drugs from Mr. Mohammad Soleimani (Human Rights Watch, January 12, 2017).

Trial

In June 2016, the Supreme Court dismissed Mr. Mohammad Soleimani’s death sentence and allowed him to be re-tried.  However, after a second brief trial that comprised one short session at the Revolutionary Court of Karaj, he was again sentenced to death.  When they considered Mr. Mohammad Soleimani’s case for the second time, the Supreme Court denied his appeal, and they upheld his death sentence (Human Rights Watch, January 12, 2017).

No further information is available on the session or sessions of Mr. Mohammad Soleimani’s trial.

Charges

The charges against Mr. Mohammad Soleimani were announced as “transporting illegal drugs, heroin” (Human Rights Watch, January 12, 2017).

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 or 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 stipulated 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

Mr. Soleimani's arrest and conviction were based on the statements of two co-defendants who were found in possession of narcotic drugs at the time of their arrest and implicated Mr. Soleimani in the offense, even though no narcotic drugs were found in his possession. A total of 820 grams of narcotics was seized from the two co-defendants, who confessed that they had obtained the drugs from Mohammad Soleimani (Human Rights Watch, January 12, 2017, Iran Human Rights, January 10, 2017 ).

Defense

Mr. Mohammad Soleimani did not have access to an attorney during the time he was being interrogated (Human Rights Watch, January 12, 2017).

No information is available on Mr. Mohammad Soleimani’s defense.

Judgment

Mr. Mohammad Soleimani had been sentenced to death by hanging on the charges of illegal drugs possession (heroin).

On January 8, 2017, at least 12 prisoners who were sentenced to death, including Mr. Mohammad Soleimani, 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).

At dawn on January 14, 2017, after many days of uncertainty following the death of Hashemi Rafsanjani and government shutdown in Iran, Mr. Mohammad Soleimani and 11 other prisoners, including two women, were executed by hanging (Information received 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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