Aadel Collection
Interim report on the situation of human rights in the islamic Republic of Iran, prepared by the Special Representative of the Commission on Human Rights in accordance with Commission resolution 1989/66 and Economic and Social Council decision 1989/148
INITED
IATIONS
General Assembly
A
Distr.
GENERAL
A/44/620
2 November 1989
ENGLISH
ORIGINAL: ENGLISH/SPANISH
REPORT OF THE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COUNCIL
Situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran
ote by the Secratary-General
The Fecretary-General has the honour to transmit to the members of the General
Assembly the interim report prepifired by Mr. R.ynaldo Galindo Pohi (El Salvador),
Special Representative of the Commission on Human Rights on the situation.of human
rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran, in accordance with paragraph 14 of
Commission on Human Rights resolution 1989/66 of 8 March 1989 and Economic and
Social Council decision 1989/148 of 24 May 1989.
Forty—fourth session
Agenda item 12
89—27147 1298h (E)
/ . . .
ANNEX
Interim report on the lituation of human rights in the Islamic
Republic of Iran. prepared by the Special Representative of
the Commission on Human Rights in accordanco with Commission
r.aolution 1989/66 and Economic and Social Council decision
1989/148
CONTENTS
I • INTRODUCTION
II. CO .Q4UNXCATIONS WITH THE GOVERNMENT OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC
OF IRA1I ,.....s............s........s...i......e......... . .
A • Written communications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B. Conversations with representatives of the Islamic
Republic of Iran . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
III. INFORMATION AVAILABLE TO THE SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE
A • Oral information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . .
1. Witnesses presented by armed opposition groups ....
2. Witnesses whose appearance was facilitated by the
Iranian Government . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3 • Baha' i witnesses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B • Written information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1. Information provided by the Iranian Government ....
2. Information provided by other sources
(a) Right to life
(b) Right to freedom from torture or cruel,
inhuman or degrading treatment or puni inment .
(c) Information cov erning the situation of
followers of the Baha'i faith
IV. CO .2. NTS AND VIEWS OF Ti iE GOVERNMENT OF THE ISLAMIC
REPUBLIC OF IRPN . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
V • GENERAL OBSERVATIONS
Paragraphs 2Uifi
1—6
4
7—16 5
7—14 5
15—16 12
17—89 13
17—57 13
21—43 13
44—52 17
53—57 19
58—89 20
59—62 20
63— 9 21
63—73 21
74 — 78
79 — 89
23
23
90—96 26
97—129 28
—2—
CONTENTS (continued)
Append I cei
I. NAMES AND PARTICULARS OF PERSONS ALLEGEDLY EXECUTED IN THE ISLAMIC
REPUBLIC OF IRAN IN THE SECOND HALF OF 1988 AND THE BEGINNING OF
1989, SUPPLEMENTARY TO THE LIST CONTAINED IN DOCUMENT E/CN.4/1989/26J
LtST PROVIDED Y NO 4-GOVERNMENTAL SOURCES ............................. 1
II . NAMEP A ) PARTICULARS OF PERSONS VICTIMS OF TERRORIST ATTACRS; LIST
PROVIDED BY THE IRANIAN GOVERNMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
III. L.ST OF NAMES AND PARTICULARS OF PERSONS ALLEGEDLY ARRESTED, REARRESTED
OR ECUTED IROVIDED BY A WITNESS ..................................... 1
IV. OPENLETTERPROVIDEDBYAWITNESS.......S............................. 1
-3—
I. INTRODUCTION
1. At its forty-fifth session, the Commission on Human Rights decided, by its
resolution 1989/66 of 10 March 1988, to extend the mandate of the Special
Representative, as contained in Commission resolution 1984/54 of 14 March 1984, for
a further year and requested the Special Representative to present an interim
report to the General Assembly at its forty-fourth session on the human rights
situation in the Islamic Republic of Iran, and a final report to the Commission at
its forty-sixth session (pars. 14). In its decision 1989/148 of 24 May 1989, the
Economic and Social Council endorsed that resolution.
2. Previously, the Cenetel Assembly had decid d, by its resolution 43/137 of
8 December 1988, to keep under consideration the situation of human rights in the
Islamic Republic of Iran during its forty-fourth session on the basis of additional
information that might be presented to the Commission on Human Rights and the
Economic and Social Council (p&rs. 13).
3. In compliance with paragraph 14 of Commission on Human Rights resolution
1989/66 and in response also to the General Assembly's decision to keep the
question under consideration on the basis of additional information, the Special
Representative submits herewith his interim report on the situation of human rights
in the Islamic Republic of Iran. The General Assembly welcomed the intention of
the Special Representative to consider several issues pertaining to the legal
system in the Islamic Republic of Iran (resolution 43/137, para. 9). In that
connection, the Special Representative states that his final report to the
Commission on Human Rights at its forty-fifth session included an analysis of that
question (E/Ct4.4/1989/26, paras. 22—57).
4. As in previous years, the interim report concentrates on oral and written
communications with government officials and on events involving human rights in
the Islamic Republic of Iran and their repercussions in the international sphere
and concludes with genera]. observations. In hia final report the Special
Representative intends to consider more general questions, both factual and
doctrinal, including the points of view contained in the letters from the Deputy
Minister for Foreign Affairs transmitted on 26 June and J.2 September 1989, which
are reproduced in this report, and the official opinions to be presented in coming
months, particularly those relating to the application of international instruments
such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and international convent 4 .ons, as
well as the declarations which may be made by the Government of the Islamic
Republic of Iran before the termination of his mandate.
5. In order to facilitate comparison, this interim report is arranged in the same
way as previous reports, and is accordingly divided into five sections:
introduction (saut. I), communications between the Government of the Islamic
Republic of Iran and the Special Representative (sect. II) , written and oral
information received by the Special Representative after the renewal of his mandate
(sect. XII), considerations regarding opinions expressed by the Government of the
Islamic Republic of Iran during the discussion of the item by the Commission on
Human Rights (sect. IV), general observations (sect. V) and annexes.
6. The Special Representative wishes to point out that, as in previous years, the
intek'im report has been planned and written as the first part of the final report,
owing to he relatively short interval between the preparation of the two reports.
—4-
II. COMMUNICATIONS WITH TW GOVERNMENT OF THE
ISLAMIC PE UBLTC OF IRAN
A. Written cpmmunicationi
7. On 15 March 1989, the Charg d'affatzes of the Permanent Mission of the
Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva addressed the
following letter to the Special Representatives
“In reference to paragraphs 11 and 12 of your final report on the human
rights sit tion in the Islamic Republic of Iran to the 45th Session of the
Commission on Hwnan Rights, document E/CN ,4/1989/26, enclosed please find the
English translation of the text of a letter by Mr. Saeed Shahsavandi, former
member of II. Central Committee of he ‘Mujahedin Khalq Organization' to
Le Monde, dated 15 February 1989. Mr. Shah3avandi was captured while taking
part in the MKO's military incursion into the territory of the Islamic
Republic of Iran in July 1988.”
For a summary of the letter referred to above, see paragraph 61 below.
8. By note verbale, dated 26 June 1989, the Permanent Mission forwarded to the
Special Representative the following jotter addressed to him by
Mr. Mohammad Hossein Lavasani, Deputy Minister for International Affairsi
“In reference to your report No. E/CN.4/1989/26 dated 26 January 1989,
regarding (the] situation of human rights in Iran, the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs of the Islamic Republic of Iran wishes to draw your attention to the
following observations on recommendations and suggested measures regarding the
‘pending problems' as itemized in paragraph 77 c.f the aforementioned report.
“1. The Islamic Republic of Iran's extensio ' of ‘full co-operation to
the Special Representative for a total fulfillment of his mandate,
including a v i. it to the Country'.
“It must be recalled that before the preparation of the final report and
the submission of the suggestions and recommendations to the 45th Session of
Commission on Human Rights, the Islamic Republic of Iran as an innovative
measure, originally proposed the adoption of a consensus, instead of a biased
and politically motivated resolution, under which t h. Islamic Republic of Iran
would have been committed to fully co-operate with the Special Representative
in all respects. .
“Unfortunately, however, this proposal which was aimed in all honesty at
removing the stalemate in resolving the ‘pending problems' was simply ignored,
only to satisfy the political motivations of certain malignant Western
sponsors of the resolution.
“It is, therefore, quite strange that the nubject of Iran's full
co-operation with the Special Representative is not only repeated here in the
report but also recommended ‘as a matter of urgency', without even alluding in
passing to the self-serving, obstructionist policl.s of certain sponsors of
the resolution.
—5—
“2. Investigating ‘all allegations of human rights violations and ...
(reporting) in detail on the results of such investigation'.
“Lists such as the one in the annex to the report No. E/CN.4/1989/26 of
the Special Representative could very easily be prepared by any opposition
group who bear no commitment to the Constitution and respectable values of the
country.
“Definitely, the Islamic Rept'blic of Iran cannot, and will not, hold
itself committed to answering allegations originated from certain terrorist
groups and war-time traitors who have brutally murdered, through
self-professed terrorist as well as military operation, thousands of
defendants of their own country and fellow countrymen, and have treacherously
engaged in espionage activities for the enemy.
“So long as the Commission's information is virtually based on the
self—serving, politically motivated allegations of certain armed terrorists to
the extent that 7 out of 8 so-called witnesses and claimants of human rights
violations in Iran bear their membership in the armed, fifth-column group of
hypocrites, i.e. the self-proclaimed Mujahedeen, there remains no room for
responding to such baseless allegations. Allegations of human rights
violations can be raised only and only after the terrorists have been excluded
as the source of information from the fact-finding and information-gathering
system of the Commission on Human Rights, for the very holding of meeting with
these groups and acquiring information from them is in effect a way of
granting recognition to terrorists and sanctioning terrorism.
“Nonetheless, as an indication of its good-will in co-operating with the
Special Representative, the Islamic Republic of Iran, having reviewed the list
of names annexed to the final report, announces that 140 out of the total list
of persons alleged to have been executed in Tehran are forgeries and virtually
non-existent individuals, which clearly proves the information provided by the
terrorist groups to be purely false and to have been conveyed only for
self-serving political purposes. Needless to point out that any single
forgery suffices to discredit the source of information.
“3, Ensuring that ‘the prison regime conforms to international standards
and that prisoners are not subjected to unjustified or unnecessary
hardships'.
“The Islamic Republic of Iran, inspired by the exalted Islamic teachings,
laws, and regulation, always finds itself morall:' obligated to observe
humanitarian considerations in her treatment of prisoners and to prevent any
ill-treatment. Th Islamic Republic of Iran has so far extended substantial
efforts in the rehabilitation and personality development of the prisoners.
“While the Israeli and South African governments , with confirmations and
practical supports of these very sponsors of the show of adopting repetitious
resolutions on the so-called human rights violations, relentlessly, and with
Impunity, perpetrate the most horrible tortures and the worst conceivable
kinds of treatment in their prisons, there 3.s indeed great cause for regret to
see that those countries which have staged the strongest campaign against
tortures in Israel and South Africa are being accused of ill-treatment and
torture instead of the real. culprits.
“4. Suppreasin ' ‘ill-treatment and torture, during both investigation
and imprisor ent'.
“The Islamic Republic of Iran categorically denies the question of
torture of prisoners and detainees. Issw s of this sort, unfortunately, have
frequently been presented by certain terrorist groups as first-hand
information to the Commission and have subsequently formed the basis for the
reports of the Special Representative and for the judgments of certain
countries.
“As mentioned earlier, so long as armed terrorists and war-time traitors
constitute the source of information for the Commission, such politically
motivated allegations wi]]. not be worth considering much less responding to.
“The punishments currently practiced in Iran under Ta'zirat after a
verdict by court f law, as also publicly reported in Iranian newspapers,
which have been presented by certain terrorist groups as documents of human
rights violations, are entirely based on indisputable laws and regulations
stipulated in the Islamic legal system. Having been derived from the Islamic
judicial sybtem and having met the consensus of all Islamic sects and
persuas3ons throughout the world, they are being enforced in some other
Islamic countries as well,
“Under no circumstances will the Islamic Republic of Iran ever give up
the practice of such divine laws and standards which constitute the
fundamental tenets of the belief system among one billion Moslems in the world
and which must duly be regarded as a credible legal system in the world.
“5. Limiting ‘use of death penalty strictly to the most serious crimes,
(exempting) from death penalty those under 18 years of age and
(replacing) punishments involving torture by punishments compatible with
international standai ds'.
“By its divine outlook, the Islamic judicial system embodies far more
superior values than ani other judicial system for man nd life. OEe
practical application of this system has been designed II such a way as to
effectively safeguard the human values in a comprehensive manner and to remove
impediments to individual growth and exaltation for mankind.
“Within the Islamic law, the unjustified slaying of even a single
individual is being considered as tantamount with a cataclysm or destruction
of the population as a whole; the Holy Quran stipulates: ‘whoever slays a
soul, unless it be for manslaughter or mischief in the land, is as though he
slew all men' (5 32).
“Undoubtedly, no other syste' not even present international laws and
standards, has ever placed such &gher, exalted value on man's life.
Imposition of death penalty in the Islamic Republic of Iran, therefore, is
permitted only and only within this divine framework for maintaining human
values and for preserving the integrity of human society as a whole.
“It must be pointed out that in order to limit the use of a death penalty
many obstacles have been provided in this system, such as paying Diveh (blood
money/restitution) and carrying out the regulation of Ghesemeh (swearing), to
—7—
ensure that fewer people receive death penalty. The long process of
confirming a death sentence from the lower courts to the appellate courts, the
highest judicial court an finally to the Supreme Judicial Council consisting
of several ce mpetent, outstanding lawyer(s].. is a further evidence of built-in
concerns within the judicial system of the Islamic Republic of Iran to provide
legal guarantees for limiting death sentences. Furthermore, death penalty is
also practiced in many other countries based on their own particular penal
codes and judicial systems and cannot be considered as something peculiar to
the Islamic Republic of Iran. Finally, the question of violating
international standards by the Islamic Republic of Iran, we believe, has been
raised not due to honest concern over justice or over violations of
international regulations but only and only because of politically motivated
interests of some particular states which unfortunately seek to impose their
political hegemony in almost all international organizations. It is clearly
observed that while certain states have frequently demonstrated their utmost
disrespect and indifference towards international norms and standards and have
immensely and relentlessly violated human rights, no practical action has ever
been taken against them by appropriate international bodies. This phenomenon
clearly indicates that the states which self-servingly spread charges of humnn
rights violations apparently view international standards not as a set of
values in human relations but simply as a lever of pressure to achieve their
own political interest.
“The Islamic Republic of Iran, in view of the aforementioned facts,
announces that investigation of the situation of human rights in different
countries as conducted by the Commission on Human Rights is tainted by certain
political interests and consequently does not follow its proper, just course.
“Nonetheless, as it has also previously demonstrated its sincerity at
forty-third session of the General Assembly, the Islamic Republic of Iran has
always sought to resolve this problem and to fully co—operate with the
Commission. The Islamic Republic of Iran, in this respect, completely
fulfilled its obligations. According recognition by the Commission to the
false information provided by certain terrorists and armed spies; which in
effect sanctioned their action, on the one hand, and the selective,
discriminating approaches by the Commission as demonstrated clearly at the
45th Session of the Commission during the adoption of the resolutions under
item 12, on the other hand, created obstacles in th way of full co-operation.
“The Islamic Republic of Iran is, therefore, looking forward to the
removal of tI, s great obstacle for laying the ground for our full cooperation.”
9. By a note verbale, dated 26 June 1989, the Permanent Mission also transmitted
to the Special Representative a note by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which read
as follows:
“In reference to your report No. E/CN.4/1989/26 concerning (the]
situation of human rights in Iran, the Islamic Republic of Iran would like to
draw attention to the following points regarding the annexed list of names (of
persons] supposedly executed in Iran.
“It is quite obvious that those who commit offenses, misdemeanors, or
felonies are punishable according to the statutory laws in each country, and,
in our case, they have been punished according to the Islamic standards.
—8—
“Since the judicial system in each state is enforced independently, the
Islamic Republic of Iran, therefore, does not hold itself obliged to answer
questions which directly violate this axiom. On the other hand, lists such as
the one annexed to Your Excellency's report could very easily be prepared by
any opposition group who bear no commitment toward the Constitution and the
3stablished values in their country.
“In this connection, it is instructive to refer to 140 forged names and
particulars in your annexed list, who prove as false and baseless all
allegations of your sources and which, even taken individually, suffice to
discredit such sources. These forged names and particulars have bean pointed
out here (in the attached list) as they had appeared in the annex to your
roport.”
“Annex
Forged Names and Particulars of Parsons allegedly executed iji the
Islamic Republic of Iran durir g the period of Ju3.y-Se9tember 1988,
as they appear in the original report
“Pages Entries
“22 14, 20
“23 19, 20, 25, 29, 30, 31, 34, 46, 48
“24 12, 29, 34, 44, 55
“25 15, 16, 23, 24, 25, 30, 34, 41
“26 1, 22, 25, 28, 29, 32, 33, 34, 40
“27 4, 8, 24, 35, 39, 42
“28 5, 6, 7, 8, 18, 19, 26, 42, 47, 49, 50
“29 2, 13, 17, 24, 30, 40, 42, 44, 47, 50
“30 1, 5, 19, 20, 30, 31, 40, 49, 54
1, 7, 9, ]2, 24, 43, 44, 50, 51, 52
“36 3, 8, 11, 13, 14, 31, 24, 34, 44, 45, 46, 49, 50, 51
“37 6, 12, 17, 19, 23, 25, 26, 31, 37, 313
“38 14, 15, 18, 20, 21, 25, 26, 28, 46, 47, 50
“39 9, 10, 13, 19, 23, 28, 31, 38
“40 8, 9, 38, 44, 48, 49, 53
“41 12, 13, 15, 43, 49, 50, 54, 55
“42 10, 16, 18, 22”
10. On 10, 12 and 13 July 1989, the Special Representative held hearings with 22
persons who claimed to have direct knowledge and experience relating to the various
aspects of the situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Subsequently, the Special Representative addressed two letters, dated
29 August ‘989 and 22 September 1989, to the Permanent Representative of the
Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office at Geneva informing him of
those hearings and transmitting summaries of the statements made by the witnesses.
These summaries are reflected in section III of the present report.
11. The letter dated 29 August 1989 addressed to the Permanent Representative read
as follows
“I have the honour to refer to Commision on Human Rights resolution
1989/ 36 concerning the )human rights situation in the Islamic Republic of Iran
—9—
(text attached). As you know, the Commission on Human Rights dc cided to
extend my mandate for a further year and requestt d mc to present an interim
report P the General Assembly at its fc rty_four1h session and a fina] report
to the C mrnission on Human Rights at its forty-sixth session. Resolution
1989/66 was endorsed by the Economic ane Socia] Council in decision 1989/148
of 2 May 1989.
“Zn this connection, I should like to inform you that, during my visit to
Geneva from 10 to 18 July 1989, I conducted, in the framework of my mandate
under Commission on Human Rights resolution 1989/66, a series of informal
hearings with 22 persons who claimed to have first-.)oe.nd knowledge and
experience of various aspects of the human rights situation in the Iclamic
Republic of Iran. A summary of the allegations made in the course of these
heari:igs will ), made available to you by the Secretariat in due ‘ourse.
“1 would greatly appreciate receiving any information or ouu. ,ents that
your Government may wish to provide with regard to these allegations.
“I should also like to inform you that I will again visit ..zie Centre for
Human Rights in Geneva from 18 to 22 September 1989, in conne' tion with the
preparation of my interim report to the General . ssembly. I hope that a
meeti g may be a anged between us on that occasion in order to continue our
dia1i ,ue.”
12. The letter dated 22 S'.,pcember 1989 addressed to the Permanent Representative
read as followsi
“Xn pursut.nce of my letter dated 29 August 1989, I have the honour to
trans it herewith a summary of the allegations made in the course of the
informal hearings I recentl conducted in the framework of my mandate under
Commission on Human Righ-s resolution 1989/66. Thb above-mentioned summary
reflects statements me y persons who claimed to have first-hand knowledge
and experience of varic s aspects of the human rights situation in the Islamic
Republic of Iran.
“Any information, comments or observations that your Government may wish
to provide with regard to these allegations would be greatly appreciated. In
this connection, I should like to recall that my mandate a.' first established
by the Commission on Human Rights in resolution 1984/54 and extended for the
last time in resolution 19 9/66 requires me to make a thorough study of the
human rights situation in your country based on such information as I may deam
relevant, including comment. and materials provided by your Government, to be
presented to the Commission at its forty-sixth session.
“I should also like to iinform you that I shall visit the Centre for
Human Rights from 8 to 12 January in connection with the preparation of my
final report to the Commission. I hope that, on that occasion, a meeting may
again be arranged between us to continue our dialogue.”
13 By a note verba]e, dated 12 September 1989, the Permanent Mission forwarded to
the Special Representative a letter addresbed to him by
Mr. Mc .ainmad Hossein Lavasani, Deputy Minister for International Affairs, which
as foLlows:
—10-
“Before anything else, please allow me to convey to you my satisfaction
and pleasure for your cooperation in providing necessary facilities for the
meeting of the special human rights delegation with Your Excellency at the
office of the United Nations. Without doubt, this meeting was materialized as
a result of the intention of the Islamic Republic of Iran to expand
cooperative relations with the Special Representative with a view to enlarging
his knowledge, and the desire of Your E ccellency to obtain true and correct
iflformation. The gro that met with you was only an indicative example of
numerous other similar cases in the Islamic Republic of Iran. In fact, the
persons who met you were the messengers for numerot's bereaved fathers, mothers
and wives in Iran. With the sincerest sentiments and while still suffering
from the p 'in and distress caused by the violation of the most fundamental
rights of their dear ones, that is, the right to life, each one of them
revealed uLdeniable cases that demonstrated the savage nature and cruelties of
terrorists. Naturally, the least that can be expected from the meeting idth
you of the rei.atives of the victims of the atrocities of the terrorists and
armed groups in Iran is the reflection of rises of violation of human rights
and crimes vf criminal organizations in the international fora so that the
public may become aware of the acts of violence committed by these groups.
