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

Sarafraz Nik Eqbal

About

Age: 41
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Non-Believer
Civil Status: Married

Case

Date of Killing: September 27, 1982
Location of Killing: Yasuj, Kohgiluyeh-va Boyer-Ahmad Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Shooting
Charges: Plotting to overthrow the Islamic Republic; Acting against state's security; Actively opposing the Islamic Republic

About this Case

The information about the execution of Mr. Sarafraz Nik Eqbal is drawn from an interview with an individual close to him. His execution was also announced in the Keyhan newspaper on September 27, 1982. Mr. Sarafraz Nik Eqbal was born in Sisakht (Kohgiluyeh va Boyer-Ahmad Province). He was married and had seven children (one of his children, Aziz Nik Eqbal, was executed in 2000). His occupation was agriculture and animal husbandry. He was a nationalist figure and a sympathizer of Dr. Shapur Bakhtiar. After the unsuccessful Nojeh coup, starting in 1981 he began an armed struggle along with other tribes against the Islamic Republic regime.

On July 11, 1980, the Islamic Republic of Iran authorities announced the discovering and dismantling of a civil and military network which had planned a coup d’état (known as the Nojeh coup) to overthrow the regime. Following this discovery, more than sixty officers and civilians were executed in several cities of Iran in less than a month. Most of the officers were still active in the army and had not been swept away in the first wave of purges which took place in the army after the fall of the monarchy.

Two months later, the organization Neqab, in a communiqué, claimed responsibility for this attempted ‘uprising.’ Neqab attested that ‘the path of Mossadeq is that of the people’ and today ‘Bakhtiar is its authentic leader.’ The communiqué stated: “We have risen up to put an end to this curse (the Islamic regime) and to entrust the affairs of our land to the faithful disciple of Mossadeq—Shapur Bakhtiar” (Iran: In Defense of Human Rights, National Movement of the Iranian Resistance, Paris 1983).

Nureddin Kianuri, Secretary General of the Tudeh Party (the Iranian pro-Soviet communist party) mentions the coup d’état in an article dated May 2, 2000 (www.rahetudeh.com). Kianuri stresses the fact that the military branch of the Tudeh, which cooperated with the Islamic Republic authorities, discovered and “neutralized” the above mentioned organization as well as other groups that planned a coup against the newly established regime.

Arrest and detention

Mr. Sarafraz Nik Eqbal was arrested in the road between Firuzabad and Shiraz in the spring of 1982. First, he was taken him to Shiraz immediately transferred to Tehran. The location of his detention and interrogation is unknown. Before his execution, he was detained incommunicado for almost three months, during which he was denied the right to be represented by an attorney.

Trial

No specific information is available on the defendant’s trial.

Charges

On September 27, 1982, the Keyhan newspaper published the following charges brought against Mr. Sarafraz Nik Eqbal: “mobilizing some locals and taking them to Tehran and Hamadan for military training, dressing as military personnel and leading some rebels, playing an active role in the coup and having continuous connections with the top leaders of the coup, receiving money for people who were involved in the coup and having connections with tribal and local elders in order to gather these people.”

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 report of this execution does not contain information regarding the evidence provided against the defendant.

Defense

No information is available about his defense.

Judgment

According to the Keyhan newspaper, Mr. Sarafraz Nik Eqbal was executed by a firing squad in Yasuj on September 27, 1982 at dawn. According to his relatives, his body was given to his family; however, the officials did not allow them to bury him in their garden. In order to avoid any gathering of the opposition by his grave, the officials selected a remote place near the mountain for his burial.

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