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

Omid Shahnavazi

About

Age: 20
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Islam (Sunni)
Civil Status: Married

Case

Date of Killing: September 30, 2022
Location of Killing: Makki Grand Mosque, Zahedan, Sistan Va Baluchestan Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Arbitrary shooting

About this Case

Information regarding the execution of Mr. Omid Shahnavazi was drawn from the Abdorrahman Boroumand Center's interview with one of his close relatives (Oct. 10, 2022). Additional information was obtained from the interview of his parents with Rasanak News (Dec. 15, 2022), Tasnim News Agency (Oct. 28, 2022), the statement of the Security Council of Sistan and Baluchestan province (Oct. 29, 2022), New York Times (Oct. 14, 2022),  Haalvash (Oct. 14, 2022), an online report by the Baluch Activists’ Campaign (Dec. 13, 2022), Human Rights Watch (Dec. 22, 2022), Iran Human Rights Documentation Center (Sep. 30, 2022), and Amnesty International (Oct. 6, 2022).

Mr. Omid Shahnavazi, son of Ahmad adn Shahnaz, was born on May 9, 2022, in Zahedan, Sistan and Baluchestan. His father was a simple workman and father to five children. Mr. Shahnavazi did not receive formal education.(1) Instead, he attended the local mosque for religious studies for eight years (2), the last two of which were spent at the seminary of the prestigious Makki mosque in Zahedan, to become a Mawlawi.

Mr. Shahnavazi worked as a construction worker, and in the months prior to his death, he had also started teaching in Baqeri Mosque in Zahedan. He was a calm and quiet man; not rowdy and never raised his voice. He remained focused on his studies and work at all times, never interfered with the lives of others, and treated everyone in the community with respect. Mr. Shahnavazi was married and had a daughter; she was two years old when Mr. Shahnavazi was killed.

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 protests, which started in front of the hospital and continued in the city of Saqqez (Kordestan Province), where Mahsa was buried, were triggered by popular exasperation over the morality patrols, misleading statements of the authorities regarding the cause of Mahsa’s death and the resulting impunity for the violence used against detainees, as well as the mandatory veil in general. This protest, initially led by young girls and women who burned their veils and youth in general who chanted the slogan “Women, Life, Freedom,” 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. 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 19,603, 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 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.” 

‌Bloody Friday Background 

The city of Zahedan in Sistan and Baluchestan Province, and home to the ethnic and majority Sunni Baluch minority, was the scene of a massacre on Friday, September 30, 2022. The massacre, also known as Zahedan Bloody Friday, took place in the context of nationwide protests that followed the death in detention of Mahsa Jina Amini on September 16, 2022 and after the news of the rape of a 15-year old girl by the Police Chief in Rasak, which was confirmed by the local Friday sermon cleric, had sparked protests in Chabahar on September 27. The earlier protest had led to calls for further demonstrations across the Province on Friday September 30th “in solidarity with those who struggle across Iran’s geography and in Kurdistan,” and called for a transparent investigation of the rape and accountability by local clericsm including the Great Mosalla prayer complex, located near Zahedan’s Makki mosque.

Based on eyewitness testimonies, media, and human rights groups’ investigations of videos and photos of the event that took place on September 30, 2022, the shootings by armed security forces (including some in plain clothes), who were located on the roof of Police Station 16 across the Great Mosalla and surrounding roofs, began when a small group of unarmed worshipers emerged from the prayer complex around mid-day, before the end of the Friday prayer and walked toward the police station chanting anti-government slogans. In response, security forces fired live ammunition, metal pellets and tear gas at them and at bystanders while protesters threw stones at the police station.  Snipers also shot at worshipers in the Mosalla and its vicinity killing scores, including children and at least one female worshiper. According to medical professionals, many victims died from bullet wounds to the head, back of the head and neck, torso, heart, and stomach. Following the shootings, tension mounted in several other neighborhoods in Zahedan and the surrounding area, including around Maki mosque.  The authorities reported that three police stations had been attacked by protesters that day in Zahedan. In a statement issued on October 28, the Security Council of Sistan and Baluchestan province claimed that six security force members and 35 other people including worshipers and bystanders had been killed, and falsely accused protesters of having attacked the police station with stones and firearms. Additionally, the statement announced that the head of Police Station Number 16 and the head of police in Zahedan were dismissed because of their fatal “negligence”. As of October, the number of people killed during Zahedan’s Bloody Friday or died from their injuries in the following days and weeks has been estimated between 66 and 97 and hundreds were wounded.

Mr. Omid Shanavazi’s Death

According to available information, on September 30, 2022, Mr. Shahnavazi had attended the worship area (Mossala) of Makki Mosque to participate in the Friday prayer. Once the shootings began, he was hit by snipers with three bullets in the chest, the kidney and the upper body.

His dead body was taken home in the hours following the shooting. His father received his body from several worshipers, who carried him home. He was buried in Lar Cemetery and a service was held in his memory. According to the family, no constraint was imposed on them in holding the ceremony. A military official close to the local government attended the service.

Officials’ Reaction

The Security Council of Sistan-va Baluchestan province issued a public statement one month after the event on Oct. 30, 2022, in which the authorities called the incident of Sept. 30, 2022 “regrettable” and claimed that the incident was triggered by a group of rioters who intended to occupy the local police station, accusing the rioters of engaging in an armed conflict that led to the death of some worshippers. The Council admitted to the shortcomings of some of the officials and announced that the head of the local police station number 16 and the head of police in Zahedan were dismissed on the ground of fatal “negligence.” The Council has promised to take action to compensate the innocent victims and their families, and to further investigate the incident, in addition to finding any additional parties, individuals, military personnel, as responsible for the incident or reporting to the authorities.

The Council announced that as of the date of the statement (Oct. 30, 2022) 35 people had lost their lives in the incident. In the aftermath, the public registrar refused to cancel the birth certificate of Mr. Omid Shahnavazi.(3) The public registrar claimed that since the body had not been examined by the coroner prior to the burial, the birth certificate could not be cancelled. The registrar informed the family that Mr. Shahnaavazi’s birth certificate could only be canceled if heart deficiency was entered into the death certificate as the cause of death. The family rejected the proposal. 

Baluch clerics who showed support for and solidarity with Zahedan’s Bloody Friday and agreed with the positions of Mowlana Abdelhamid against the government were subject to increasing pressure from the authorities. Mawlawvi Youssef Raissi, son of Abdolrashid, the chief cleric of the village of Heridouk in Lashar who had supported Mowlawi Abdolhamid, was kidnapped by security forces in plain clothes on Oct. 31, 2022, in the city of Lashar and killed. Mawlawi Abdolhamid Moradzehi, a well  established Sunni cleric in Zahedan and a close ally of Mowlawi Abdolhamid was arrested on Jan. 30th, 2023 by security forces.

Familys’ Reaction

Mr. Shahnavazi's family have brought no action to any tribunal for the assassination of their son. They believe there is nothing they can do. Thus far, they have rejected the motion of the public registrar to cancel the birth certificate of their son with heart failure indicated as the cause of the death.

Impacts on Family

According to the available information, the family has been devastated by the tragic premature death of Omid Shahnavazi. His mother is grief-stricken, extremely sad and irritable. His father is grieved with his loss and cannot hold back his tears when he sees his 2-year-old granddaughter who has lost her father.

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(1) Mr. Shahanavazi’s father did not obtain a birth certificate for him until the age of 12, at which point the appropriate age of elementary schooling had passed. A birth certificate is a requirement to enroll at school in Iran.
(2) A religious education does not require a birth certificate.
(3) Cancellation of the birth certificate following the death is a common practice in Iran.

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