You heard the revelations of the families of the victims of terrorism and the
admissions of the former members of the ‘People's Mujjehedin Organization' in
explaining their dastardly acts, a d have also seen all the documonts.
“You probably agree that meeting with menib rs of a terrorist group and
receiving raise information from tiem wou3d .‘redit to them end their
activities, and encourage them to commit furt - r terrorist acts. Condemna ion
of legal actions in Iran and censuring the im .tII;.)ntatiOn of Islamic
punishment meted out to murderer: of inno,. ent presons constitute indifference
of and disregard to pnins and ufL. rings o those whose representatives met
with you.
“I hope the contacts and cooperation with the Special Representative,
which are desired by the lb.L8ffiC Reoublic of iran, will produce desirable
results, and will further reveal the realities and facts in Iran as well as
the resulting adverse consequences of defending and supporting terrc Ists
groups.
“Considering that you have become familiar with the part of the realities
regarding the presence and the way terrorists act in Iran, we can therefore
expect that your Excellency, as the Special Representative, will use different
means available to you to direct the Human Rights Commission toward
understanding and true support of human rights. Allow me to once again
reaffirm tFie readiness of the Islamic Republic of Iran to cooperate with the
Special Representative.”
14. On 21 September 1989, the Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of
Iran to tne United Nations Office at Geneva addressed the following letter to the
Special Representative:
“I iave the honoui to communicate La you the enclosed list of 1611
innocent people who have been martyred by the terrorist and mercenary groups
and organizations, pr rticularly, the so-called People's Mujah• deen
Organization (PMO).
—11—
“I would greatly appre iate if you would consider it in your ffi rthcoming
report on the situation c human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran.”
The above-mentioned list, is reproduced in annex III to the present report.
B. Convarsatio with representatives
of the Islamic Republic of Iran
15. As the dialogue ith the representatives of the Islamic Republic of Iran has
b'oadened, communications have become quick and continuous, since contact has taken
place not only through visits to the diplomatic offices of the Islamic Republic of
Iran or United Nations offices but frequently by telephone. This informal and
direct means of communication has been particularly effective as regards
arrang0ments for the appearance of witnesses and advance announcement of activities
relating to proceedings.
16. On 19 and 22 September 1988 the Special Representative met with
Ambassador Sirous Nasseri, Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran
to the United Natior s Office at Geneva. On those occasions pending problems
relating to the implementation of his mandate were discussed.
—1.?—
III. INFORMATION AVAILABLE TO THE SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE
A. Oral information
17. On ‘ .0, 12 and 13 .July 1989, the Special Representative conducted hearings
during which 22 ine&viduals described their experiences in Iraniafl prisons, their
court appearances and their knowledge of what had happened to members of thoir
families and other individuals. Eleven of the witnesses stated that they were
sympathizers of the People's Mojahedin, three witnesses referred to the death of
very close relatives through action attributed to the above-mentioned Mojahedin,
and two of the witnesses stated that they were former militants of the Mojahedin
organization who had given up their political mUitancy after their terms in
prison. For reasons of security, the former militants asked that their identities
not be revealed. Five other witnesses, who also asked that their names not be
revealed, were Baha'is.
18. It should be pointed out that for the first time the Government of the Islamic
Republic of Iran sponsorbd the appearance of witnesses, whose testimony differed
considerably from the experience reported by other witnesses who had appeared in
pr& vious years and the current year.
19. The statements that follow were made by witnesses in the course of oral
depositions. The summary of this testimony reproduces as faithfully as possible
the language and mode of expression of the witnesses examined. The Special
Repre entative considers that further investigation will be necessary before he is
personally convinced of the truth of some of these statements.
20. The summary of the testimony follows. It is divided into three subsections,
in order to maintain the distinctions between the organizations which acted as
sponsors of the witnesses' appearance.
1. Witnesses presented by armed oppositicn groups
21. On 10 and 12 July 1989 the Special RepLesentative conducted informal hearings
in the course of which 10 persons who claimed to have first-hand knowledge of
various aspects of the human rights situation in the Islamic Republic of Iran
related their experiencR. These persons described themselves as sympathizers of
the Mojahedin organization. They were, in order of appearance before th'd Special
Representative: Mariem Torabi, Shansi Ro hanah, Shahrzad Alavi-Shah3di,
Roghieh Jaberi, Yazdian-Azad Kobra, Chorban-Ali Torabi, Fattaneh Ayaz—Poor ,
Zahra Sarayi and Abdel-Hamid Emami. Two witnessi s requested that theh names be
kept confidential.
22. All of the above-mentioned persons st6ted that they had spent from one to
eight years in prison. All of these persons also affirmed that during their
incarceration they had been subjected to torture and had witnessed other prisoners
being tortured. The dates of arrest indicated ranged from 1982 to 1987. One of
those arrested in 1982 was not released from jail until November 1988.
23. They stated that they had witnessed prisoners being executed and tortured to
death. They also alleged that they had not only been subjected to physical
ill-treatment but also to psychological torture to such an extent that some of them
had beome mentally ill. They asserted that there has been a change in the method
—13--
of torture during the last year, psychological torture having largely substituted
physical torture.
24. The witnesses further stated that they had met several prisoners who had
become demented as a result of psychological torture and were kept together with
other prisoners in the same cells. Some of the mentally ill had been driven to
commit uicidei others had been manacled to the carts distributing food and paraded
in ths prison. Their cries and behaviour were used as a demoralization factor
against other detainees. New detainees were placed with the mentally disturbed
prisoners and in some cases the mentally ill attacked the others.
25. During those hearings, two prison officials were charged with inflicting
torturei Haji Davod Rashmain, warden of the Qezel-Hessar prison in Tehran, who is
curren$1y head of the Information Bureau of the Prosecutor's Office at Evin prison
and Asghar Ja'afari, warden of the Gohardasht prison.
26. It was reported that, during the wave of executions in the second part of
1988, many prisoners had seen their sentences changed to capital punishment, a
great number of them having been tried for a second time after serving a previous
sentence. Released pzisoners had been rearrested, tried again and sometimes
executed. Usually the time served during preventive arrest was not taken into
account and the pricon term became effective from the date of the sentence only.
During the afore-mentioned wave of executions, family vtsits had been barred for
three to four months. Some detainees were released, however, under certain
conditions, usually a bail of about $US 25,000 and the obligation to report back to
jail periodically.
27. According to the witnesses, families and relatives of the executed persons
were frequently not told the whereabouts of their places of burial and on several
occasions, protests by families lead to further arrests. From 1988 onwards,
several families of female political prisoners had rec4ived from administrative
officials a certificate of marriage of their imprisoned daughters. These
certificates concerned female prisoners who had allegedly been raped before
execution.
28. One witness, who wished to remain anonymous, reported the arrest of a woman
under the charge of wearing inappropriate clothing (not conforming with officially
admitted colours, such as black and grey) and in one case, a woman who was clothed
decently, was jailed because she had taken a taxi alone.
29. One witness, Roghieh Jaberl, reported that she took close cognizance of the
suicide of one person who drank cleaning fluid, of another who hanged herself and
of a thir4 who cut her wrists. She also testified to the extreme mental and
physical pressure brought upon prisoners who lived in the so-called “residential
units” (non-official prisons), a part of Qezel-Hessar prison near Tehran, where
female prisoners were submitted to psychological torture aimed at driving them mad.
30. She also reported that throughout her five and a half years of captivity she
had been tortured several times, the method consisting of beating azid whipping by
cables. She said she was put on trial twice and described the proceduke as
follows: The first trial, during which she was blindfolded, took five minutes only
and she was sentenced to one and a half years in prison. At the end of this term,
instead of being released, she was tried again because she had refused to appear on
official television. She was condemned to a further term of three years on the
—14-
charge of beii g a resistant prisoner. She was released one year and a half after
having served the second sentence, i.e., I the end of 1987.
31. Mrs. Roghieb Jaberi further stated that about two months before her release a
hunger strike took place in Evin prison in protest against the poor quality of food
and living conditions. After her release she learned that all hunger strikers had
been put in solitary confinement and had been tortured; some of them had even been
executed. A few of her ceilmates who were released had been arrested and shot in
the second half of 1988. She indicated the following names of former cellmates who
were rearrested and sentenced to death: Mariam Mohammadi, Bahman Abadi,
Tamineb Setoodeh, Kheirieh Saffaii, Shekar Mohamma-Zadeh, Zoreh Mir-Esmaeli,
Mahin Amadi, Zahra Saffaii, Soheila Shems-Zadeb, Mehri Rahimi, Foroozan Abdi,
Rogieh Akberi, Ashraf Khodaii, Foroshtch Harnidi, Zahra Bijan ‘lar,
Nasrin Kemal-Zadeh, and Mahnaz Karani.
32. Another witness, who wished to remain anonymous because of the continuing
detention of his wife and eight-year-old daughter who had unsuccessfully attempted
to leave the country illegally, reported that his trial took a few minutes with no
defence available. He said that he had servea five years of imprisonment and was
released in September 1987 subject to a financial guarantee. He also reported
the fate of several fellow prisoners as follows: Ali-Taher Jooyan 1o'.t za niental
balance owing to the severity of torture and set fire to himself, c . sing serious
injuries, which led to his death; another one, named Au Haghverdi, after losing
his senses as a result of torture was shot in one of the mass executions of
political prisoners. The witness further asserted that in many cases relatives of
executed prisoners were not tol of the burial places and on several occasions
their protests had led to furthek arrests. He also reported having witnessed that
persons who were about to be hanged had shouted that they were not drug smugglers
hut political prisoners.
33. Shahrzad Alavi Shahidi decll2red that sh was arrested in November 1981, was
held in prison until April 1988, and left thu country in March 1989. She said that
during her first nine months in prison she was routinely beaten and lashed, and
when one of her feet became infected she was refused medical treatment on the
pretext that there was no need as she would soon be executed. After nine months'
detention without charge, she was taken to trial blindfolded. The trial took about
five minutes and she was sentenced to 15 years of imprisonment. She was
reinterrogated in 1984 for 10 days and at that time was k,4.cked on her head. As a
result, her left ear was severely damaged. She showed IIe Special Representative
the scars left by the infected wounds on the sole of left: foot.
34. Shahrzad Alavi Shahidi further tescified that she h. d witnessed the killing
under torture of Sara Mokhtarzadeh, Soheila Yavarzadeh dnd Homa Mesbahi, as well as
the torture of a 10-year-old girl in a wheelchair, whose name she did not know.
She reported too the case of Rafat Kha]id, a female prisoner, who as a result of
torture, including rape, became mad, was not given proper care and finally
committed suicide II Evin prison in November 1988.
35. The same witness also referred to executions that she said had taken place in
the second half of 1988. She said that she had witnessed the execution of a group
comprising 74 prisoners. Subsequently, other groups of prisoners were taken to a
room which had been turned into a temporary court room; there, a religious judge
asked each prisoner the following question: “In connection with which organization
were you arrested?” If the reply was the Mojahedin organization, the judge would
-15-
issue immediately en execution sentence. Families and relatives of IIe executed
persons were kept uninformed for lengthy periods of time. On one occasion, 200-300
families and relatives of prisoners were invited to Evin priaon they were then
given sweets and subsequently had to witness the execution of their relatives. In
another case, a prisoner named Nemati who had served many years in Gohardash prison
was waiting for his release; one day before the set date, his family was requested
to go to the prison, where, instead of his release, they learned of his execution.
Accor . ing to the witness, cases similar to this were numerous.
36. Another witness, Fattneh Avaz-Poor, stated that, while in captivity in Evin
prison in the second half of 1988, she had watched th death under torture of two
women named t4ariam Shaghari and Ghodsi Hava-Keshian, who had been serving prison
terms. She said she had also witnessed the torture of a 57-year-old woman,
arrested in 1987, and that she saw a 10-year-old girl who had to be carried in a
wheelchair because torture had damaged her legs.
37. Shemai Rosharani reported that when she was arrested, her interrogation took
21 days, during which she was blindfolded .l1 the time.. She stated that she was
not told why she had been arrested and was regularly lashed with cables. Her
five-month-old baby was with her. Several months later, he was taken away from her
and given without her consent to her mother. Her trial by a religious judge took
15 minutes without the assistance of a defence council. She was sentenced to three
years in prison and the judge told her that the two years she had already served
were not to be counted. She was released after five years of imprisonment.
38. Ms. Rosharani also reportod the severe torture and eventual execution of a
female prisoner, named Batul Akbari. As a result of the tort .tre, Mrs. Akbari could
hardly walk and one of her shoulders was broken. Another female prisoner, named
Razleh Avatollah-Zadeh Shirazi, whom the witness had known earlier, was put in
solitary confinement. She was pregnant and was refused sufficient foods after
giving birth, the prison guards took the baby away and told her that the baby had
been born dead. The witness said that she had also watched the torture of anoIIer
woman called Razieh, who was executed in 1988.
39. Yazdian-Azad Kobra reported that in 1988 about 110 female political prisoners
were executed in the ward of Evin prison. She also said that she had witnessed the
execution of a number of prisoners and that the following executed women had shown
marks of torture on the soles of their feeti Mehboobeh Kiaei, Azadeh Tabib,
Soodabch Mnsoori, Hoorieh Beheshti-Taber and Razleh Ayatollah-Zadeh Shirazi.
40. Another witness, Abdel-Hamid Emami, reported the names of some of his
ceilmates who were executed in the second half of 1988 Syed Reza Mir-Karimi,
All Akbar Ebrahim-Poor, Nejat Khatir Sameni, Feizollah Akbari, Karim Mallahi and
Tahmoores Rahim-Nezad, and said that others had been executed more recently, such
as Behzad Kordi, Issa Mazni, Parvia Taghi-Zadeh, Babma Eghbal Maghbooli and
Humid Shaeri.
41. In her deposition, Mariam Torabi reported that in August 1988 a man named
Malek Shabani, formerly a political prisoner, was captured allegedly by government
agents in the city of Bandar Gaz. His ‘arents and relatives frequently inquired
from officials about his fate but no information concerning his whereabouts had yet
been given. In addition, in the second half of 1988, Feizal Allah-Akbar, who was
serving a sentence of eight years' imprisonment was executed a few months before
the date of his release. The guards refused to t il his parents about the place of
—16-
burial. Mariam Torabi also stated that another long—serving prisoner called
Behzad Kianpoor was recently executed in the city of Bandar Gaz and that a
political prisoner named Soltani lost his mental balance under torture and was
subsequently released.
42. In respect of a]).egations that political prisoners were hanged under the
pretext of being drug traffickers, Ms. Torabi reported having witnessed several
executions at Hashami and Monirieh SquQre, Tehran, where the prisoners before being
hanged had shouted that they were not drug trafficke .j but Mojahedin supporters.
She mentioned in particular the cases of two brothers, one of them called
Nasser Mohammad Tachi, and two other parsons, one cf them called Hossein, who ware
executed on charges of drug smuggling. Later Mr. Tachi's family was informed that
“his execution had been carried out mistakenly”. The guards returned his
belongings and informed the family of the number of the plot in the Behesht-e-Zahra
cemetery where he had been buried. Due to the mistake, rect gnized by prison
officials, the family received permission for a funer il.
43. According to the testimony of several witnesses, manifestations of protest
were handled with extreme severity. Protests about food and poor living
conditions, which took place in autumn 1988 in Evin prison, had caused prison
officials to react by administering daily beatings, solitary confinement, and even
ha igings. It was reported that hunger strikers named Ashraf Abmadi,
Razieh Ayatollah-Zadeh Shirazi, Mariam (olzadeh-Ghafoori and Zohreh Einolyaqin were
summarily tried and hanged in front of other prisoners who were forced to watch the
executions. In Cohardasht prison, cranes had been used to hang the striking
prisoners.
2. 1 jitnesses whose appearance was facilitated by
the Iranian Government
44. On 17 July 1989, the Special Representative conduc' ed hearings with five
witnesses whose visit to GenGva was fa ilita ed by the Iranian Government, Three
had suffered the loss of family members and the other twc claimed to have been
former members of the Mojahedin organization. The ii.e requested that their names
be kept confidential. The testimonies of these witnesses had as a common
denominator the attribution of terrorist actions to the Mojahedin organization and
the indication that the victims of such ections were both government officials and
private individuals.
45. A witness related how her son, after several death threats and attempts on his
life, was finally assassinated by agents of the Mojahedin organization. Two years
later, her husband suffered the same fate. Immediately after the death of her son
and her husband, the clandestine Mojahedin radio station had claimed responsibility
for the assassinations. Acknowledging responsibility, the Mojahedin had also
reported these executions in one of their publicatio ts.
46. Another person stated that his 17-year-old son hed been kidnapped. Ha celled
the police to carry out investigations. One week later, three bodies were found by
the police. One of these bodies was that of his son. He had been tortured to the
extent that his identification was extremely Mfficu]t. The Mojahedin, in one of
their publications, later assumed responsibility for the death of his son. .
According to the witness, the sole apparent reason ior the killing of this young
man was his support for the Islamic revolution.
—17 --
47. Another witness described how his two sons went kil)ed by gunfire in the
office of one the two, a cifi ntiat. He stated that the Mojahedin also took
responsibility for the assassination and that the reasons behind this action ware
not clearj it could have been that his sons had treated persons who the Mojahedin
considered as their enemies. According to the witness, these killings were also
reported in Mojahedin pubitcations.
48. The fourth witness dencribed himself as having formerly belonged to the
Mojahedin organization. He said he had joined the organization because he was
interested in participating in political activitied. Afterwards he recognized that
the organization was solal - interested in milita action. He realized his error
in 1360 (1981) in the month of Khordat (22 May-21 June) when, before attending a
demonstration, he was told to he armed and use his arm at his discretion. In the
first clash, 13 to 14 men were killed. In this incident it had become clear to him
that the Mojahedin organization believed that through military action they could
overthrow the Government. One of their attacks consisted of a bomb placed in the
office of the Islamic Republic Party. Another bomb h as its target, the prime
minister and his deputy. These acts, however, did not lead to the result the
orgainization expected because the Government had broad popular support.
49. The same witness stated that he had realized that, not ony were those acts
useless, but that through random vio. ence many innocent people were killed. Once
even a citizen of India was killed because he looked like somebody else. In 1361,
while still a member of IIe organization, he participated in the kidnapping and
torture of three persons. He estimated that about 57,000 persons were killed in
1364 (1986) and 1365 (l98 ) because of Mojahedin actions on the battlefront.
50. The last witness stated that he would like to be acknowledged as the
representative of the political prisoners in the Islamic Republic of Iran. He had
been arrested because of active support for the Mojahedin organization and
participation before and after the Revolution in armed struggle. At the time of
his arrest, he had commandod over 200 Mojahedin supporters. His arrest took place
in a home used as a bace for armed operations. During the fight. the superior of
the group was killed. Answering a question, he advised that he was tried after a
few months in prison and that he could have had legal counsel but he chose not to
do so, as he recognized he was guilty of the criminal charges against him. When he
was released, the sole condition imposed was to report once a month to the prison.
Replying to further questions, he stated that his family did not suffer harassment
and that his home had not been pillaged. His personal experience derived from his
detention in Evin and Ghesil Hesar (Koralli) prisons.
51. He indicated that he would concentrate his testimony on three main issues:
executions and punishment., treatment of prisoners and facilities and education in
prisons. He stated that, according to his experience, persons guilty of murder as
a rule would be executed. He had encountered in prison persons who had
paEticipated in various killings. One of them was Mehdi Fatha, a member of the
military operations of the Mojahedin. This man acknowledged that he had
participated in four killings and that when 3rrested he was in possession of two
hand grenades.
52. According to his experience and judgement, treatment in Iranian prisons was by
and large humanitarian, especially in regard to female prisoners. Difficulties
with guards were taken cares of by officers, generally in the framework of general
discussions with the staff. The conditions in prisons were similar to the general
-18-
living conditions in the country, which were characterized by certain shortages due
to the war. The treatment given to prisoners, in particular, with regard to
sanitary and educational facilities, was the same as that enjoyed by the entire
Iranian society. He stated that in some ways inmates often had better facilities
than the rest of the civilian population, especially with regard to food supply,
which at times had become problematic because of the war.
3. Baha'i witnesses
53. Five of the persons appearing before the Special Representative were Baha'is.
They requested that their identity not be revealed. All of them described
persecution and harassment to themselves and their families, such as denial of jobs
and professional education and confiscation of property solely on religious
grounds. Imprisonment for participating in Bah'i activities was reported to last
as long as five years. All witnesses described brutal arrest, accompanied by
searches of their homes and confiscation of goods, including religious objects and
literature.
54. Usually arrest was followed by physical and psychological torture. Mock
executions were frequently used method of psychological torture. Torture was used
as an inducement to change faith, to confess links with the deposed monarchic
r gime or to confess spying for the benefit of foreign Powers. One of the
witnesses related how his father was sentenced to death by the presiding judge;
however, the verdict was later changed by the Supreme Council in Tehran to 10 years
in exile. A relevant document was submitted to the Special Representative.
55. One person affirmed that he had witnessed a man of Baha'i faith die under
torture, whereas the authorities had reported his death as suicide. Another person
testified that Mr. Tolou , an interrogator especially assigned to the interrogation
of Bah'is, inflicted in Kerman such torture to one of the aha'i prisoners, that he
later had to use a walking stick. Two other witnesses related how torture left
them permanently mentally impaired. Three witnesses reported how they were beaten
up and expelled from schools because of their faith.
56. The confiscation of homes and other properties was reported by two witnesses.
One woman, owing to her Baha'i faith, had her government pension withdrawn leaving
her and her family completely destitute. Trials against Baha is continued to be
described as extremely summary and sentences very harsh.
57. One of the witnesses said that he had been drafted into the army despite his
exemption due to a flatfoot. He was interrogated by the officer in charge of
religious beliefs and was arrested after two weeks of leave at home, incarcerated
and finally taken before an Islamic magistrate. The magistrate accused him of
having links with foreign Powers and sent him to prison for two months. After his
release, he was sent back to the army, interrogated again by the officer in charge
of religious beliefs and then by the commanding officer. He was sent to the war
front but decided to desert when another soldier warned him that he was going to be
assassinated in such a manner as to give the impression that he had been killed in
battle.
—19—
B. Written information
58. The Special Representative has continued to receive written information
contained in documents and reports supplied to him by the Iranian Government and
various organizations devoted to the world—wide defence of human rights, including
non-governmental organizations in consultative status with the Economic and Social
Council. The Special Representative also received more than 3,000 individual
communications containing allegations of human rights violations in the Islamic
Republic of Iran during the previous year. A summary of the relevant information
follows:
1. Information provided by the Iranian Government
59. During the discussion of human rights i' Iran, the Iranian representative
expressed his point of view concerning the final report of the Special
Representative before the Commission on Human Rights on 6 March 1989. On that
occasion, the Iranian representative said that the official response to the annex
of that report, which contains a list of persons executed during the second half of
1988, was being prepared. Pending the complete reply, he atated that 140 names on
that list were false, as the names of the individuals said to have been executed
did not appear in the registers of t-hr' prisons, hospitals or even cemeteries
investigated. That fact indicated that those individuals had not been executed but
had died in battle during the invasion of Iranian territory in July 1988.
60. By a letter dated 15 March 1989, the Permanent Mission of the Islamic RepubUc
of Iran transmitted a copy of a letter dated 15 February 1989 sent by
Mr. Saeed Shahsavandi, a former member of the Central Committee of the People's
Mojahedin Organization to the French newspaper La Honda . Mr. Shaheavandi, a
journalist by profession, was a member of the Central Committee of the
above-mentioned organization from June 1985, took part in the armed incursion by
his organization in July 1988, was taken prisoner and was spending seven months in
prison when he wrote the letter, as he says, of his own volition and on his own
initiative.
61. According to his letter, Mr. Shahsavandi, a member of the organization for 20
years, worked in its publicity and propaganda office and II that capacity was
responsible for the preparation for propaganda purposes of statements concerning 74
kinds of torture in Iranian prisons, the violation of women prisoners, the
extraction of blood from those sen -nced to death, the confinement of prisoners in
small metal cAlls and their injection with morphine and other narcotics; he also
affirmed, for the same purpose, the existence of an exaggerated number of political
prisoners, amounting to 140,000, and alleged that 70,000 individuals had been
executed from 1981 on. After his irnprisonmez t he realized that the reality in the
Iranian prisons was completely different. According to him, the real number of
political prisoners was about 3,500, of whom 2,600 had been amnestied, leaving only
about 900; he had, moreover, learned that amnesty proceedings for that small group
of political prisoners were in progress. .
62. While he was completing his interim report, the Government of the Islamic
Republic of Iran transmitted to the Special Representative nine files concerni . g
acts ‘f terrorism and a list of individuals who had been the victims of terrorist
acts during the past year. The list referred to is contained in annex II.
Information on the contents of the files will be included in the final report.
-20—
2. Information provided by other sources
(a) Bight to life
63. On 28 February 1989, an interview given to the Ar -language weekly
Al Moataqbal , published in Paris, by the senior Iranian political official
responsible for internal security, was reproduced in mojor newspapers throughout
the world. The following statement was attributed to that officials ‘To settle
this matter once and for all, all those who have been arrested and those who
agitated politically during the Bakhataran campaign have b.en executed according to
the Islamic law. They declared war on the people. Becaus. they killed, they were
killed. All those who stated their support for the Mojahedin were •xecuted.' That
statement was understood and commented on as meaning that the imprisoned politica3
dissidents had been purely and simply eliminated. Three days later, the same
official denied those statements, claiming that he had said that “many members of
the Mojahedine Khalq organization were killed or taken prisoner during the attack
of last July”, and attributed the statement quoted to the imagination of the
journalist. The journalist, Hadar Assad, insisted, in turn, that his version was
correct.
64. From January 1989 on, there were reports of many execution. for ordinary
of fences, considerably exceeding the previous figures for executions for this
category of offences. Some figures will provide an idea of the increase in the
number of executions for ordinary offences. In 1988 147 executions were officially
announced for offences such as murder, rape, aggravated robbery and drug
trafficking. Between January and May 1989, 250 executions wire officially
announced for those of fences, apart from drug traffickers. The executions took
place in public and in groups and on the same day in a number of cities. For
example, 81 executions were reported on the semi day, 27 of them in Tehran, and the
remainder in other cities.
65. Between January and May 1989, more than 900 executions were officially
announced, most of them for drug trafficking. In subsequent months the Iranian
national radio continued to announce the hanging of groups of drug traffickers, so
that the total figure for executions may exceed 1,500 and is apparently increasing.
66. The Iranian national press and radio reported that those •xecutions took place
in public places, generally by hanging. An Italian journalist took a photograph
from his hotel room of eight corpses hanging from cranes ueed for public works, end
a Turkish newspaper published the photograph.
67. The Iranian press and radio also reported that 26 executions took place by
means of stoning. Fourteen of the 26 persons stoned to death were women convicted
of adultery, prostitution or procuring. In April 1989, 12 women and three men were
stoned to death on a football field, and apparently the spectators took part in the
execution of the sentence. According to the law in force, as explained end
commented on on television, the stones used must not be so large that the person
condemned dies quickly nor so small that they cannot be considered stones.
68. The Iranian Government his launched a campaign to eliminate drug traffickers.
From 21 January 1989, a new law came into force which imposed the death penalty as
the sole and mandatory punishment for individuals in possession of more than
5 kilograms of hashish or opium, or more than 30 grams of heroin, codeine,
methadone or morphine.
-21—
69. The Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran has also ta en measures to
speed up judicial proceedings in connection with that offence, with the goal of
reducing the interval between the cc.i mission of the crime and the ‘ iplicati6n of
the death penalty to no more than 10 days. The country's highest judicial
authorit ' stated on 20 Janubry 1989 that the procedures now in effect involved long
d 1ays and too many formalities and legal steps before the verdict could be carried
our., and that exceptions and loopholeri should be eliminQed. He concluded by
saying that it was therefore necessary to expedite the trials so that they were
over in three, four or five days, a d the delinquent would know that “between the
commission of the crime and the axecr.tion of the penalty there would be a maximum
interval of ten days”. In a statement on 10 February, ti'- same high official noted
that the judiciary was following the new directives and the prisoners were being
executed v,ithin a very few days.
70. On 5 April 1989, the highest official in II. Prosecutor's Office said that 313
traffickers had been eliminated, and that on the following day 65 more would be
‘-.anged. Commenting on those events, the high official added that the law had been
applied with great success, the doubts that some groups had expressed at first had
disappeared, and consequently the executions of drug traffickers would continue
until the last trafficker had been eliminated.
71. The Iranian press has reported few political executions so far in 1989.
However, many allegationr have been received that the large number of executions
for drug trafficking masks political executions. The Special Representative has
received information that some political executions took place in secret, including
executions during the first months of 1989.
72. The Special Representative has received and taken note of the followJng
written allegations: that in Tehran, four pol tiua1 prisoners belonging to the
People's Mojahedin organization, including a doctor, were hanged in Badeghien Plaza
in January: that in February, seven political prison rs were hanged at Molavi
Junction, three in Pirozzi Square, three in Haftchenar District, three in Shahpoour
Square, and one in Hashemi Square, all People's Mojahedin; that in March, three
other political prisoners were hanged in the Nezamabad District of Tehran and five
more in .3ha Abdolazim Square. It is alleged that all the individuals executed were
said to be drug traffickers when in reality they were political prisoners and were
executed for political reasons. It has also been reported that 200 political
prisoners executed in the city of Hamedan were falsely presented as drug
traffickers. In some cases, the names had been given of individuals who were
falsely called drug traffickers: Mahmo .id Jabbari, executed in Qazwin,
Homayoun So].ati, hanged in Tehran, Ozman Baluchi, executed in Chah- har. Two of
the witnesses who appeared before the Special Representative this year stated,
apparently without the slightest doubt or hee3.Lation, that, while they were
prisoners at the beginning of 1989 they saw that sr me of t1 ir prison comrades were
listed as drug traffickers, when in reality they were political prisoners, and that
they asserted this on the basis of direct personal acquaint” ce with those
indiv duals.
73. The official news agency, IRNA, reported that two persons had been executed in
the city of Zahedan on 17 June “for plotting against national security”. From
various sources, it has been po sib1e to draw up a list of some 1,700 individuals
possibly executed, either for ordinary offences or for political offences. The
sources include th family and friends of the victims and political opposition
groups of varying tendcncies, which agree that politicc 1 executions are
-22—
continuing. In a reply to Amnesty International, the Permanent Mission of the
Islamic Republ 4 c of Iran in New York stated the fo1lowing “Indeed, authorities o .
the Islamic Republic of Iran have always denied the existence of any political
executions. But that does not contradict other subsequent statements which have
confirmed that spies and terrorists have been executed.”
(b) Right to freedom from torture or cruel,. inhuman or degrading treatment or
punishment ,
74. According to the information received, a common form of torture continued to
be flogging with cables and sometimes barbed-wires. Allegedly, flogging usually
was applied to the sole of the foot and to the legs, and beating was usually
inflicted by several prison guards.
75. N',w methods of torture that left little or no trace on the body of the victims
were described. Among these were* lashing all over the body (in the long run the
scars tend to disappear), suspension from the ceiling, mock hangings, crowding of
rtiaoners in small rooms with high temperatures and insufficient oxygen. It was
reported that soms prisoners were burned by hot metal rods or by lighted cigarettes.
76. Another method of torture described was the refusal of medical treatment,
using the pain from illness to break the will of the prisoners. For instance,
prisoners with kidney malfunctions resulting from beatings were allegedly prevented
from going to toilets. Prison conditions were described as extremely poor, cells
as being small and deliberately overcrowded, and sanitary facilities were
reportedly kept to a minimum, leading to skin, gall-bladder and other diseases.
Medical assistance and medicine were also said to be insufticient and sometimes
withheld until it was too late to save the life of a prisoner. Political prisoners
were allegedly held together with common law prisoners and mental cases.
77. According to the allegations received, a typical process of torture would
start with lashes over the whole body, to be followed by mock hanging or suspension
from the ceiling. Detainees were said to be held “en masse” in small closed rooms
with high temperatures and in u fficient oxygen. While such practices were being
applied, the guards pressed the prisoners to repent and to appear on official
television confessing their guilt.
78. Alleged forms of psychological torture including watching or listening to
other prisoners being tortured, dissemination of false news about the death of
family members or threat of rape. Attempts to incite prisonerb to join in the
torture of other inmates were also reported.
(c) Information concerning the situation o . followers of the Baha'i faith
79. According to information received, together with the relevant details of
names, places and dates of execution, 197 Baha'is were executed and 15 disappeared
since 1979. As regards 1988, the execution has been reported of two individuals
about whom there is no doubt whatever that they were Baha'is: Bihnem Pasha'i, a
resident of Simnan, who had been imprisoned since 19 vember 1983 and whose family
was notified on 3 December 1988 of his execution i the Evin prisons nd
Iraj Afshin, arrested late in 1986, whose family learnt of his execution on
26 November 1988.
-23—
80. At the beginning of January 1989, thd international press published the report
that two army generals sentenced to prison seven years earlier, Ardeshir Ardeatani
and All Jalayer, were executed on the charge that they ware followers of the Baha'i
faith. According to the press reports, the two generals were executed
on 23 December 1988, together with 23 members of the People's Mojahedin
organization. The same cable announced the execution of Zohreh Ainalyagin,
aged 27, who had been a candidate of the Mojahedin for the Iranian Parliament
during the elections of 1980, had been sentenced to 17 jea ' imprisonment in 1981,
and was a member of the political opposition.
81. It has been estimated that in 1986 780 Baha'is rernzt.uie. in prison and that of
those about 200 had been relee sed on bail. In May 1989, reliable sources indicated
that only 14 Baha'is remained in prison. Five of them had been arrested recently.
82. Those Baha'is who were expelled from government posts in the early 1980s, heve
reached the age of retirement and have an acquired right under law to retirement
pensions, continue to be refused them. Nor have they been reinstated in their
posts, even when they are qualified to fill them. Ranchers and farmers who profess
the Baha'i faith continue to be denied admission to agricultural co-operatives.
83. On the other hand, in cert ain respects the situation of the Baha'is has
improved; for example, some s iops which had been closed have been returned to IIeir
former proprietors, and the latter have been permitted to operate them. These
reparation measures have been taken da facto , as IIe licances necessary for legal
operation of the shops have not been renewed. A few cases have been recorded of
other confiscated property being returned to its owners.
84. Baha'l community proper . .y remains confiscated. Recently, the Baha'is have
been permitted to bury their dead in cemeter 4 .es of their faith, which had been
c1o ed for a number of years. At prosent, fa Baha'i cemeteries remain closed.
85. Since 1988 many children and young people have been readniitted to primary and
secondary schools, but they continue to be denied access to the universities. All
Baha'ia are refused passports or permits to travel abroad.
86. The Ministry of Justice decree under which heirs must be officially certified
as such remains in force, and such certification is denied to Baha'is, who
consequently cannot take legal possession of their irtheritances.
87. The Special Representative has received a number of documents, duly signed and
sealed by officials of the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran, which
testify to the situation of the Baha'is. These docdments consist of •he
followlngt (a) a letter from tb Department of Cereals, informing the addressee, a
retired employee, that In accordance with a judicial order of 6 June 1987, he has
been accused of belonging to “one of the groups that have strayed frorn Islam”, that
is, of being “a member of the Saha'i spy group”; (b) an announcement by the
Department of Industry and Trade of Tebran stating that the Islamic Committee for
the supervision of the distribution of goods confirms that it has cancelled the
ration cards of two individuals because they are Baha'is; (c) a note from
Mr. Aarya-Kinar, Director of the Department of Communications of the Sabulsar
District, dated 7 November 1987 and addressed to the Department of Communications
of Nazindaran Province, which states that the refusal to connect a telephone is
because the individual making the request belongs to the Baha'i community;
(ci) notes from Departments of the Ministry of Justice attesting that, first, an
-24—
individual, who preferred that he remain anonymous in the report, had been granted
a retirement pension and thanking him for his services, and second, stating that
the individual had been deprived of his pension, in conformity with the decision of
the Telecommunications Committee, because “his adherence to the Baha'i faith has
been estab1iahed” and (e) order No. 3261 of the Governor of Rejej Province,
dated 2 May 1987, ordering the closing of the shop owned by an individual of the
Baha'i faith who requested anonymity, and warning him that any action taken against
the order would subject him to criminal 1iability
88. The Special Representative received a translation of an open letter signed by
students of th Montazevi lyc e addressed to their schoolmates of the Baha'i faith,
warning them, with threats, not to attend class. The text of the letter is
reproduced in annex IV.
89. The following information appeared in the Iranian press a sv.mmons dat•d
15 November 1988 addressed to Mra. Samadiyyih Musazadih Kuhnan, issued by the
Administrative Errors Investigatory Board summoning her to defend herself against
the charge that she had “relations with the misguided Baha'i sect.”; and a report
published the same day stating that Mr. Imamquli Shadiman had been dismissed from
his job because he was a Baha'i.
. —25—
IV. CO .Q4ENTS AND VIEWS OF THE GOVERNMENT OF THE ISLJAMIC
REPUBLIC OF IR?N
90. During the discussion in the Commission on Human Rights on the situation of
human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran, the Iranian representative submitted,
on 6 March 1989, comments and views which should be retained because of their
implications for the implementation of the mandate and, in particular, for the full
co-operation that has year after year been requested of the Government of the
Islamic Republic of Iran by the General Assembly and the Commission on Human Rights.
91. The representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran said on that occasion that
so far 2,000 persons had been granted amnesty and that the exact and definitive
figures for the number of persons amnestied on the occasion of the tenth
anniversary of the Revolution would be communicated to the Special Representative
and the Commission on Human Rignts. When he concluded the present interim report,
the Special Representative had not received the definitive figures for the number
of persons amnestied, which might be due to the fact that, according to information
received, the judicial records of some 900 persons still in prison are being
carefully studied.
92. With regard to the study of human rights and their consequent evaluation, the
representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran asked that the competent organs of
the United Nations should take into account the situation in the country and, in
particular, two factors of the utmost importance: the international war of eight
years' duration and the revolutionary process under harassment and threats from
terrorist and subversive groups. The representative of the Islamic Republic of
Iran repeated the co nplaint that selectivity, inspired by political 4 nterests, was
applied in the determination of the countries subjected to the sc” uttny of the
Commission on Human Rights or to confidential procedure 1503 and called for equal
treatment for all countries that might find themselves in similar situations with
regard to human rights.
93. The representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran said that it was absolutely
necessary to establish the responsibility of groups and orga ioetions which, acting
on their own account and separately from the Govarnment, or e . against the
Government, ‘-arried out activities and committed offences that comprised violations
of human rights and to hold them accountable for their acts. In his view, that
very important matter had not received appropriate consideration from the United
Nations. Once again, the Iranian comments rejected the impartiality and veracity
of one of the organizations submitting information on st pposed violations of human
rights. He argued that, in general, denunciations concerning violations of human
rights wore no more than mero allegations without proofs of any kind.
94. The representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran reiterated criticisms
voiced earlier of the text of the resolution of the Commission on Human Rights
containing the mandate of the Special Representative and the text of the draft
resolution extending that mandate, which was then to be put to the vote. He said
that those resolutions contained subjective criteria and lacked objectivity and
good will. He said, in particular, that, as on previous occasions, such
resolutions attempted to confer on groups a status that they did not really have.
That indirect language referred to the attribution of the status of religious
minority to the Baha'is. Those problems had prevented th Government of the
Is .amic Republic of Iran from co-operating fully with the Special Representative,
a .IIough that co-operation, while partial, had been on the increase.
—26-
95, The representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran recalled several times in
his statement the efforts made during the forty-third session of the General
? asembly to arrive at a consensus resolution that would facilitate the discharge of
the man Iata relating to human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran. Be then said
that those efforts had been very close to fruition but had broken down when the
elements of consensus had been at hands he added that the differences could only be
overcome through dialogue, understanding and mutual co-opeLation. The
representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran concluded tha.t part of his statement
with the following wordss ‘We remain ready and willing to co-operate and to
upgrade it in light of the consideration which I enumerated”.
96. The representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran also expressed the
readiness of his Government to proceed by way of dialogue, in the event that that
was acceptable to the countries sponsoring draft resolutions, and reiterated that
the Special Representative could play a role - which he qualified as mediation - in
obtaining an agreement between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the sponsors. He
said also that, in his view, the Special Representative had a good theoretical and
conceptual understanding of the proble ns underlying the differences that persisted
between both parties.
—27—
V. GENERAL OBSERVATIONS
97. During the period in question, the Special Representative continued to re ive
written and oral allegations of huiiian rights violations in Iran. Those allegations
came from Iranians who had recently fled their country, Iranian organizations based
abroad, including a militant on that utilizes armed force, press and .-adio
reports, generally Iranian or taken from Iranian publicity media, and
non—governmental organizations in consultative status with the United Nations
Economic and Social Council. During the period under consideration, the Special
Representative received testimony denying some of those allegations, such as t e
high number of executions and political arrests and ill-treatment and torture of
prisoners. Attention should be drawn to the diversity of the sources and the
particular attention accorded by the Special Representative to independent sources
and to reports from Iranian communication media.
98. The Special Representative has informed the Government of the Islamic Republic
of Iran of the testimony received. The Lilegations communicated relate to the
right to life, the right not to be subjected to torture or cruel, inhuman or
degrading treatment or punishment, the right to liberty and security of person. the
right to freedom of conscience and religion and the right to guarantees of an
objective and fair trial.
99. During the forty—fifth session of the Commission on Human Rights, the
representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran said that he had considerably
advanced the preparation of replies to the lists of persons condemned to death
accompanying the 1989 final report of the Special Representative, whose contents
had been communicated to him before its publication, and he added that 140 cases
had been investigated and no trace of the said persons had been found in the
registers of prisons, hospitals, courts and cemeteries, owing to which he
considered that those persons had died during the invasion of Iranian territory in
July 1988. The letter of 26 June 1989 from the Deputy Minister for International
Affairs also contains this information.
100. It will be necessary to wait (or the circumstantiated replies of the Iranian
Government in order to evaluate the contradictory information and proceAd to
investigation by the means available. Also outstanding are the replies, many times
promised, to allegations of violations of human rights and to the lists of persons
executed accompanying previous reports.
101. The information received by the Special Representative, both from witnessos
and from non-governmental ozganizations and other independent sources agreed in
affirming that ill—treatment and torture, both physical and psychological, were
continuing in Iranian prisons. According to the reports, it would seem that,
during the months of the current year, psychological torture has bean prevailing
over physical torture, with the aim of avoiding visible marks.
1.02. On the other hand, some of the witnesses heard, when relating their experience
in Iranian prisons, had stated that they had not been subjected to ill-treatment or
torture. In conformity with that testimony, some prisoners are apparently not so
badly off in some prisons, but, of course, this testimony does not invalidate that
of less fortunate persons, perhaps much more numerous, who were very badly treated
in those prisons. On the basis of the accounts and replies to questioning the
Special Representative is convinced that, in Iranian prisons, the treatment of
-28—
prisoners continues to be completely careless and is therefore left to the
initiatives of the guards and that the investigators use methods at variance with
humanitarian principles in order to extract confessions or information from
prisoners.
103. Reports continued to be received about the lack of procedural guarantees laid
down in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, such as the lack
of impartial proof of the legality of detention, statement of the charges
immediately following arrest, the services of a defence lawyer, the hearing of
defence witnesses, the lack of publicity of the trial, effective appeal and other
irreg%larities. Some of the testimony related to the accused appearing in court
blindfolded, and all the testimony agreed that the verdict was pronounced in a
question of minutes. It was also reiterated that persons who had completed prison
terms continued to be detained for extensive periods on the whim of prison
officials.
104. Reports were still being received about very distressing conditions for
prieoners, for example, overcrowding in small spaces, scarcity of food, highly
deficient and scant sanitary facilities and a lack of medicarnents and adequate and
timely medical treatment.
105. It should be noted that so far there is no information concerning any measure
taken by the Iraniezi authorities to introduce effective procedural guarantees,
eradicate ill-treatment and torture, improve living conditions in the prisons or
assign responsibility to those accused of committing abuses. Consequently, in
these matters, the situation continues to be the same as last year. .
106. With regard to allegations of violations of the right to freedom of thought,
conscience and religion and to freedom of expression, IIe Special Repre..ntative
received information on the situation of adherents of the Baha'i faith. According
to that information, the Baha.is are still being harassed for their faith.
Nevertheless, according to oral and written proofs received in recent month., that
harassment has decreased, and there have been some instances of rectification.
Fourteen are still in prison, and four were executed. Some hundreds who had been
kept in prison for some years have been released. In general, the Bahais are now
admitted to primary and secondary schools, but access to the universities continue
to be blocked. Some of their businesses have actually been reopened, with the
consent or the tolerance of the authorities, but others remained closed. Recently
they have been permitted to use their cemeteries, which had been forbidden to them
for years. On the other hand, the right to travel freely is still denied them. On
the whole, an improvement in the situation is noted, and it is to be hoped that the
Iranian Government will continue on that course to the point of making reparation
for all damages and will make harassment a chapter in history.
107. It should be noted that, according to official information, 2,500 political
prisoners were re1 ased on the occasion of the tenth anniversary of the Revolution
and that 900 remained in prison. The Special Representative announced that amnesty
in his final report to the Commis6ion on Human Rights. On that occasion, some
delegates told him privately that they had doubts 3bout that amnesty and feared
that it might be a question of propaganda. Recently, the Special Representative
has received assessments from armed opposition groups disputing the existence of
the amnesty end stating that, according to the investigations conducted by the
groups, none of the supposed amnestied person. have returned to their horn.. and
that they should therefore be numbered among the disappeared persons.
. —29-
108. While awaiting fresh information in particular the conclusion that may be
reached by the Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances, concerning
these latest presumed disappearances, the Special Representative presents his
personal consideration regarding the cnse on the baeis of the information available
to him. Lacking, of course, direct proofs, he nevertheless maintains his
conviction that an amnesty was decreed on the occasion of the tenth anniversary of
the Revolution. In that regard, he points out that the information media,
generally very zealous, have not categorically denied it but have even implicitly
confirmed it in their commentaries and that the same attitude has been adopted by
non-governmental organiz ations concerned with human rights; furthermore, some of
the witnesses who were heard were released during the period during which the
amnesty was operative, which suggests that they might b counted among the
beneficiaries of that measure of clemency.
109. Assuming the reality and effectiveness of the February 1989 amnesty, it might
be characterized as a step in the right direction towards the disappearance of
political arrests. It is to be hoped that'measures of clemency such as this may be
multiplied on future occasions and complemented by the upgrading of the criminal
laws and the moderate application of the death penalty, although the ideal would,
of course, be its total abolition in all countries of the world.
110. The information emanating from various sources, including Iranian sources, end
to some degree corroborated by official statements, confirmed that politically
motivated mass executions took place in the second quarter of 1988 end that among
those executed were prisoners who were serving sentences, including some whose
sentences were about to be concluded in a few days and others who had been
recaptured. The international communication media and organizations that monitor
human rights agreed that those executions were the culmination of very summary
judicial proceedings, whore there had been any, and that they lacked the procedural
guarantees instituted in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
111. During the past months of 1989, politically motivated executions were also
reported. New information has supplemented the lists of executed persons of the
previous years. Or. the other hand, the Iranian written press and the official news
agency, IRNAI have announced the dramatic increase in the number of executions for
ordinary offences and, in particular, for the offence ot drug trafficking. In
addition, allegations have been received according to which many or some of those
executions were political executions disguised with the aim of avoiding the
negative reaction of international opinion. Those allegations, which are extremely
sensitive, merit balanced and prudent examination, and, consequently, the Special
Representative proposes to continue this investigation through the means available
to him.
112. With regard to the mandatory death sentence for drug traffickers, some
comments are called for. Drug traffickers do not enjoy the slightest sympathy in
any country of the world, because they embody and promote one of the worst scourges
of the human race in these closing years of twentieth century. Their actions are
condemnable from every point of view, but this does not mean that they should not
enjoy guaranteea of a fair criminal trial and be recognized as entitled to inherent
rights, just like other human beings.
113. According to reports disseminated by the international press, the Government
of the Islamic Republic of Iran, through a law promulgated on 21 January 1989, made
possession of specific quantities of d:ugs - more than 5 kilograms of hashish or
-30-
opium or more than 30 grams of heroin, codeine, methadone or morphine - an offence
punishable by death, without eiiy alternative penalty or coneideration of
exonerating, extenuating or aggravating circumstances. Possession of quantities
less then those stated is not punishable. Consumers must give up the habit in six
months; otherwise, they will be taken to re-education camps or health clinics. The
setting of the mandatory death penalty for mere possession of specific quantities
of drugs may give rise to confusion between consumer and trafficker, the one
requiring assistance and the other deserving some kind of punishment, although not
necessarily death. Possession of a gram of a hard drug may make the difference
between being sent to a health clinic or to the gallows 30 grams might indicate a
consumer, while 31 grams could mean the gallows for the possessor, on II. legal
presumption, without admitting any proof to the contrary, that he is a drug
trafficker.
114. Possession bf drugs, even in smaller quantities than those indicated, might be
a sign or complementary proof of drug trafficking, but this isolated fact does not
necessarily prove that that is so. Possession of drugs should be combined with
oIIer evidence to constitute a proof of the existence of the offence of drug
trafficking. In this case, the sole fact of possessing a specific quantity of
drugs is sufficient for proof of the offence. It should be pointed out that, in
the past, extreme severity in the treatment of common criminals has never lad to
the eradication of the offence, because that severity attacked the effects of the
problem but left its underlying causes intact.
115. According to reports, drug traffickers are tried by emergency courts,
constituted by a judge, a prosecutor and an intelligence officer, and in this court
the intelligence officer prevails, when the judge should prevail. However odious
the offence and however necessary it may be for a country to declare an open war on
drugs, there is no exemption from observance of procedural guarantees. OEe speed
of the proceedings, arranged for by means of two circulars distributed to all the
courts and other authorities, ensures that the cases can be closed in three, four
or five days and that a maximum interval of 10 days elapses between commission of
the offence and the punishment. Official statements from high judicial authorities
have announced that of fences are being punished within the above-mentioned limits;
and the time-limits are so short that they do not allow for the defence to be
prepared or for applications for review or appeal or application for pardon to be
made. The risks involved in extremely summary proceedings and the absence of
guarantees of a fair trial are illustrated by the case of possible judicial error
which has been mentioned. All this points towards the recommendation that trial of
the offence of drug trafficking be taken from the emergency courts and handed over
to regular courts and that professional judges should be entrusted with full
responsibility for the application of procedural guarantees ensuring a fair trial.
116. During the period under consideration, the theme of terrorism has been
raised. Pive of the witnesses examined, among them two veteran militants of the
People's ?4ojehedin organization, accused that organization of terrorism. Three
witnesses affirmed that the above-mentioned grouping had claimed responsibility, in
its own publications and on its radio, for the death of members of their families.
117. The same accusation has been made by representatives of the Government of the
Islamic Republic of Iran in international forums, most recently in the statement of
the Iranian representative on 6 March 1989 before the Commission on Human Rights.
Just as the deposition of witnesses is not to be discounted because of the
political position of the organization promoting their appearance, nor can the
—31—
testimony of those who have appeared through the offices of the Government of the
Islamic Republic of Ir'' be rejected, because it is not a question of statements by
one or other of the in ested parties but of individuals relating their personal
experience.
118. Terrorism committed by one of the parties to a civil or international dispute
never legitimates the terrorism with which the other party may respond. Fighting
terrorism with terror has been the erroiieous excuse that has caused indescribable
suffering to persons who have nothing to do with the events. In the long term, the
results have almost always turned against the promoters, because they are
profoundly injuring the feeling of natural piety and natural benevolence towards
other human beings and the ethical and religious ideas that constitute the
deep-lying root of various cultures.
119. The Special Representative has 3tated in previous reports that terrorism is to
be condemned, in all its forms and independently of its origin and motivations,
whether State terrorism or insurrectionist terrorism, because it is in itself a
brutal assault on the fundamental rights of persons. Anti-governmental groups that
use terrorism in order to obtain their political ends incur criminal responsibility
and violate well established end widely recognized norms relating to the protection
of human life and the integrity of persons. Terrorism is inconsistent with the
prevailing international crder. L.ife and liberty are ethical .. nd juridical assets
that are above considerations of party and factional interests, as well as
interstate rivalry and po)l.Pical power struggles. Human rights philosophy does not
ignore questions of internal and external security, because it is based,
inter qua , on the security associated with the state of law, conceived,
constructed and ensured through compliance with human rights norms.
120. Human rights, because of their inherent character and fundamental status have
been recognized as the key element of the modern State and of government by
consent, which, in turn, is the sole title to legitimacy of the command-obedience
binomium. Human rights therefore remain integral in extreme emergencies, even in
those that endanger the existence of the nation itself, and admit only of the
restrictions expressly laid down in the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights. Nor can the condemnable practices of terrorism be legitimately
countered with violations of human rights, on the pretext of State security or
stability of the Government. Moreover, it is precisely in emergency situations,
even acute emergencies, that adherence to human rights and their careful and
constant application is most necessary. In those situations, human rights reveal
their grandeur, their unique role in contemporary societies and their superiority
over politicist theories. Of coursa, the easy life consisting of abandonment or
neglect, laissez-faire and laissez-aller in human rights matters appears the
expeditious and immediately effective way to establish security of State and
Government, but the difficult way is much more constructive and, in the medium and
the long term bears better fruit, including well consolidated stability and
security.
121. According to all the information, including official information, the
executions of drug traffickers have been carried out through the hangJng in public
places, in various cities on the same day and in groups, of tens or scores of men
and women. This mass implementation of the death penalty, in public and in various
cities at the same time, has negative repercussions on the feeling of personal
security of individuals and might drastically inhibit their expressions of the
exercise of such important rights as freedom of expression, freedom of associat'.on
—32—
: , . .. N. . “ .. , . .‘. WNNN ,..t J, . .tmL .,.-,tA'. ,.a . ,N , ,I
and political rights in general. The Iranian Government might consider these
possible effects with a view to iectifying, to the extent that might appear
prudent, the modalities currently accompanying the execution of drug traffickers
and other common criminals.
122. Although the state of full co-operation has not yet been attained during the
period under consideration, in spite of the reiterated calls of the United Nations
General Assembly and the Commission on Human Rights,, the Government of Iran has
continued to indicate that it is prepared gradually to increase its co-operation
: with the Representative. Full co-operation, which would include in situ
investigation of the human rights situation, has continued to be one of the
short-term goals, but official objections to the language used in the resolutions
annually extandi g the mandate of the Special Representative have been maintained.
123. During the forty-third session of the Genera2 Assembly, negotiations were
conducted with a view to obtaining a consensus resolution and, at the same time,
guaranteeing full Iranian co-operation, including an invitation to the Special
Representative to visit the c.ountry and conduct investigations on the spot. After
extensive negotiations and advances in rapprochement between the positions of the
Iranian Government and the sponsors of the corresponding draft resolution, it was
finally not possible to reach consensus. During the forty-fifth session of the
Commission on Human Rights, thut effort was not repeated.
124. The Special Representative wishes to place on record the fact that he has
maintained personal and written contact with Iranian representatives and that he
has encountered a readiness to clarify outstanding issues, discuss opposing points
of view zir.d examine the most thorny questions in friendly terms. The personal
relations may be described as good, without prejudice to keen discussions end rough
moments, which are inevitable in such a sensitive dialogue, which needs to be
conducted in all frankness and with all the cards on the table.
125. Accordingly, it would be appropriate to make fresh appeals to the Iranian
Government to extend full co-operation to the Special Representative, including a
visit to the country. The countries directly involv ed in this might also decide
whether to repeat efforts to obtain some kind of settlement that, while not
diminishing the protection of human rights and compliance with international pacts
and declarations, might offer a mutually acceptable base for proceeding to another
stage in the developmrnt of the mandate.
‘126. The information reccived, both from official sources and from opposition
sources and independent sources do not contain elements that would, for the m..ient,
allow modification of the conclusions at which the Special Representative has
arrived in his earlier reports, particularly in his 1988 interim report to the
General Assembly and his final rEport for the current ‘ear to the Commission on
Human Rights. The Special Representative maintains his conviction that acts are
being commitLed in Iran that are incompatible with international human rigflts
instruments that are binding on the Iranian Government.
127. Consequently, the Special Representative cunsiders that the recommendations
remain current and pertinent which he submitted to the Commission on Human Rights,
in particular those relating to requesting the Government of Iran to consider, as a
matter of urgency, extending its full co-operation and to adopt effective measures
on the following matters: (a) full co-operation with the Special Representative,
including a visit to the country to investigate in situ the allegations submitted,
_33 .
(b) scrupulous investigacion of all the allegations on possible human rights
violations that have been brought to its kno iledge' since the Commission on Human
Rights established the mandate of the Special Representative in 1984, and a
circumstantiated reply on the result of those investigations to the Special
Representative, so that he can take it into account in the preparation of his final
reports; (c) legislative and administrative'' steps to ensure fair trials;
(d)' substantial reduction of the number of executions, thus complying with the text
and the intention of the international Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
while avoiding, at the same time, carrying out those executions in such a way that
might be regarded as intimidating; (e) total elimination of ill-treatment and
physical and psychological torture”during interrogations, pre-trial detention and
punitive detention; (f) crediting prisoners with the time spent in pre-trial
detention so as to reduce the term of punitive detention; (g) a substantial
improvement in the prison r gime by the provision of minimal hygiene conditions and
adequate food, medicaments and medical care for' prisoners, and permitting ‘them
family vjsj-ts. On the other hand, close attention should be given to considering
and investigating the allegations that political prisoners have' been executed on
charges of drug trafficking.
128. As a primary action decisive for: the whole ‘process of full enjoyment of human
rights, it seems appropriate to have a political ‘pronouncement adopted at the
highest level, proclaiming a global policy ‘ f compliance with international human
rights instruments, followed by w penal norms, principally norms that empower
judges to adapt penalties to the particular circumstances of each case, and
accompanied by concrete measures relating' to' investigation, supervision and
responsibility at the administrative level. ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘
129. ‘In conclusion, it should be pointed out that the basic framework with'regard
to human rights has not changed. :OEe Special Representative maintains his
conviction that the persistence of acts inconsistent with the international
instruments in force justifies both international concern and study and constant
vigilance by the United Nations General Assembly' and- the Commission on Human Rights.
—34-
APPENDIX I
Names and particulars of persons allegedly executed in
the Islamic Republic of Iran in the second half of
1988 and the beginning of 1989. supplementary to the
list contained in document E/CN.t./l989/25; list
provided by non-governmental sources
Name Forename Date
ABBASI 1.89 Tohran
ABBASI 11. 1.88 Shiraz
ABBASSIAN Behrooz 10.88 Ahwaz
ABDI Esfandiyar (Majid) .‘.88 Tehran
ABDI Foroozan 9.88 Tehran
AEDI Ghanbar 1988 Lahijan
ABDI Hossein 11.88
ABDOL-HOSSEINI . kbar 9.88 Tehran
ABDOL-HOSSEINI Morteza 9.88 Tehran
ABDOLEOSSEINI Gholam-Hossein 11.88 Karaj (Gohardasht
Prison)
ABDOLLABI Mirfattah 11.88 Teliran
ABDOLVAHAB Hossein 11.21.88 Karaj
kBEDI Hassan 9.88 Tehran
ABEDINI Abbass 9.88 Tehran
ABEDINI Monir 9.88 Tehran
ADEL I 9.88 Babolsar
ADI-SHEERIN Au 9.88 Ardebil
ADIB Mabmood 9.88 Mashad
ADIBI Siroos 11.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
AFGHAN Abbass 9.88 Karaj
AFGHANI Hossein 12.88 Tehran
AFRAVI Naji 2.89 Ardebil
AFRAZEH Abbass 1988 Lahijan
AFSALI Esmaeil 9.88 Tehran
AFSARI Hamid 1.89 Babol
APSARI Mohammad 10.88 Amol
AFSHAR 12.88 Isfahan
-AFSRAR 12.88 Karaj
AF SRAR Akbar 10.88 Ahwaz
AFSHAR Parviz 11.27.88 Tehran
AFSHARKANDI Rasou]. 11.88 Orumieh
AFSHARLU Ahmad 10.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
AGA-NOOR Shahnaz 9.88 Tehran
AGAH 11.88 Mashad
AGHAYAN Abciolvahab 12.88 Larestan
AGHAYAN Amir 1.89 Shahrood
AGHILI Hainid 11.88 Tehran
AGHVAMI Maliheh 1.99 Tehran (Evin Prison)
AGHVAMIPANAB Mohammad-Reza 11. 6.88 ICaraj
AHANG Saied 11.88 Tehran
AEMAD-NEJAD Farshid 9.88
AIOE4 ADI 12.88 Tehran
-.1— :
Place
?JNADI bdo11ah 1988 Buehehr
AEMADI Abmad 1.89 Garmiar
AJfl4ADI Ashraf 2.11.88 Tehran
AID4ADI Aai.h 9.88 T.hran
ABMADI ?arah-Naa 9.88 Isfa) an
ABMADI Fariba 8. 6.88 Zefahan
AIOEtADI Hassan 3.89 Tehran (Evin Priso )
Aa4ADI Hushang 11.88 Hamedan
ABMADI Mansur 9.88 Shires
A 4ADI Mohammed 8. 6.88 lefahan
AIfl4ADI Mohammed 1.89 Mashed
ABMADI Mohammed Raze 11.88 Garmear
AIfl4ADI S.yyed 3.89 Tehran (Evin Prison)
?JC4ADIAN Mahin 9.88 Tehren
A 4ADIAN MOGHADDAS Ahmad 10 • 88 Ahwaz
?JOEIADPUR 9.88 Isfahan
Am4ADPUR 9.88 lefahan
AIU4ADZADEH 9.88 Reeht
AJDAB-AFSHAR ghar 9.88 T.hran
AZBARI F.izo l lah 12.88 Gorgan
AKBARI-MONFARED Roghiyeh 9.88 T.hran
ARBARIAN FeLor 1988
ARRAMI-FARSI 2.89 Tabran
ARZIA Mine 10.88 T.hran (Evin Prison)
AL-ES'HAQ MeI di 2.89 Qom
AL-t .AMEH Fazilat 9.88 Tehran
ALA'EDDINI Masoud 11.88 Shires
ALAk. ARI Bivas 9.88 Tehran
ALAVI TAFRESHI Af shin 1.20.89 Xaraj
ALl MORADI Behrooz 11.88 Sanandeg
ALI-BEIX A li-kkb er 7.27.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
ALl-POOR Hamid 1.89 Lahijan
ALt -ZADEH Mahmoo d 9.88 Tehran
ALIARBARIAN Majid 11.88 Mashed (Vakilabed
Prison)
ALIDOOST Raze 1988 Lahijan
ALIREZANIA 12.11.88 Tehran
ALIZADEH Ghasem 11.88 Orumieh
ALIZAGHII Zia 11.88 Tahran
ALLAN-POOR Hossein 10.88 Karaj (Gohardasht
Prison)
ALLAEIARI Majid 1.89 Ahwaz
ALLAMEH 11.88 Sernnan
ALLAMEH Fazilat 9.88 Tehran
AMADPUR 9.88 lefahan
AMIN Masoud 11.88 Tehran
M4IN Raze 11.88 Tehran
AMINI Khos ow 8.88 Raraj (Gohardaeht
(Prison)
AMINIAN Alireza 9.88 Mashed
AMIRI 9.88 Mashed
AZ4IRI 1988
—2—
Date
Place
AZ4IRI
AI4IRI
AMJADITOOSI
AMOOZGAR
AMRI
ANNOSNE-SARIXANI
ANOOSHEX
ANSARI
AQVA I PANAN
ARAB VAZIRIFAR
ARAB I
MARTEN
ARDAXANI
ARDESHIRI
ARDESHIRI
ARDE SHIRZADEH
ARDESTANI
ARIAN
ARJMAND
ARJMANDI
ARJMANDI
ARMIN
ARSHADI
AR SHAD I
ARZHANGI
ASSAIl
ASGAR-KNANI
ASGAR-SHAI II
SGARI
ASGAI I
ASGARI
ASGARI
ASGAUHANX
ASGHAR-ZADEH
ASOHARI
ASOHARIPOUR
ASHOURI
ASHRAFZADEGAN
ASHTARI
ASHT IAN I
ASOOPA
ASSADI
AS S AD I
ASSADI
ASSADI-ZADEH
ASSADPOUR
ASSGARI
ATARI
ATARI
ATARI
ATARI TEHRANI
ATI OHER-CHI
Jahanbakhsh
Parvin
KhoaroI7
AlL
Mojteb
Mohi nm ad
Mohainmad
AlL
Moha nmad Reza
Alireza
Bahman
Majid
Jafar
Shahran%
M•hrdad
Mabmood
Akbar
Mahrnood
Jamal
Javad
Abo ighasem
Ahmad
Majid
Zahra
Ahmad
Mohemma d-R.sa
Shahia
Modjtaba
Mahmood
Siroos
Mohammad
Seyyed Hassan
Mehrdad
Jafar
AlL
Mahmood
Nader
Jalal
Siroos
Hossein
Mebdi
Moha1Tm ad
Iambic
Kamal
12. 688
9 • 88
10.88
12.29 .88
9.88
8. 5.88
12.88
9.88
11. 6.88
9 • 88
1.89
1.89
9.88
11.88
11.88
1 • 89
9.88
11.88
1.89
9188
11.88
9.88
9.88
9 • 88
9.88
9.88
9.88
11. 17 • 88
9.88
11.88
10.88
9 • 88
9,88
11.88
9,88
9 • 88
9.88
9.88
10.88
9.88
11.88
12.88
11.88
11.88
11.88
11.88
9.88
9 • 88
9.88
11.88
1.89
11.25.88
Karaj
Karaj
Tehran
Shiras
Arak
Daiful
Ahwaa
Tehran
Aaraj
Semnan
Garmsar
Shiras
Tehrar
Kas.roon
Xa..roozt
Shiras
Tebran
Tebran
Shiras
Qaivin
Rasht
T.hran
Zanjan
Zanj an
Karaj
Des ful
T.hran
Tehran
Karaj
Tehran
Tahran
Tshran
Tihran
Ansal i
1sf alien
Gorgan
Shabrood
Rasht
Karaj
Tehran
Mashed
1sf alien
Tabris
Tsh ran
1sf alien
Tehran
Tehran
Tehran
Tehran
Zanj an
(Evin Prison)
(Evin Prison)
(Evin Prison)
(Evin Prison)
—3—
1
Forename Dpte Place
ATRAK Farha 8.88 Tahran (Evin Prison)
ATRAK Farrokh-Zad 8.88 Isfahan
ATTARI Au 1988
ATTARI Shahrbanoo 9.88 Te)iran
AVAZ-ZADEH 1.89 Ganaveh
SHIRAZI (Fatimeh)
AZAD Rahim 3.89 Babol (Guards
Prison)
AZADEB Hassan 11.88 Tehran
AZADIKHAH Rahim 8.88 Homayounshah
AZARASH GRORGANI AlL 9.88 Tehran
AZAflI Davood 9.88 Tehran
AZIMI Hamdam 10.88 Tehran
AZIMI Hoj jet 9.88 Te ran (Evin Prison)
AZIZ-ZADEH MALEKI Shahpour 10.88 Tabriz
AZIZI Ashraf 9.88 Tebran
AZIZI Davar 11.88 Ardebil
AZIZI Ebrahim 11.83 Boroojerd
AZIZI Robebeh 9.88 Tabria
AZIZI Yavar 9.88 Tabris
AZIZSALES Kha li l 9.88 Orumieh
AZMUDEH LEKAZ4I Fakhri 12.88 Rasht
BABAEI 11.11.88 Abhar
BABAEI Mostaf a 10.11.88 Tehran
BABELABI Parviz 12.88 Tehran
BABRI Abri 9.88 Anza li
BAGHERI Arnel 10.88 Tehran
BAGHERI Mehrdad 12.88 Ahwaz
BAGHERI Siroos 11.88
BAGHERIFARD Bagher 10.88 Lahijan
BAGHIAN TOOSI Mobsen 9.88 Mashed
BAHADOR Akram 1988 Tehran
BAHADORI GHASRGHAEI Morad 9.88 Tehran
EAHMANX Hamid 11.88 Teh an
BANRAMI Fereydoon 11.88 Tehran
BAERAMI Kurosh 9.88 Karaj
BANRAMI Mohammad Amir 1.89 Tehran
BAHRAMI Zahra 11.88 Tehran
BAERAMI FARID Mohsen 12. 4.88 Rasht
BABRAMI-HEIDAJI Darioush 9.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
BAHRKAZEMI 1988 Lahijan
BA}IROLOLOOM Ef fat 9.88 Shiraz
BAKHSHAEI Mahmood 12.88 Tehran
BAKHSHAII Nasro l lah 11.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
BAKHSHANDEH Davood 12.88 Tehran
BAKHSHI Hossein 9.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
BAKHSHI TARI Hamid Raza 11.88 Tehran
BAKH SHIAVI Jalil 11.88 Dezfu l
BAKHSHIZADEH 10.88 Gorgan
BAZ4QNIRI Abdol—Sattar 9.88 Isfahan
BANDAR Hamid 11.88 Tehran
BANDI 11.88 Semnan
—4—
Fe rename
BANI AMERIAN Real 9.88 Xaraj
BARADkRAN-MOQADDAZ4 Ali-kaghar 12 • 88 Mambad
BARkRX Rasoul 9.88 Mashad
BARZAXIPOOR Majid 11.88 Lahijan
BARZEGAR 9.8 Shiras
BATENI Mabmood 1988 Rasht
BAVAR Mi 11.88 Lahijan
SAZYARPOUR Abbas 10.83 Boraujan
BAZOERPOUR azam 10.88 Boraijan
BAZYARPOUR Maeoomeh 10.88 Boraijan
BEHESHTI-TAYAR Ht*rieh 10.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
BEHNIK Macsan 9.88 Mashad
BEHRANGI Abdo l lah 11.88 T.hran
BEHZADI Macsan 9.88 Hashtpar
BEHZADI Mo ctaf a 8. 5.88 Dieful
BEIK-MOHAk'24).DX Mohammad Reza 9.88 Tihran
BIABANGARD Habib 11.88 T.hran
BIDOKHTI Hoas•in 12.88 Tshran
BXGHAM Amir Mihran 9. 2.88 T.hran
BIGLARI Eamasil 11.88 T•hran
BIGLARI Mehrdad 11.88 Lahijan
BIHANTA-TOOSI Mohemmad 11.88 Machad
BITARAFAN M.hdi 1.15.89 Ohom
BOEHARAZI Makhsoos 8.88 T•hran
BOLBOLIAN Roahan 12. 4.88 T.hran (Evin Prison)
BOOINI Kameran 11.88 T.hran
BOOINI Kiomars 11.88 Tshran
BOORBOOR Kha li l 12.88 S.mnan
BORHANI S.yyed Abmad 11.88 Qasvin
BORHANI Seyyed Mohammed 11.88 Qaivin
Ho ace in
BORJ-ALI Yusief 11.88 Tehran
BOROOJERDI Ehoarow 9.88 T.hran
BORZ- ABADI 9.88 Tshran (Evin Prison)
BORZA BADI-FARAHANI Mortise 12.88 Arak
CHAHARROOSTA 11.88 Shiras
CHAMANI Behzad 11.88 Rasht
CHAR-ROOSTAIl 1988 Ahwas
CHEHR-AZAD Mohammed 9 • 88 Tihran
DADGAR Majid 10.20.88
DADGAR Masaoumeh 10.20.88
DADSETAN Zari 9.88 Raaht
DAXNAMA Afagh 11.88 Tebran
DAKNAMA Majid 11.88 Shires
DM..XRI Maryam 11.88 Rasht
DAMGHANIAN Hassan 9.88 Machad
DANABIFARD Mohammed Ebrahim 9.88 Semnan
D)NESH Khosrow 9.88 Rasht
DANIALI Soheyl 11.88 Tehran
DARABI Hamid 10.88 T.hran
DARABI Mansareh 9.88 Bor jerd
—5-
Foransii e Place
DARABI Mansoor 10.88 Borujerd
DARABI Moh en 10.08 Sorujerd
DARABI Raze 10.88 Borujerd
DARABI Sasen 9.88 Borujerd
DAR)AZINI Huesein 10.88
DARVI Rashid 9.88 Tehran
DARVISHVAND Mohammad 1988 Masjed Soleiman
DARYARI Mehdi 9.88 Fassa
DASETAXI Changis 8. 5.88 Deaful
DASHTI Fariba 9.88 Tehran
DASRTISABERI A u 9.8& Tehran
DASTIAN Akbar 11.88 Amol
DAVOODI Gho lam 9.88 Zanjan
DAVOODPOOR Mohaen 9.88 Orumieh
DEHGHANZADEH Mahrnood 10.88 Ahwaz
DELAVAR 9.88 Gonbad
DELAVARI Gholam Raze 11.88 Semnan
DELKASH Faramars 9.88 Karaj
DERAKHSHANI-NXA Mehri 11.88 Tehran
DEZYAkII Mohammed Hossein 9.88 Shahrood
DXBAEI Reze 11.10.88 Rasht
DINAVAND Rahim 1988 DEzfu l
DOLATSHAEI 11.88
EBADI Mahmood 12. 9.88 Tehran
EBRANIMI Asgher 11.88
EBRAHIMI Jaafar 11.23.88
EBRAHIMI Karim 1988 Tehran
EBRAHIMI Nasser 1988 Tehran
EBRAHIMIAN Hadi 9.88 Shahrood
EFTEKHARI Masoud 12.88 Tehran
EGHEALI NAMIN Mehr&n 9.88 Tehren
EHTERAMX Seyyed Mahdi 10.88 Ahwaz
EIDZPOOR 1.89 Ganaveh
BIDIPOUR 11.88 Shires
EKUTIARI 11.88 Kerend
EMAMI Hedayatoi lah 1.89 Abhar
EMAMI Nasro ll eh 1.89 Abhar
ENSI Sadigheh 9.88 Tehran
ESFANDIARI-NOORI Farshad 9.88 Tehran
ESHOHI 8.88 Ahwaz
ESKANDARI Gholam Hossein 1988
ESKANDARI Mahmood 11.88 Tehran
ESKANDARI Mohammed 3.89 Karaj (Ghezelhesar
Prison)
ESLAMBUL-CHI Hamid 1.89 Mashed
ESLAMI 9.88
ESLAMI Farah 11.88 11am
ESL.A141 Maryam 3.89 Mashad (Vakilabad
Prison)
ESLAMI Mehran 1. 9.88 Karaj
ESMAEILI Effat 11.88 Tehran
—6—
F renaine Date
ESMAKILI Fatemeh 6. 8.88 lafehen
ESMAEILI Zraj 8.88 Tehran
ESMAEILI Parvaneh 6. 8.88 lifahan
ESMAEXLI Saber 9.88 Tehran
ESMAEILI-POUR Ef fat 9.88 Tehran
ESMAEILIAN 12.88 1sf ahan
ESNA-ASHARI 9.88 Tehran
ESNA-ASHARI Tehran
EVAZI-ALAMDARI A u 9.08 Tehran
EVAZX-ALAMDARX Faremars 9.88 Tehran
FAICHARZADER Au 11.88 Machad
TAXRRI Nader 11.88
FALLAHI 11.88 Ke manehah
FANI Mohamrn d 9.88 Maah d
FARAMARZI Mehrdad 9.88 Tehran
FARAMARZX Nahid 1.10.89 flandaca.bbasa
FARDIPOOR Parvin 1988 Maa .d Soleiman
FARHADI Babram 1988 Raeht
FARHMII 1.89
FARIAD-ABADI Hassan 9.88 Tabris
FARIDAN 1988 Ahwaz
FARIDAN ESFAHANI Sadegh 11.88 Ahwaz
FARIDANI 12.88 Ahwaz
?ARJAD 12.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
FARSX Hassan 11.88 T.hran
FARSI Kacem 9.88 Machad
FARZANEH-SANI Mehrdad 11.88 T.hran (Evin Prison)
FATEHALI-ASHTIANI Sadri 11.88 T.hran
FATEMI M hsen 11.88 Sav.h
FATEMI Mohsen 11.88 Saveh
FATHI Ah ad 11.88 Semnan
FATRI-KUYEHKI yasir 11.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
FATTAHIAN Soheyla 9.88 Tehran
FAZL ALI Hoasain 11.88 Tehran
FAZLI Alireza 11.88 T.hrau
FAZE.II Hassan 11.88 Zanjan
FAZLI Mahoeood 11.88 Tehran
. FEIZ-ABADI Gholam Macsan 11.88 Tehran
FEIZ-ABADI Gholam Hossein 11.88 Tehran
FEREYDOONI Mehdi 11.88 Karaj (Gohardasht
Prison)
FEYZI Bahran 9.88 Tehran
FIROOZMAND Gho larn 11.88
FIROUZI Mahtab 9.88 Tehran
FOOLADI 11.88 Tehran
FOOLADI Hadi 10 • 88 R8aht
FOROOZAN 10.11.88 Rasht
FORSAT Mohammed Javad 11.88 Shiras
GALLEH-DAR 12.88 Khorram Abad
GANJIKHANI Behrooz 9.88 Tehran
GARABI Moheen 9.88 Machad
GERAMI Ramezan 12.88 lafahan
—7—
Name Forename Date Place
GHADAI4I Hooahaug 12.88 Amol
GHAFURI 11.88 Ghaemsh hr
GHAFFARZADEGAN Davar 11.88 Ardebil
CHAFOORI Hassan (Mohsen) 9.88 Mashad
QH .HREMANI Ayyoub 2.89 Tehran
OHALAVAND Hojat-O l lah 9.88 Desful
OHALAVAND Hojjat 8. 5.88 Desful
OHALAVAND Mohammad Reza 8. 5.88 Dezfu l
OHALAVAND Soghra 8. 5.88 Dezfu l
OHALAVAND Yahya 8.88 Ahwaz
OHALEHEX 9.88 Tehran
GEALEHE I 9.88 Tehran
OHANBARI Taher 9.88 Tehran
GHANBARI Teymoor 1988 Massed Soleiman
GHANDHARI-ALAVIJEH Manuchehr 11.88 Tehran
OHANE TABRIZI Nader 1988
GHANEI Hassan 11.88 Rasht
OHANIMATI-OL-KARIZI Hojtaba 10.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
GHANNADI Saeid Mohammad 11.88 Rasht
GHARAEI Hamid 9.88 Mashed
GHAEAEI Mehdi 9.88 Mashed
GRASEMI 2.89 Shires
GHASHGHAEI Morad 11.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
OHASHGHAEIAN Asghar 11.88 Tehran
GHASHGHAEIAN Reza 11.88 Tehran
GHASSEMI 12.88 Tehran
GHASSEMI-SIiOKRIAZI Salman 10.30.88 Tabriz
GHAVAZ4I Moheen 9.88 Lahijan
GHX OOR NMAFABJIDI Ebrahim 8.88 1sf ahan
GHAZANFARPOOR MOGHADDAM Alireza 2. 8.89 Karaj (Gohardasht
Prison)
GHAZNAVI Katayoon 9.88 Tehran
GHAZVINI Hossein 9.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
GHIAMX 1988 Ahwaz
GHOBAD-POUR Marziyeh 9.88 Tehran
OHOBADRAR Manuchehr 9.88 Tehran
OHODSINIA Simm 9.88 Tehran
OHOLAMI Ahamd 9.88 Ghaemshahr
GHOLAMI Au Asghar 8.88 Mashad
GHOLAMI Hojjatol lah 9.88 Tehran
GHOLAMX Mohammad 9.88 Tehran
OHOLAMI Parvin 9.88 Oruznieh
GHOLI-POOR Shaban 11.88 Hamedan
GHOMIAN Behrooz 9.88 Tehran
GRORAYSHI Masiha 12.88 Zanjan
GHORHANI Ahmad 11. 3.88 Orumieh
GUORBANI Mahin 9.88 Tehran
GHORBANI Senobar 9.88 Tehran
GHOREISHI Abolfazi. 11.88 Semnan
GROREISHI Jalal 9.88
GO}IARNIA Farideh 9.88 Karaj
GOLCHINI 9.88 Anzali
—8—
Nsrne
GOLESTANI Xwnal 9.88 Shiras
GOLPAYEGANI Hassan 1.89 Garmsar
G OLZADEH-GHAFOORI Hadi 11.88 T.hran
GOLZADEH-GHAFOORX Hossein 8.88 Tehran
GOLZADEH-GH AFOORX HarLem 12.88 Tshran
000DARZX Hassan 11.88
GOODARZX Ma id 12.88
000DARZX Hinoo 1.21.89 F& lian
GOODARZI Minu 11.23.88 Shires
GOODARZI Ni na 11.88
000DARZI Parvis 9.88 Hsm.d .an
GOODARZX Shehbas 11.23.88 Shires
GORGIN Yu sssf 11.88 Tshran
GORJI 9.88
GOVARAI'I Au 1.89 Qasvin
HABIBI Ebrahim 9.88 T•hran
HADI-POOR Seyy.d Hemid 9.88 Ahwai
MABE l Parvin 9.88 T•hran
HAGHANI Hoessin 11.88 Lahijan
HAGIIIGHAT Mohammed 11.88 Tabnis
HAGHIGHAT TALkS Taher 9.8 T.hran
HAGHIOHI Roghieh 1.8 l T.hran
HAGHIGHI Shahin 1988 Rasht
HAGHIGHI FARD Mohammed 9.88 T.hran
HAGHIGHIAN ROODSARI 11.88 T.hran
HAGHIGHIAN ROODSARI Au Naghi 11.16.88 Rasht
HAJ AKBARI Soh.i la 9.88 T.hran
HAJ-AGHAII Ghaasem 10.88 Xaraj (Gohardasht
Prison)
R AJ-MOHA*IADI Zohreh 9.88 Tshran
HAJI NEJAD All 12.88 Karaj
HAJIA-NEJAT Lsi la 11.88
HAJIAN Nile 1988
HAKIMI Siroos 11.88 T.hran
HAMEDANI Farhad 8.88 Kerend
HAMIDI Fereshteh 9.88 Tehran
HA*IAMI Mohammad 11.88 Mashed (Vakilebad
. Prison)
HAMZEH Shalalvand 12.88 Karaj
HAMZEHEI Fat.meh 9.88 Tshran
HANAEI Moheen 9.88 Mashed
HANIF 11. 3.88 Orwnieh
HANIF Roghiyeh 9.88 Tehran
HA.NI 'ZADEfr Fereydoon 12.88 Desful
HAQVERDI All 9.88 Tehran
HARIRI Abbas 11.88 Karaj
HARIRI Khalil (Yaghoob) 11.88 Zanjan
HARIRI Magheoud 10.88 Raaht
HARIRI Mohsen 11.88 Rasht
HARRIAN Masoud 12.88 T.hran (Evin Prison)
HASANPOUR Letif 9.29.88 Tshran
HASHEMI Jafar (Hadi) 8.88 Mashed
—9—
Name Forename Date Place
HASHEMI Mahdokht 12.88 Tehran
HASHEMX-BAJGIRAN Jamshid 9.88 Isfahan
HASHEMIAN 11.88 Qaavin
HASHEMIAN Habib 9.88 Tehran
HASHEMIAN Mohammad 1.89 Tehran (Evin Prison)
HASHEMZADEH Mashallah 9.88 Mashad
HASSANI Mabmood 7.30.88
HASSANI Yaqoub 11.88 Karaj (Qezeihessar
Prison)
HASSANPOOR Hassan 9.88 Orwnieh
HASSANZADEH 11.88 Maragheh
HAYDARI Zohreh 9.88 Tehran
HAZRATX Hossein 12.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
HEIDARX 12.88 Mashad
HEIDARI Farrokh 11.88 Tehran
HEIDARI Seyyed A].i 11.88 Tehran
HEIDARI Shahin 10.88 Dezful
HEIDARIEH Hossein 7.31.88 Mashad
HEIDARIEH Mohammad 7.31.88 Mashad
HEIDARNIA Saeid 11.88 Tabriz
HEJRATI Mirzarnan 12.88 Lahijan
HE?.24AT 1 Abdolrahman 11.88 Tehran
HENDIJANI Farid 1988 Ahwaz
HENDJANI Farid 9.88 Rasht
HESAM Asgar 11.88 Tabriz
HESAMI Mohammad-Ali 9.88 Birjand
HEYDARI 12.88 Mashad
HEYDARI 12.88 Mashad
HEYDARI Shirin 9.88 Tehran
HOOSHMAND Amano l lah 11.88 Shiraz
HOOSHMAND liojjat 12.88 Bandaranza li
HOSEINI Seyyed Nasrollah 12.88 Kermanshah
HOSEINPOOR Qolam 12.88 Bushehr
HOSSEIN-ZADER ERBANI Soosan 9.88 Tehran
HOSSEINI 11.88 Tebran (Evin Prison)
HOSSEINI Abolfazi. 9.88 Chiraz
HOSSEINI Akbar 12.88 Tehran
HOSSEINI Etrat 9.88 Shiraz
HOSSEINI Layli 9.88 Tehran
HOSSEINI Mir .-Hossein 12. 1.88 Khoy
HOSSEINI Mohammad Hossein 9.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
HOSSEINI Mohammad Hossein 3.89 Booshehr
HOSSEINI Parviz 9.88 Gachsaran
HOSSEINI Reza 12.88 Tehran
HOSSEINI Saeid 8.88 Tehran
HOSSEINI Seyyed Esmaeil 9.88 Gonardasht
HOSSEINPOOR 1.89 Ganaveh
HOVEIDA Mehrdad 9.88 Tehran
HUSHANGI 11.88 Kermanshah
ILBAKI 11.88 Tehran
IRANI Majid 9.88 Tehran
-10-.
Name
Forename
Place
IZA.DI
I ZADI
JAAFANI
Javad (Hesam)
Mehdi
Seyy.d Mohammad
Reza (Mabmood)
Fahirneh
Jalal
I raj
Ami r i
AI uiiad
Jafar
Fahimeh
Hooshi
Mitra
Mob amm ad
Hadi
M.hdi
Rosa
Siroos
Abdoirassul
Gholam Ha&san
Masoud
All
Ar f a
Mohammad Saeid
Far) ad
Farhad
Shahi n
Fereydoon
Al i
Hushang
All
Shahpoor
Aboighasem
Ardeshi r
Farangis
Hamed
H am i i
Mary n
Esfandiar
12.88
12.88
1.89
9.88
10.88
9.88
11.88
11.88
11.88
11.29.88
10,88
11.88
2. 9.88
9 • 88
9.88
19.88
9.88
9.88
9.88
11.88
12.88
11. 11. 88
9.88
2.89
11.88
11. 15. 88
10.88
9.88
1.89
9.88
10. 23. 88
11.88
11.88
12.88
11.88
9.88
11.88
8. 2.88
11.88
1.89
9.88
10. 23. 88
9.88
11.88
11.88
9.88
9.88
12.88
11.88
12.18.88
Shires
Hams dan
Xe rmanshah
T.hran
Xermanshah
Tehran
Tehran
Tahran
Tehran
Tehran
Mashed
Tehran
Bandarabbass
Tehran
Tehran
Karaj
Shahrood
Qasvin
Tehran
)bhar
Boroojerd
Mashed
Shires
Tehran
Tehran
Shires
Tehran
Xaraj
Xe rmanshah
Tehran
Tehran
Tebran
Tehran
Behbahen
Rashan
Kermanshah
Tehran
Tehran
Xe rmanshah
Xaraj
Shiras
Tehran
Tehran
Xe rmanshah
Tehran
Shires
Xaraj
(Evin Prison)
(Evin Prison)
(Evin Prison)
JAM4EH
JABBARI
JA3BARI
JABBARI AN
JABBARIAN
JABBARIAN
JAFAR-ZADEH
JAFFARI
JABANBAKHSH
JAHANOIRI
JAHANGIRI
JAHROMI
J ALAA
JALALI
J AL.ALI
JALALI
JALALI AN
JALALIAN
JAMA • AT
JAMASBI
JAMEH-AWJA .T
JAMEHDAR
JANI
JANNATI
JASEMI.
JAVAN SHOJA MOFRAD
JAVIDNIA
JAVIDYAR
JEBRAEELI
JEBRAEELI
JER
JODAKI
JOLGHAZ I
KADKHODA
KAFFASH
KAFFASH-POOR
KAFFASHIAN
KAFFASHIAN
KAJIRI ZI
KAHRI ZI
KALANTAR
KALANTAR
KALANTAR
KALANTARI
KAIJINTARI
KM ANTARI
KALHOR
(Evin Prison)
(Evin Prison)
—11—
Name Foi ename Data Place
KM4AL-ZADEH Nasrin 9.88 Tebran
KM.IILI Marjan 9.88 Tehxan
KkRI .K! Hassan 11.88
KAR .?4I MAHA ADI Boozarjomehr 10.88 Tabriz
RARGARMOZD Bahram 1988 A waa
KARIM NEJkD Mohsen 8.88 Tebran
a(ARIMI 11.88
RARIMI All 9.88 Tehran
KARI 1I Hossein 9.88 Tehran
KARIMI Mohauunadshah 10.88
KARIMI Moslem 11.88
KARIMI N Masumeh 11.29.88 Tehran
(Shur. ngiz)
KARIMIA.N Mehri 11.88 Teh:an
KARIMZADEH Saber 9.38 Tehran
KARIMZkDEH Sab3r 11.88 Ardebil
KASHr.NIAN Kiomars 11.88 Kermanshah
KASRAI'I Mahoeood 1988 .hwaz
KAVEH 1.89 Arak
KAZAZI Jalal 9.88 Tehra i
KAZEM-BAYGI Maryam 9.88 Tehran
KAZEMI—ABAD Behrooz 9.88 Lahijan
KAZEMI-FARD Mehdi 9.88 T *hran
KESARI Hadi 11.88 Rasht
KESHAVARZ Fatho].lah 9.88 Gach-Saran
KES}IMXRI Abbas 11.88 Tehran
KEYVANPOOR Mostafa 1.89 Shiraz
KHAL .GHI Nasser 9.88 Tehran
KHAL .IL. Esmaei]. 9.88 Mashad
KHAT. .IT .I Ebrahim 9.88 Mashad
KH AL LPO0R Noorol lah 1.89 Karaj (Gohardasht
Prison)
KHALILZADEH Davood 1.89 Oroomeieh
KHANBANI Mostafa 12.88 Tahran
K}JANI Amir 9.88 Tehran
KHANI Moheen 9.88 Mashed
KH NJ INI Nasreen 11.88 Semnan
KHANM0HN 2V1ADI KNEIDAN Ahmcd 8.88 Kerend
KNANSARI Hassan 10.88 Tehran
KNANSARI Seyyed H ssan 11.88 tran
KHARRAD Morteza 9.88 Shiraz
RHASI 12.88 Tehran
KHATIBZAt EH Mohammad 9.88 Tehran
KHMTARI Ainit 11.88 Lahijan
HAZAEI Sadegh 9 88 Mashed
KHEr .DMAND Mahnaz 10.88 Tehran
KHEZRI Asghar 9.8 Tehran
KHEZRI Hamid 9.88 Tahran
KHEZRI Mostafa 9.88 Tehran
KHODA- AHKSHI Sohrab 9.88 Karaj
KHODABANDEH Ghasem 10.88 Qazvin
KHODABANDEHLOO 9.88 Tehran
—12—
Name Forename
KIIODMOO Mohammed 9.88 T.hran
KHODM4I Majid 9.08
KHOLDI Ref at 11.88 Tehran
RHORS./NDI Saeid 9.88 X.rmanshah
KEOSH X}!OO u saef 2.89
KHOSHAFKAR I heli1 11.88 krd•bi l
HOSHFkM AlL 11.88 Roodsar
KEOSHKHAB Abbass 9.88 Shires
XHOSHNFVIS AlL 9.88 Meshed
KHUSRAVANI M. di 11.88 Bushshr
KEOSRAVI 1.89 Ti ran
KNOSRAVI Jafar 11.88 Tehxen
KHOSRAVX Zahra 9.88 T.hran
KHOSR 0 00RJI Abdolla i 12.88 Tebren
KHOSR000RJI Hemid 12.88 T.hrau
KHOSR0 00RJI Mohammed 12.88 Tshren
KHOSROVANI 9.88 Tehzen
KIA POUR Akbar 9.88 0o qen
KXA- OJOOR 9.88 T•hrer
KIABI Sa ud 11.88 TehLan
KIAMARZI Nader 9.88 T.hren
KXANI Kho srow 11.88 T.hran
KIANI Seham 1988 Kaz.roon (Noorebad)
KIANI Salman 12.88 T.hran (Evin Prison)
KIANI-DEUXORDI Simm 9.88 T•hren
KIKUAN Saniad 9.88 Shires
KXYANFAR 9 • 88 T.hran
KXYANFAR 9.88 TIIren
KODIRI Aliresa 11.88 Tehran
KOLAGHOOCHI 9.88 T.bran
KOLAR-KAJ Masoud 1988 Ahwez
KOLAHKAJ Maecud 1988 Ahwas
KOMPANI Hooshang 11.88 Tehren
KOOHESTANI ShaMe 11.88 Ma. jed-Soleiman
KOOHI Parvin 8.8$ Isfehan
KOORMANI 9.88 Tebren
LA'ALX Jamehid 11.88 Ehorramebad
LAAL 9.88 Khorrainabad
LAHIJANI 1988
ATIF Akbar 11.88 Tehran
LATIF A liakbar 9.88 T.hran (Evin Prison)
LATIFI Hojjat 11.88 Lahijan
LATIL'I Mojgan 10.88 Tebran
LATIFI Nasser 1988 Babol
LATIPPOOR Marzieh 9.88 Shires
LAYEGH Shehpoor 11.88 Ahwea
LAYEGH Shehpoor 1988 Ahwes
LESANI Nader 1288 Tsh au
LOTFI Alireza 1 .88 Isfahan
HAANAVI Sasid 2.89 Ahwei
MAASOOMI AlL 8.88 Boruj.rd
MADANI Morteza 9.68 Tehran (Evin Prison)
—13—
____ f aname Date Place
MMIBOUBI 11.10.88 Rasht
MABJOOBI Anijad 9.88 Zanjan
MMD400DI 11.88 Kazeroon
M)Jfl400DZADEH Siavosh 11.88 Tehran
MAIOEIUDI Mahnrod 8. 4.88 Haniedan
M A1 4UDI Sasean 12.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
M)Jfl4UDI-FAR Abdol-khad 11. 3.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
MLJDI Asghar 11.88 Tehran
MAKIANI Abdoirahim 10.88 Deaful
MAKIANI Karim 8. 5.88 Desful
MAKVANLI Ali-Hossein 11.88 Ahwaz
MALAYERI Adel 11.88 Tehran
M A LAYERI Ui 11.88 Tehran
MALAYERI Mahvash 3.89 Tehran (Evin Prison)
MALEKI Assadollah 9.88 Ksrmanshah
MALEKI Eino]lah 10.88 Kermanshah
(Yado 11 II)
MALEKI Maryam 1.89 Shahrood
MALEKI—ANARAKI Majid 11. 1.88 Tahran
MALLAHI Karim 9.88 Gorgan
MANDEGAR Hossein 9.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
MANSOORt Kiumars 11.88 Tehran
M A NSOORIAN 9.88 Tehran
MARZANEHSANI Mehdad 11.88 Tehraz, Evi Prison)
M A RZOJI 9.88 Gonbad
MASHADI MOHAMMADALI Abmad 12.88 Tehran
KHARRAT
MASHADI-BAGHBAN Soroor 12.88 Tehrau
MASJEDI Asghar 11.88 Tebran
MASOORI Iraj 12.88 Khorramabad
MASOUDI Saeid 9.88 Zanjan
MASOUDI-FAR 9.88 Kermanshah
MASSIH Parvia 9.88 Geobsaran
MAZAHERI Sussn 12.88 Tehran
MAZENI Eissa 11. 4.88 Tehran
MAZRUEX 9.88 Rasht
ME'EMARAN Afehin 10.88 Karaj (Goha dasht
Prison)
MEFTAHI Mehran 1988 Ahwaa
MEHDI-ZADEH Nastaran 9.88 Tehran
MEHDIZADEH Ahma d 10.38 Tehran
MEHDIZADEH Majid 11.88 Tehran
MEHR-ALIYAN Mehdi (Hashem) 9.88 Tebran
MEHR ABIAN Au 12.88 Tehran
MEHRANI Mohsen 10.88 Gorgan
MEHRIPOUR Moha mmed 11.88 tahijan
MEIAHI 12.88 Ahwaz
MEIAHI 12.88 Ahwaa
MENBARI Mohammad 12.88 Tehran
MESCHI Masoud 9.88 Tehran
MESGARI Jamsh 1988 Gachsaran
MESIIKAT Mohammed Hassan 9.88 Tebran
-14-
Na na Forename
MIMEH Darioosh 11.88 Tehr n
MINAXI Kha li l 12.11.88
MIR-F AKHRM 11.88 T.hran
MIR-HEIDARI Zohr.h 9.88 Tehran
MIR-HOSSEINI Farajo l lah 1t.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
MIR-RAHIMI Soheila 1988
MIR-VA1U ZADEN 1988
MIRAIM4 Abbas 11.88 Shirsa
MIRSARDO Lotfali 11.88 Earman
MIRSHARI AlL 9.88 Mashed
MIRSHAHXDI Jamahid 9.88 Mashed
MIRVASEB Mohammed AlL 12. 2.88 Rasht
MIRZAEI 9.88 Zanjan
MIRZAEI Hojat 2.89
MIRZAEX Mostaf a 10.27.88 Tehran
MIRZAEI Parvia 12.88 Tehran
MIRZAEI Shahnaz 9.88 Hamedan
MIRZAEI Zahra 12.88 Ahwaz
MIRZAI 000DARZI Qassem 1.89 T•hran
MIRZAIE Rouros 11.10.88 Rasht
MIRZ AIE ourosh 11.10.88 Rasht
MOADELLI Kavoos 9.88 Shires
MO AGHAR-MOGHADM4 Gholasn Hossein 9.88 Mashed
MOAKKEDI Hossein 11.88 Semnen
MOALLEMIAN Khodadad 9.88 Tehren
MOAYERI }lamid Reza 9.88 Tehren
MO8ARkRI AlL 10.88 Tehren
MOBINI Mehdi 1.89 Earej
MODARESS KAMALI Mehdt 8.88 T.hran (Evin Prison)
MODARR SSI 11,88 Est*nbanet
MOBIN 9.88 Tehren
MOEIN-ALZAKER Aghdas 9.88 Tehren
MOEIN—SHIR AZI Seyyed Hessan 5.88 Tebran (Evin Prison)
MOEINI 12.88 Shires
HOEXHI Faribe 9.88 Shires
MOEZZI Hessan 10.88 Tabria
MOGHADAM Ghas.m 9.88 Mashed
MOGHADAM Mohammed 9.88 Meshed
MOHAGER Maryam 9.88 Ta Iwan
MOHAJERI Au ‘3.88 Tehran
MOHM'Q4AD RHANI Seaid 9.88 Shahrood
MOHM'Q'IAD REZABI 988 Kerej
MOHA '24AD TAHER NMJAR Saeid 12.13.88 Tehren (Evin Prison)
MOHM'Q .IAD-ASADI Rosa 10,88 Arak
MOHM . 4AD-NEJAD 9.88 Lehijer
MOHAMMAD-RAHIMY Soheila 9.88 Tehran
MOHAMMAD-ZADEH Jamal 11.88 Ramhormoz
MOHA*IAD-ZADEH Shokr 9.88 TaIwan
MOHAMMADALIZADEH Shahbanali 1988 Babol
MOHM.24ADALIZADEH Shahbanali 8.30.88 Sari
MOHA*(&UI AlL 1 .88 TaIwan
MOHAMMADI Aeghar l .88 Tehra
-15-
Forename Date
ace
MOHM'QdADI
MOHAZ4MADI
MOHAMt4AD!
MOHAI*4ADI
; MOHA*IADI
MOHA*tADI BAIOEIAN-ABADX
MORA*IIDI BAW4AN-l BADI
MOHM04AD! OHANNADI
MOHA*IADI NOSSEIN POUR
MOHAZ.Q4ADX MIR-MOGHIMI
MOHAl.Q. AD ! - SARVESTANI
MOHA* AD! ZADER
MOHA?Q4ADRAHIMI
MOHM.Q4ADREZAI ‘I
MOUSEN-ABADI
MOHSENI
MOHSENI BERENJABAD
MOJADDED
MOJARRAD
MOJDEH
MOJTABAI
MOKVANDI
MOT LAZADEH
MONAFI
MONSHI
MONTAZERI
MON'IAZER I
MOOD!
MOOF ,AVI
MOOSAVI AN
MOOSAVI F tRD
MORABBI
MORADI
MORADI
MORADI -SHALAL
MORADZADEH SARVESTANI
MOR SHED ZADEH
MORTAZAVI
MORTAZAVI
MOSAYEB POUR
MOSHREFEDDIN
MOSHTAGHI
MOSTAFAE I
MOSTAFAVI
MOSTAFAVI
MOTAGHITALAB
MOTTAGHI TALAB
MOTTAGHI -TALAB
MOUSAVI
MOUSAVI
MOUSSAVI
Firooz
Panahandeh
Saeid
Shahnaa
Vali
Ma ry am
Mohammad Reza
Saeid
Mehdi
Al i
Gho lain -Reaa
Mohsen
Farangis
Az im
Re a a
Amir Hossein
Yahya
Jafar
Asghar
Kiomars
Fakhri
Bijan
Yahya
Kaaem
Vahid
Mahmood
Morteaa
Khal ii
Mabmood
Nasser
Sahan
Zarqhaoe
Moni reh
Jalal
Re a a
Mohammad Reza
Seyyed Hossein
Jefar
Bahran
Mahxnood
Mohammed
Keyvan
Koyvan
Reza
Saeid
?uni r
Ashraf
Mebdi
Seyyed Nasser
9.88
9.88
9.88
9.88
9.88
11. 8.88
11. 8.88
9.88
12.88
12.88
1.89
11.88
11.88
10.88
11.88
11.88
11.88
1988
9.88
11.88
8. 6.88
11.88
2.89
8.88
9.88
12.88
11.88
9.88
9.88
11.88
10.88
10.88
11.88
11.88
8.88
9.88
9.88
9.88
9.88
9.88
9.88
10.88
9.88
9.88
11.88
1988
10.88
11.88
12.88
9.88
1988
Masjed Soleiman
Kerman
Tehran
Ardebi 1
Tehran (Evin Prison)
Isfahan
Ahwaa
Ardebil
1sf aban
Tehran
Or urn ieh
hwaa
Birjand
Shiraa
Shahr-Kord
Arak
Tab r i a
Ahwaa
Shiraz
Ahwaa
Shiraa
Tehran
Tehran
Ahwaz
Tehran
Mashad
Tohran
Tehran
Rasht (Guards
Prison)
Rasht
Rasht
Tehran
Gorgan
Tehran
Tehran
Tehran
Rasht
Mashad
Tehran (Evin Prison)
Shiraa
Kermanshah
Tehran
Ahwaz
Tehran
Tabr i a
—16—
Name Forename
MOUSSAVI-NEJAD Raze 9.88 T•hran (Evin Prison)
NADERI 11.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
N .DXMI 11.88 Ksrmansheh
NAGMDI DOORBATI Mohammed 11.88 Xare)
NAGHI—POOR AMIRZADI Oholem-Reza 10. 8.88 Mashed
NMAF—ABADX Ghand-O l lah . 9.88 T•hren
NMAFX AZAD Abedin 9.88 Rasht
NAJJARXAI Ebrehim 9.88 Tehran
NAKHAIX Akbar 11.88 Shires
N .ZHAXX Hamid 12.88 Pale
NAMAXIAN Habib-O l lah 9.88 Arak
NASABI Azain 9.88 Earaj
NAS).RI Kaveh 1.89 karej
NASERI Manuchehr 9.88 Tehren
NASOORI Mahvaeh 988 Xeraj
NASOORI Pooran 9.88 eraj
NASRABADI Hair 12.88 T.hran
NASSABI Azaioe-0l-Sadat 9.88 Xaraj (Gohardazht
Prison)
NASSER Masoud 2. 8.8t1 Kare (Goherdasht
Prison)
NASSIR MOOHADDAM Hazer 10.88 Khorramebad
NASSIRI Hossein 2.89 Tehran (Evin Prison)
NASSRX Seyyed Mohammed 8188 Hamedaii
Hehdi
NAVA l Ashraf 10. 2.88 Hemedan
NAYERX Moheen 9.88 Tehran
NAZZ4.RI 11.88 Xeraj
NAZ).RI Hemid 10.88 Melayer
NAZEMI 8.88 Golpayegan
HAZERI Raze 8. 2.88 Kashan
NAZERI Zahre 8. 2.88 Eashen
NEIAVAND Ab dol lah 10.88 T•hran
NEINAVAEI Sheila 9.88 Tehren
•NEINEI Bahram 1988/89
NEJATI Seyy. Hoseein 8. 6.88 T.hren
NEJATI-MOHARRAMI Amin 9.88 Mashed
. NEMATI Ferain 9.88 Tehran
NEMATI Ohanbar 11.88 Tehran
NEMATI Mabmood 12.88 T.hren
NEMATIOLLAHI Amir 9.88 Kerej
NIKAHDAM 9.88 Kengever
NIKFAR A u 1988 Raaht
NIKXAR Raze 9.88 Shires
NXKNAM Au 11.23.88 Shires
klIKOO Fariba 9.88 Tehran
NIKOO-EGHBAL Fatemeh-Zahra 12.88 Tihren
NIKOOXAR AlL 11.88 Tebren (Evin Prison)
NILGHAZ AlL 1.89 Xerej
NOORAXI Jahangir 1.89 Khorrexnabad
NOORAMIN Mohammed Raze 1.10.89 Xarej
—17—
Name Forenbzne Date
NOORI Narges 9.88 Orumieh
NOORI-NI1( Mahnaz 10.88 Tohran (Evin Prison)
NOORI-NIK Mohammad 11.88 Arak
NOROOZI 1.89 Ahwaz
NOROOZI Esmaei l 10.88 Tebran
NOROOZI Kianoosh 12.88 Karaj
NOROOZI Mehdi 9.88 Tehran
NOROOZI Mohanimad 9.88 Tebran
NOROOZI Mohammad Reza 2.89 Oruniieh
NOROOZI Mostafa 1988
NOUR-MOHAM4ADX Parvaneb 9.88 Tehran
NOUR-MOHM .Q4ADI Sa leheh 9.88 Tehran
NOURI Hossein 12.88 Tehran
NOURI Naeiin 12.88 Tehran
NOZARI Habibo l lah 11.88
OLFATI Nazi 9.88 Tehran
OMAR-ALI Saf dar 9.88 Karaj
OMRANI 11.88 Tehran
OMRANJ 9.88 Xsfahan
OORAKI Nasrin 10.88 Tehran
OROUJI-ZAREH Jaber 11.88 Rasht
OSATI AlL 10.88
OSTOVARI Kambiz 11.88 Tehran
OUJI amal 9.88 Shiraz
PABL.EVANNES}IAN Morteza 9.88 Karaj
PAIDAR-ARANI Mansur 9.88 Tehran (. vin Prison)
PAIDAR-ARANX Man&ur 9.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
PAJMAN-FAR Mahboobeh 9.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
PAKBAZ Maryam 9.88 Tehran
PAXRAVAN 11.88 M3shad
PANARI Shahin 9.88 Tehran
PAPEX Nemat 11.88 Dordood
PABSt Babak 2.11.89 Tehran (Evin prison)
PARVAREL Ahinad 11.11.88 Noshahr
PARVIZI Atnir Hossein 9.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
PARVIZI Hossein 2.89
PAYDAR-ARAN.L Mashdl lah 9.88 Kashan
PEIKAR Farshid 10.20.88 Tebran
PIROOZZADEN Nasser 9.88 Ahwaz
P O OR-ALHOSSEINI Zia 1988
POOR-MIRZA Arash 1988 Tehran (Evin Prison)
PO ORKASHKOOLI Fatemeh 10.88 Shiraz
POUR KASHKOOLI Farzaneh 12.16.88 Shiraz
GRAS HGHAE I
POUR MANSOURI Parsa 9.88 OEhran
POUR-EGHBALI Parvin 9.88 Tehran
POUR-IVAZ Farzan 11.88 Rasht
POUR-MOHM .g4AD JAFAR Masoud 11.88 Tehran
JALALI
POURDANA 12.88 Bandaranzali
POURDANA Reza 12.88 Bandaransali
—18-
Name
RABIBI Nais.r 1988
RABIEI Abbas 1988
RkHATI A li-Aaqhar ii.. 9.88 Xhoy
RkHBAR-KHAM Yahya 11.88 T.hrab
RARBARI Majid 11.88 Tehran
RAE! Masoud 9.88 Tehren
RABIM EJAD Tehmures 10. 3.88 Gorgan
RAHIMI 11.88 Gorgen
RAHIMI 11. 1.88 Shires
RAHIMI Kilvan 11.88 Tshran
RABIMI M.hdi 1988
RAHIMI Soheila 9.88 Tehran
RAEXMI-M AT'AM Hassan 10.88 Karaj
RAHIMIAN 11.88 Shires
RAWOINI Heasan 9.88 Shahrood
RABMANIAN Moheen 11.88 Shires
RAIST Sa ud 9.88 Borujurd
RAJABI Reniid 11.88 S.mnan
RAJABI Mohammed-Ruse 11.88 S.mnan
RAJAEI Fat.msh 9.88 T.hrau
RAJAX Abmad 11.. 8 Borujird
RAKI Abdoiresa 1988 Masj.d Solilman
RAE! Hamid 9.88 Masj.v Sol.iman
RAMEZANX Habib 12.16.88 Tuhr u i
RAMEZANI Mohammed Hoasein 1988 Relamebad
RAMZX Behead 1.89 T.hran
RM4ZX ESMAEELX Bebsed 1988 T.hran (Evin Prison)
RANJEAR Sammad 11.88 T.hran
R)NJBAR MASSOREHI Tah ereh 8. 5.88 Desful
RANJEAR SHUREH-DEL Sanm%ed 12. 4.88 Tehren (EviD Prison)
RASHXDI Mohammed 11.88 Ahwas
Oholam Hoesein 12.88 Ahwai
RASHTCHXAN tdaaoud 11.88 Tshran
RASSOULI Amir 10.20.88 Tshran
RASSOULXNEZHAD Sa.id 12.88 Ahwes
RAVANDI Amir 9.88 T•hran
RAVIJZADER Ebrahim 12.88 T.hran
•RA:BAN Ferideh 8.19.88 Tehran
RAZ.. Rajebali 1988 Tabri .
RAZZAGHI Meshid 11.88 T.hran
REYSHANRI 9.88 Bushehr
!ZA-KRANX Soudabeh 9.88 Tehren
REZA-SOLTAN! Fatemeh 9.88 Tehran
REZAEI 11.11.88 Abhar
REZAEX Akbar 9.88 Isfahan
REZAEI Aliresa 11.88 Ahwas
REZAEI Mahoeood 9.88 Xaraj
REZAE! Nadereh 12.88 Ahwez
REZAEI Shahriar 1.89 Tehren
RBZAEI Yuaeef 11.88 Karaj (Goherdaeht
Prison)
REZAEX JARROMI Manuchehr 9.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
-19—
Name Forename Data Place
P.EZAEI-ZADEH Alireza 11.88 Tehran
REZAEXAN Rasool 2. 9.88 Gohardasht
REZAXI Pariaa 3.988
REZAII Teimoor 12.88 Shiraz
REZAXI-TAROHOBEN Hojjat 1988
RE ASHABI Abdo l Iah 9.88 Bandarabbas
REI ?JHAHI Gholam 9.88 Bandarabbas
REZVANI Majid 11.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
RIAZI Harnid 9.88 Mashad
RIOEHI 9.88 Tehran
PIYAIiX 9.88 Tehran
RXZEH-V ANDI Hakimeh 11.88 11am
ROBAT-SARPUSH Mohammed 9.88 Mas ad
ROOD Mohammed 11.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
NOON Hesean 1988 Raeht
ROOX-PARVAR Abmad 9.88 Tehran
ROOZBAHA'X Mohsen 9.88 Tehran
ROOZEH-DAR Mel 11.88 Tehran
ROSTM4I Majid 9.88 Zanjan
ROUZITALAB Parvia 11.88 Shirea
SAADAT 11.88
SA'ADATI 4ansureh 9.88 Shires
SAADAT-HOSSEINI Abolfazi 12.88 Shires
SAADAT-HOSSEINI Aboltazi 12.88 Shires
SABAHI Haye 1eh 9 • 88 Tehran
SABZDEL Majid 1988 Meajed
SADAF Mohammed 8. 2.88 Kaahan
SADEGH-BAYGI Hosasin .2.88 Raraj
SADEGI .BAYGI Parivash 11.88 Tehren
SADEGHI A u 9.88 Karaj
SADEGHI Farsin 9.88 Tehr i
SADEGHI Firoos 1.89 Tabris
SADEGHI Hossein 9.88 Shahxood
SADEGHI Mostafa 11.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
SADIDIYAN Mebdi 9.88 Mashed
SADOOGHI Mousse 10.88 Shires
SAEEDI 11.88 Shires
SAEIDI Abdollah 8.88 Tehren
SA.EXDI Au 9.88 Tehren
SAEIDI Amir U.88 Tehren
SAEIDX Hossein 9.88 Tahren
SAEIDI-SHARIF-ABAD AlL 9.88 Mashed
SAEIDI-SHARIF-ABAD Mohammed Resa 9.88 Mashed
SAFARI Zahre 9.88 Tehran
SAFAI'I Dariooah 9.88
SAFAI'I Mahboobeh 10.20.88 Tehran
SAFARI Hossein 9.88 Lahijan
SAFARI Karim 1988 Tehran (Evin Prison)
SAFAVI Abbas 9.88 Mashed
FIFAVI Abolfesi 11.88 Mashed
SAFAVI Hamid 11. 1.88 Karaj
SAFDARI Hassen 10.88 Mashed
—20—
Name Forename
SAFFARIAN Jami l.h 0.88 horamabad
SkGHERI KHODA-PARAST Maryam 7.29.88 T.hran
SkOVAND Fereydoon 8. 5.88 Deiful
SkGVAND Parviz 9.88 D•iful
SAGVAND Parvir 8. 5.88 Deiful
SkHABI 11.88 T•hran
SARAMI 2.89 Gohardaaht
SkXHAEI Assado l lah 12. 7.88 Shiraz
SkKHkEI Farah 9.88 Tebran
SkKHAEI M5naur 12. 7.88 Shiraz
Sk HAEI Zahra 9.88 Tehran
SkLABSHOUR Fayzollab 11.88 Rasht
SALARI Alireza 9.88 Ahwaz
SALEHI 2.89 Lahijan
SALEHI Abbaz 1988 Ahwaz
SALEHX Ahmad 9.88 Bhahrood
S A LEHI A li-Akbar 11.88 Ahvaz
SALEHI Susan 9.29.88 Tehran
SALEHIZADEH Siavosh 1988 Ahwaz
SM..EMI -MOADDAB Javad 9 • 88 Tehran
S AL .IMI 9.88 Tehran
S A LIMI Nader 9.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
SA MAN-ZkDEH Hakimeh 9.88 Tehran
SAMADI A)i 1988
SAMADZADEH Mehran 9.88 Xaraj
SAMANDAR 9.88 Tahran (Evin Prison)
SAMANDAR M nijeh 8.88 Tebran
SAMANDARI Mahmood 9.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
SAIZADEGAN Mohammed 11.88 Lahijan
SANAIX Hossein 11. 1.88 Shires
SANI-SHAROHI Java d 9.88 Shires
SARMI JABBARI Rasoul 11.88 Tehren
SARAYDAR Mohammed R•za 11.88 T.hran
SAREHOSH Jahan-Bakhsh 9.88 Tehran
SARRAFI Abbas 9.88 Tehran
SAT'HZ Abbas 10.88
SATTAR-NEJAD Seyyed-Asado l la 12.88 Xa ej
SATTARI Parvis 9.88 Teb an
SAVABI 1988
SAY-YAMI Hayedeh 9.88 Tehran
SAYYADI Ebrahirn 10.88 Ra.ht
SAYYADPOOR Reza 10.88 Xhorramabad
SAYYARI Jafar 8. 2.88 Kashan
SEDAGHAT 10.88 Tehran
SEDAGHAT 10.88 Tehran
SEDAGHAT Seeld 11.88 Lahijen
SEDIGH Farhad 9.88 Ramsar
SEOHLEINI AlL-Rise 9.88 Boroojerd
SEGHLEINI Gho lam 11.88 Boroojerd
SFIHAT Ardalan 9.88 Ardebil
SEIFI Siarnak 11.88 T.hran
—21—
Name Forename Date Place
SEYSDI As ar 9.88 Tahran
SEYFI Br am 11.88 Tehran
SEYF! Sh, ariar .89 Eermanshah
SEYTED ARMAD QOOSHCHI Sey e6 Mohammad 8. 3.b8 Tahrau
SBYYED—AIC4ADI Seyyed-Mohsen 9.88 Tehran
SHAABANI 9.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
SHAABANI DARYANI AlL 9.8 Tehran
SRA3-ZENDEHDAR Zahra 9 • P 8 Tebran
SHABAN-ZADER Asarn 9.88 Roodsar
SHABANI Abdoijabbar 12.88 Tehran
SHADLOO A liasghar 1988 Tehran (Evin Prison)
SHAERX Nasser 2,89 Amo].
SHAFIBI 12.88 Mashad
SHAFIPOUR Ziba 12.88 Masjed Soleiman
SHAN-MOHAZ'24AD1 Sara 9.88 Tebran
SHAHI-MOGHANI Behrooa 9.88 Tehran
SHAHEARAMI AlL 9.88
SHAHKARAZ4I Hojat 9.88
SHANMIRI Mehr 1ad 10.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
SHANMORADI Ataol lah 9.88 Shiraz
SHANPAR Sou dabeh 9.88 Tehran
SHAKER Mahahid 9.88 Shiraz
SHALALVAND Hanizeb 1988 Tehran (Evin Prison)
SHAMS 11.8 5 Borujerd
L iAMS Hemid 9.88 Tehran (Evir Prison)
SRAZ4SZADEH Soheyla 9.88 Tehran
SHANGOLNIA Ghafoor 9.88 Lahijan
SHARAPODDIN Bahram 11.88 Ahwaz
SHARIATI Mohammad-Reza 9.88 Langarood
SHARIATI Sima 1988
SHARIF Ahmad 9.88 Gachsaran
SHARIFI Shabram 9.88 Tehran
SHAYAN Khosruw 1.89 Tehran
SHAYESTEH Masoud 11.88 :ehran (Evin Prison)
SHEIKH-MOHA*tADI Ah n iad 9.88 Tehran
SHEIKH-MOHM'Q4ADX Reza 9.88 Tebran
SHEIKH-REZAEI Hoasein 8. 2.88 Kashan
SHEXEHANI 9.88 Tehran
SHEXK}1I 1988 Dezfu l
SHEMIRANI (AYATOLLAH) 9.88 Hafshajansha Hr-Kord
SHEYSANI Saham 11.88 Shiraz
SHIRALI Shahpoor 10.88 Dezfu l
(Gho lam-Reza)
SHIRAL .I Shapoor 8. 5.88 Deztu l
SHIRMOHA*IADI Afsaneh 11.88
SHIRZAD Au 11.88 Orumieh
SHO'A Fereydoon 11.88 Lahijan
SHOJAEI Nasrin 10.88 Isfahan
SHOKOOHI Mansoor 1988 Sabzevar
SHOKRI 11.88 Ghaemshahr
SHOKRI 11.88 Ghaemshahr
SHOKRI Peyman 11. 3.88 Ozumieb
—22—
Name
Forename Date
Place
SHOKROLLIAHI AN-CHESHMEH
SIAH MANSOOR KHORIN
SIAVASHI
S INk
SI RANG
SOBHANI
SOHEILI
SONREVARDI
SOLE 1MAN I
SOLE IMANI
SOLE IMANI -FARD
SOLTANI
SOOMI
SOTUDEH
TA-AVONI R .NJI
TABANI
TABANI
TABATABABI
TABATABAEI
TABIB
TABIBI-NEJAD
T AGH-DAREH
TAGHAVI
TAllER KHANI
TAHERI
TAllER!
TAHERI
TAllER!
TAMER!
TAHI ROL -ESLAMZADEH
TAHMASB IAN
TAHSILI
TAIKANDI
TM -AKUARI
TALAEI
TALEB BIDOKHTI
TsLEBI
TALEBI
TALEBI
TALEBI
TALEBIAN
TALEGHANI
TALESHI
TAM
TAMADDONI FAR
TAQIZADEH
TARANI
Has a an
Sadrolab
Akbar
Afganeh
Hossein
MOhamtMs d
Mohsen
Azar
Farhad
Shahrokh
Parhad
Yussef
Ami r
Behnam
Hossein (Behnaxn)
Ahxnad
Maj 16
Aaadeh
Az am
A)bas
Mohanimad
Aghafakhr
Hamid
Javad
Mohammad
Seyyed FaJIIr
Seyyed Mebdi
Nahid
All
Manijeh
Abolfazl
Adel
All
Hassan
Mo r te za
Hamid
B ij an
Jafar
Davood
Eb rahim
8. 28. 88
2. 4.89
8. 6.89
9.88
9.88
12.88
9.88
9 • 88
9 • 88
9.88
11.88
11.88
10.88
11. 1.88
7.28.88
1. 8.89
3.89
11.88
11.88
9.88
1.89
9.88
9.88
11.88
11.88
11.88
9.88
11.88
8.88
12.88
9.88
8. 3.88
10.89
9.88
12.23.88
11.83
8. 8.88
11.88
8. 8.88
3. 16. 89
8. 2.88
11.8k
1988
9.88
9.88
11.88
10.89
1988
9.88
Tehran
Tehran
Nahavand
Tebran
Tehran
Karaj (Ghezelhesar
Prison)
Mashad
Tehran
Karaj
Rasht
Tehran
Tehran (Evin Prison)
Raaht
Shiras
Tehran
Tehran
Tehran (Evin Prison)
Tehran
Tehran
Tehran
Tabris
Tehran
Tabr is
Tehran
1sf aban
Tabr is
Tehr n (Evin Prison)
Ysfahan
Ahwaz
Tehran
Tehran
Karaj (Gohardasht
Prison)
Tehran
Tehran
?4ashad
11am
Tehran
11am
Marand
Rashan
Tehran (Evin Prison)
Rasht
Kermanshah
Ardebi 1
Tabria
Karaj (Gohardaaht
Prison)
Ahwaz
Tehran (Evin Prison)
Ebr able
—23—
Name Forename Pate Place
TARIGHAT Mohainmad 9.88 Tabria
TARIGHAT Zahra 11.88
TARSHIZI Reza 1.89 Tehxan
TARZ-ALI (ZAND-ARYA) Bahram 10.28.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
TASHAROFI 11.88 Semnan
TASHARROFI Hassan 9.88 Semnan
T A VAKK OLI Shapoor 1988 Ahwaa
TAVAKOIJI Rajab 11.88 Ghaemshahr
TAVAKOLI Shahpoor 1988 Ahwaz
TAVALLOLI Nasro llah 10.88 Shiraz
TAVAN AEIAN-FARD t4aryam 9.88 Tehran
TEBABATI 9.88 Babol
TENRANI Mohammad 9.88 Shabrood
TOL.IYAT Masoud 9.88 Birjand
TOOSI Javad 12.88 Mashad
TOOTOONCHI Kha lil 9.88 Zanjan
TOOTOONCHI Massourneh 10.20.88 Hamedan
TOOZAEI Bahram 9.88 Tebran
TORABI A.1 mad 1988 Orumieh
TORABI Habib 1.89 Shahrood
TORABI Vahab 1.89 Shahrood
TORABI-NAVXD Javad i2.88 Hamedan
VAEZ-ZADEH Seyyed Mohsen 1988 Babol
VAFAEI Ghassem 9.88 Tehran
VAKILI Masoud 11.88 Mashad (Vakilabad
Prison)
V A LI Changiz 9.88 Dezful
VARP OSHT! Kobra 8.88 Isfahan
VASEFI Shahin 11.88 Ahwaz
VASIGH Kazem 2.89 Ardebil
VATANPARAST Manuchehr 9.88 Shiraz
VAZIRI Hossein Au 9.88 Mashad
YACHOUBI Behrooz 10.88 Shahrkord
YAGHOUBI Hojjato l].ah 11.88
YAMANI Mohsen 11.88 Qazvin
YAZDANI hmad 1.89 Tehran
YAZDI Morteza 10.29.88 Tehran
YAZDJERDI Mahmood 11.88 Tehran
YEK-KALAM (HASSANI) Masoud . 9.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
YOUSEFI Amir 2.89 Tehran (f vin Prison)
YOUSEFI Mohsen 2.89
YUSEF-NEJAD Mohammad 11. 1.88 Shiraz
YUSSEFI Miiihnaz 11.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
ZABETI Ja].il 9.88 Mashad
ZAEEDI- ARBESOENI Sobrab 11.88 Tehian ( vin Prison)
ZAKERI 11. 1.88 Shiraz
ZAKI Abbas 11.88 Gohardasht
ZAMANI Assadol lah 2.89 Garrnsar
ZAMANIPOOR Cede-Au 1988 Ldhijan
ZAND Reza 8.88 Karaj
ZARANDI Koorosh 1.89 Karaj (Cohardasht
Prison)
Name Forename Date
ZARE'E Farhad 9.23.88 Zifihedan
ZAREZADER Mobsen 11.88 Hamedan
ZkRFCRI Farahnaa 9.88 Tehran
ZARKANI Nahid 9.88 Tehran
ZXA-MIRZAEI Parvaneh 9.88 Tehran
ZIAEI MIRZA.EI Farzaneh 9.88 Tehran
ZXNAEI Mohammad 11.88 Shiras
ZXOEEX Seyyed Mohammad 9.88 Tehran
ZOIiAGHARI Akbar 11.88 Semnan
ZOLFAGHAPI Hojjat 11.88 Semnan
ZOLFAGHARI Parviz 11.88 Shahr-Kord
ZOLFAQARI Abmad 11,88 Orumieh
Abdo l lah 11.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
Mel 9.88 Tehran
khmad 9.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
Aeghar 12.88 Shiras
Badri 7.30.88 Salmas
Bebnam 11.88 Tehran
Ebrahim 12.88 Tehran
rand 9.88 Tehran
Fend 1988 Rasht
Farid . 12.88 Shires
Fereydoon 12.88 Desful
Fereydoon 9.88 Tehran
Ghorban 1988 Karaj
Hadi 11.88 Tehren
Hamid 11.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
Hamid 9.88 Bebbehan
Hassan 11.88 Tehran
Hassan 9.88 Raeht
Hooriyeh 11.88 Tehran
Hooshang 11.88 Tehran
Hossein 11.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
Hossein 11.88 Tehran
Majid t988
Majid 12.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
Marzieh 11.88 Tehran
Mehrdad 11.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
Mehrdad 12. 7.88 Ahwaa
Mehrdad 11.88 Lahijan
Mehri 11.88 Tehran
Mehyar 7.28.88 Tehran
Mohammed 11.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
Mohammed 11.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
Mohammed 11.88 Tehran (Ev n Prison)
Mohaminad Reza 11.88 Karaj
Mohsen 10.88 Tehran
Nasser 7.28.88 Tehran
Nasser 9.88 ‘ Karaj
Parvin 11. 6.88 Khoram.-Abad
Reza 9.88 Tahran
—25—
Name Forename Date 1ace
Reza 9.88 Karaj
Roghieh 11.88 Tebran (Evin Prison)
Saeid 11.88 Tebran
Shahin 1988 Tehran (Evin Prison)
Shirin 11.88 Tehran
Siavash 9.88 Karaj
Siroos 12.88 Shiraz
Zahra 2. 9.88 Rasht
Zahra 11.88 Tehran (Evin Prison)
-26-
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1
2
3
4
5
6
7
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
Hohammad Reza (mami
AU Alcbar Eliasi
Hurtaza IluEtaharl
Fereidoon Dehiavi
Zekr *11 lad Hehr
Ibrahi. Hoghaddam
Vahab Hcidari Abhari
Hohammed T ghi Sarar Gha eh
Seyed Kamal Taheri
Nohsen Chaderi
Au Movahedi
Rahman Azizpour
Hah.ood Nortezapnur
Jasfar Zanjanizadeh
Hohammed Dawo3k Asheghbcn
All Akbar Abmadi
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
18
30
52
23
32
30
38
32
17
11
25
30
38
26
16
35
Student
Iron smith
Head of the Revolutionary
Council,lheo]ogian arid
Professor of Philosophy
Worker
Worker
Driver
Air force Technician
Employee
Student
Student
School Teacher
Clergyman
Bank (mplo-,ee
Factory Owner
Student
P ,ster seller
17.2.76
21.3.79
2.5.19
8.5.79
20. 6. 79
16.11.19
10.4.89
23 .9 . 80
10.1.81
16.1.8'
21. 3.81
29.4.81
5.5.81
20.5.81
20. 5.81
18. 6. 8 1
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Date
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17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
3D
31
32
33
34
ho1am Reza Chadimi
A,iir Hassein Bani Bid Hendi
A. 1 i Zeighi
Hassan Kazemlou
Hasood Eftekhari
Pirooz Shafiee
Au As ar Hohebbi Mobarez
3alil Abt asi
4ohammac. Iossain Jamshidi
Hamid Reza Bid Hendi
Reza Hirzai Aminlou
Amir Abbas Bakhshi Mova er
Bahram Shokzi
Behzad Bahrami
Fariborz Karami
Reza Rahmani
Au Bakhtiari
Plajid AhP4adzadeh Ardebili
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
32
31
25
15
16
23
28
25
34
30
28
24
‘2
16
45
30
17
16
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
Worker
Teacher
Martyr Foundation (n iliyee
Student
Student
Worker
Worke
Worker
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Worker
Doctor for Cuards
Student
Worker
Army Personnel
Student
Student
21.6.81
4.6.81
8.7.81
16. 7.81
18.7.8
19.7 .81
2 r,. 7.81
20. 7.81
23. 7. 81
24. 7. 81
24 .7 .81
24.7.81
24.7 . 81
25. 7. 81
25. 7.01
26. 7 .81
28.7.81
28. 7.81
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Date
Place
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
Amir Asian Doroodion
Safar All Shanjani
Taghi Hahai Soltani
Zolteghar Nomeni
All Bagheri
Karim Fateh ryan
Au Sedighiar
Qcdratollah— fflazemi Jazanabadi
Mohammed Au Agha Rajabi
Hoasein Soheili
HossEin Safai Aojjarod
Hortcza Saidi
Ahma Reza Mahdavi Hoghadd
Hansoor Panahi
Kesa rth Karami
Perham Badiee
Mahamned Dalli
Mohamee Sorb Nesri
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
40
32
36
15
48
45
16
33
35
24
40
43
27
33
20
16
25
32
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
Worker
Teacher
Court Employee
Student
Cloth Dealer
Army E loyee
Student
Shop Owner
I adio E loyee
(yin Prison Employee
PiPe Layer
Bank Employee
Teacher
Worker
Deprit ed Foisulat ion (uiployee
Student
Teacher
Worker
29.7.81
29.1.81
29.1.81
2.8.81
3.8.81
3.8.81
3.8.81
4.8.81
5.8.81
6.8.81
6.8.81
10.8.81
10.8 .81
11.8.81
11.8.81
12 . 8.81
12. 8.81
12.8.01
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Date
Place
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
Behzad Akhavan
Pirouz S afii Nasb
Atvnad Masih
Adel Pedram
Nasser SF ams
Vahid Homayounieh
Hohammad Khosravi
Majid Damir Chelli
Mohammad Reza Mahfoozi
Plohammad Hossein Farsian
Hassan Chaani
Mohammed Reza isi
Saeed Kabkanian
Nasser Sadem
Seyed Horteza Ayatollahi Tabai
HamicJ Qanberi
Abdol Rasool Jamshidi
Reza Darveeshvard
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
17
31
41
19
31
27
29
14
33
22
16
24
32
55
31
29
20
Student
Shop owner
Radio- Television Euqloyee
Student
Prosecutor's Employee
Worker
Student
Teacher
Student
Air Force Segeant
Welder
Student
Mobilization Member
Worker
Clergyman
Student
Weledr
Student
12.8.81
15.8.81
16.8.81
16.8.81
16.8.81
18.8.81
18.8. 81
19.8. 81
20. 8. 81
20.8.81
21.8.81
20.8. 81
23.8 .81
24 .8 . 81
24.6 . 81
24.8.81
25.8. 81
25.8.81
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71
72
73
74
75
76
17
78
19
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
Abdoirasool Jamahidi
Masood A.iri Hoghaddam
Hossein Dafooti
Au Haj Hoh ad Au Zargar
Saeed Nategian
Mohid iloesein Chalami Siani
Nasser Seifian
Bahr Melirnejad
Mohad Isaael Halek
ShaNaz 8ayat
Hoh d F iroozi
Nasser 8aM Jali
M * a d Taqi Reza Harcjioi ,kar
Hoh ad esandoost
Hoh ad Hossein Sheikh-Akbary
ilamid Saami
Moh d Ta i Haj Haidari
Abol as$em Sedghi
x
x
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x
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36
29
22
32
18
42
17
19
56
33
18
31
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16
15
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34
Worker
Teacher
Member of Mobilization
Oil C anyWor!cer
Moblizatio,n Member
Worker
Student
Habilizatio Meater
Clergyman
Sofa Maker
Student
Disciplinary Court
Head of Physical Training
Student
Student
Bank Eqloyee
Dairy Prodoct Seller
Bank (qloyee
25.8.81
26.8.81
26.8.81
27.8.81
28.8.81
28.8.81
28 .8.81
29.8.61
29.6.81
30.8.81
30.6.81
31.8. 81
31 .8. 61
2.9.81
3.9.81
5.9.81
6.9.61
6.9.81
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89 Chasem Joberzadeh X X 23 2 . th W. cer 6.9.81 Iehran
90 Hamid Namazi X X 32 Production Worker 7.9.81 “
g 1 Abdol Maj id Ardalan X 59 Farmer 8.9.81 Saqez
92 Mohamaad Hasham ( asemi x X 62 Farmer 8.9.81 lehran
93 $ a ad Yusefj X X 28 Teacher 8.9.81 U
94 Au Akbar Ramzani X X 17 Student 8.9.81 ..
95 Kho row Chadiani X X 16 Mobilization me er 9.9.81
% Reza Hatemi X X 15 Mobilization masher 9.5 .81 “
97 Hamid Tahaasbi X X 14 Student 9.9.81 ‘.
98 Mohaa.ad Hadi Shabanpour X X 36 Driver 9.9.81 N
99 Hoh ad Reza Kakai X X f5 Driver 10.9.81
100 Rat atollah Soltan Ahi X X 28 Worker 10.9.01 N
101 Hamid Reza Heidari X X 16 Student 11.9.81 N
102 Hoh d Yahyai X X 15 Student 11.9.81
103 Rahmatollah Jawanmard X X 40 Driver 12.9.81 II
104 Hamid Seifi Chomi X X 31 Teacher 15.9.81 N
105 Hohsein Hanafizadeh X X 23 Army Sergeant 15.9.81
106 Seyed Au Seyed Nasseri X X 32 Worker 15.9.81 U
P. I .D
I I . .
Name and Family Name Age Occupation Date Place
101 Noha d Au Molla Tayefesh X X 40 Worker 15.9.81 lehran
108 Shu KJ J i X X 52 Far't er 51 .9.81 “
109 Au Aslipour X X 16 Student 20.9..
liP, Raza Moosivand X X 17 Mobilization mei er 20.9.81 ‘.
P11 Hasood Moosivand X X 18 Mobilization me er 20.9.81 ‘.
112 Ghol Reza Yusefian X X IS Student 20.9.81 .‘
113 Ta i Fattat akhsh X X 31 St., . .. . . ,ker 22.9.81
114 Moh ad Vkkhsh X X 17 Student 24.9. 1
115 Nad Mazhabdar X X 16 Student 24.9.81 .
116 Reza Allabdad X X Si Mobilization Meober 25.9.81 .
117 Amir Ebrahim Darbandi X X 2 ; university Student 25.9.81 “
118 P4ehdi Nebdizadeb Fazeli X X 32 Key Maker ‘6.9.81 ‘.
119 Au Akbar Hossein Reigi X X 16 S t udent .26.9.81
120 Mohsen Chassemo X X 31 thbiversity Student 27.9.81 .‘
121 rarzad Raiszadeh X X 26 University Student 27.9.81
122 Nebdi AJ adi X X 33 Ministry of Road (aployee 27.9.81
123 t4ehdi Rastgar X X 15 Sti.jdent 27.9.0'
124 Mehdi P4ansouri X X 31 Taxi Driver 2 7•9 . 1
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125 Cholam Reza Raza Ratimani X X 17 Student 27.9.81 lehran
126 Moh ad IChosravi X X i6 Student 27.9.81
127 Seyed Rassol Moosavi Abrikereh X X 32 Laundry Worker 27.9.81 “
128 Mehdi Rajab Raigi X X 22 Development Worker 21.9.81 ‘.
129 AU Mansouri X X 30 Teacher 27.9.01
130 Abol fazi Samiri X X 2& Teacher 27.9.81 “
131 Cholam Hossein Lavaee X X 34 Shop Owner 27.9.81
132 tloh ad Reza Sadeghpour X X 24 University Student 27.9.81
133 Hossein Dawood Dae!4ti X X 29 Worker 27.9.81 “
134 Abbas HoghVizadeh X X 38 Worker 28.9.81 “
135 Matnood Jaafari X X 35 Teacher 28.9.81
136 A ia3an Farahzad X X 36 Police Warrant Officer 30.9.81
137 .3aafar Kaihori X X. 20 Mobilization Nesber 1.10.81
138 Masood Fajri Qomsheh X X 16 Student 3.10.81 H
139 Hamid Aofacrahi X X 17 Student 5.1 .81 .
140 Fereidoon R jabzadeh X X 16 Student 5.10.81 “
141 Ebrahi. Ni a X X 18 Mobilization Mesber 8.10.81 .
142 Fariborz Redafzoo. X X 19 Mobilization I g er 11.10.81
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143 Nad Shafiefar X X 18 Mobilization Heober 15.10.81 Miol
144 Javad Hossein Khah X X 26 Teacher 17.10.81 Tehran
145 Reza Qadir Zareh X X 32 Bank E.ployee 19.10.81 N
146 Yahya Mohtashi x X 54 Tailor 21.10.81 N
147 seyed bbas rahaat Nejad X X 46 Retired Serjeant 22.10.81
148 Khosrow Pasooli X X 23 Driver 27.10.81 “
149 Mi Reza Rezaian X X 16 Student 11.11.81
150 M h ed RaZe vi.taj X X 17 Student 16.11.81 .‘
151 Ja ehid Hogoie X X 19 Student 18.11.81 .‘
152 Hussein S i X X 16 Driver 21.11.81 “
153 Davood Chahardori X X 34 Worker 22.11.81 “
154 MoI c—' Mu V cili X X 15 Mobilization Meaher 23.11.81
155 Mehdi Behrooz X X 23 Textile Worker 23.1181 “
156 Seyed Seifollah Seyed Nazarallal X X 55 Ice Seller 25.11.82
157 AU Nikzad Farokhi X X 32 Blood Transfer (aployee 25.11.81
158 As ar Nikzad FardII X X 26 Cendarserie Sergeant 25.11.81 “
159 I4 .sour Zartosht X X 33 Mechanic 27.11.81
160 Kari. Shirgir X X 24 Independent Work 30.11.81 “
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161 Ra ool Noordanesh X X 21 Independent work 30.11.81 Tebran
162 Hassan Varzinyar X X 30 teacher 1.12.81 .‘
163 Abol asea Nasirnia X X 26 Worker 4.12.81
164 Kazem Shahrabi Farahani X X 15 Student 5.12.81
165 liadi Shahrabi Farahani X X 17 Mobilization He er 5.12.81 .‘
166 Ah.ad Boland Mahiatpour X X 24 Prosecutirs Eqloyee 5.12.61 “
167 Seyed Abdol Reza Mo tabai X X 45 Me er of reconstruction Corps 7.12.81 1
168 I4oh d tiolamshahi X X 22 P chanic 13.12.81 *1
? 169 Au Hirza Hosseini X X 44 Police Warrant Of ricer 16.12.81 .‘
170 Seyed bdol Karim Mokhber X X 36 Clergyman 16.12.81
171 Abol IIasswe Abeidjnj X X 25 I'rosecutor Office Driver 28.12.81
172 Fereidoun Chasemzadeh X X 21 Mobilization nw zter 29.12.81 U
173 Au Reza Hosseini X X 38 Development Worker 29.12.81 “
174 Qassem Cudarzi X X 43 Warehouse man 5.1.82
175 Mohaiiiaad Parsi Mogadam X X 37 Dray Fruit Seller 5.1.82
176 Reza Shokrai X X 46 President's Emoloyee 10.1.82 ‘.
177 Javad sobhani X X 35 Household Coods Seller 20.1.81 “
178 Hossein Rasoolzadeh X X 26 legal Police 3.2.82 ‘.
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179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
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191
192
193
194
195
196
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tlohad Au Hoh adi
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Sayed Hohsen Hoseini
Ilaeewi Agha Baigi
MdtOOd Col Nabi
Abdol Hossein Rezai
Hot' d Au Na. ize
Hoses in Mi Shayesteh
Abbas Mi Ranjbar Pazooki
- J Hossein Mir Ahaadi
N iood Zareefnie
Nosteta Hojatti
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Seyed Hossein islali Fariborz -
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x
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27
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29
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32
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Legal Police
Defens Kinistry e.ployee
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Neaber of IIiiversity Crusade
er Cf reconstruction Crusad
Heaber of (Miversity crusade
Crocery ier
Household Cood Dealer
Officer
Xlergysan
Student
C&ibler
4.2.82
5.2.82
5.2.82
7.2.82
8.2.82
9.2.82
15. 2. 82
16.2 .82
16.2 . 82
22.2.82
23.2.82
23. 2 .82
23.2.82
25.2.82
25.2.82
27.2.82
27.2.82
27.2.82
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197
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199
200
201
202
203
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205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
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Au Rezai
Zeiriol Abedin Yat oi .IIinia
P4oh ad Bagher Qaffari
Abbas Jalali
Manouchhr Azimi Anaraki
$ohaad thavooshi
Shamsolish Sheidai K ashai
Abc ighassem User i Baghdadabadi
Ahaad Nawab Not lag
Abdoihamid Saboonchi
Javad bor-jali
Ilorteza Eezadi
Ismil Aqheleh Tarjani
Sayed Saeed Jahimei
Nahaood Sheen Boyouki
Sherang Romouzi Bagherjani
Seyed Ilojtaba Afzali Mousavi
Hossein Mozaf far Kagham
x
x
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x
x
x
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Director Ceneral of Sepah Bank
Driver
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Oil Company Employee
Builder
Teacher
Student
Development Worker
Car Oil Changer
Develol nt Worker
Employee
Builder
Employee of Housing Foundation
Clergyman
Clergyman
27.2.82
3.3.82
5.3.82
7.3.82
7.3.82
7.3.82
7. 3.82
7.3.82
12. 3. 82
12. 3.82
13.3.82
13. 3 . 82
14.3.82
14. 3.82
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Date
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215 Noh ad Torobi Azar X X 34 Jeweller 24.3.82 Iehran
216 Naseer Hasani X X 53 Tailcr 24. 3.82
217 Noh ad Montazerol Zohour X X DevelopPt Worker 24. 3.82 Sari
218 Qo1 Reza B 4 d X X 28 Soldier 27.3.32
219 Abdol Rahi. Hajionori X X 34 Soldier 28.3.82
220 Mi Choopan 4ojaraddi X X 31 Te cher 28.3.82 U
221 Horteza Hehdizaden X X 27 Worker 3.4.02
222 Pa'viz Dastarbandani X 29 Worker 4.4.82 “
223 Sated Pelehclu X X 19 Cloth 4.4.82 I I
224 HOS yOISl Mahvi X 17 Student 6.4.32
225 Hajid Taleblou X X 18 Mobilization er 13.4.82 U
226 M.ad Mani X X 15 Student 18.4.82 U
227 Seyed Hohaed Tabatahai X X 41 Erployee 21 .4.82
228 Hoh ed Reza Kardau X X 31 High Court Em 0 loyee 21.4.82 U
229 Seyed Akbar Mirhossaifli X X 28 Electrician 26.4.82 S .
230 Hoh ed Shatii X X 18 Mobilization P er 27.4.82 N
231 Siavosh Then X X 15 Student 27.4.82 N
232 Cholan Reza Sainarghandi X X 78 Spiritual Man 28.4.82 .
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233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
chorb 'n Taati
ChoIIan Biclchoi
Abbas Meechi
Au Reze Rahimi Sefat
Aiiiad Reza kalachai Sabet
Behn II Noha i
Au Asgh. r Rahimi Ml
Seyed Moha d Tabatabai
Akbar .skari Bokai
K r Sheikh
Qanbar Bayatlou
Hossein Au Moradi
Moesayeb Yazdian
Esla. Moh ad Au Khani
Hohamed Mir Abi Sefid Abi
Au Rahoani
Hossain Firoozian
Rajab Au Nagabi
x
x
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28.4.82
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4.5.82
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5.5.82
C .5.82
8.5.82
8.5.82
8.5.82
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11.5.82
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Place
251 Mehdi Qayyomi X X 42 Police Co. ando 12.5.82 Iehran
252 Au Reza Reeshsefidi X X 31 Policeman 13.5.82 “
253 Oh ed .]aafar Tabatabai X X 53 Businessman 15.5.82
254 Seyed Farjollah Khora X X 35 Clergyman 15.5.82
255 Jsmshid T be d Xhos ehr X X 45 Mason 20.5.82
256 Taher (gda.i Col Afzaee X X 14 Student 20.5.82
257 Zahra Kordi x X 21 House- Wife 31. .82
258 Javad Jaafari X X 32 Officer 1.6.82 N
259 Ali Reza Det4ian X X 17 Student 1.6.82 “
260 Seyed Mastafa Raheati Poor Shai a X X 32 Spiritual man 1.6.82
261 Akbar Ayeneh Wand X X 31 Officer 3.6.82 ‘.
262 Seyed Mahaed Au Seyed Sadri X X 24 Officer 3.6.82 ..
263 Hassan Ha ii i X X 43 Worker 7.6.82 “
264 Seyed Miba Darabi 7 . X 35 Terico Dealer 9.6.82 “
265 Ismael Safdari X X 42 Worker 12.6.82 1
266 Batool Safdari X X 33 Housewife 12.6.82
267 Salman Raheani ..
268 Abbas Aliabadi X X 53 Train Driver 1L6.82 “
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269 Najieb A11 adi Rahisi X X 25 Education Hinistry Inspector 12.6.82 Tebran
270 Nader Farkhondeh Owghani X X 20 Student 15.6.82
27t Naehailah Najafi X X 31 Employee 15.6.82 “
272 Hoha ed Kia Shemshaki X X 28 Worker 15.6.82
273 Yadollah Sadeg Naini X X 36 Endowr nt Employee 15.6.82 “
274 Sayed Au Hejazi X X 32 Retired Office Employee 15.6.82 .‘
275 Hoesein Aekari Boshkani X X 16 Student 22.6.82 ‘.
276 Eshrat Eskandari X X 34 Housewife 25.6.82 ‘.
277 Abdoflah APisadi X X 34 Constructin Material Seller 4.7.82 Yard
276 Seye Mohsein Hit Sharifi X X 20 Employee 4..7.82 SI
279 Hoesein Hosseinian X X 18 Student 6.7.82 “
280 Deiood Arjcmandi X X 16 Student 7.'.82 II
281 Anis Noon X X 24 Houswife 8.7.82 N
282 Hoesein Riahi X X 42 Worker 8.7.82 5 ,
283 Hoh ed Au. Rostasi X X 32 Cloth Seller 8.7.82
284 All Akbar Amiri X X 23 Driver 9.7.82 “
285 Naqser 8ashlid X X 31 Automobile Dealer 9.7.82 “
286 14ohsd Au Amini Nejad X X 28 Theology Student 11.7.82 II
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Date
Place
287 Saeed Noun Tajer X X 43 Hobilization Ne er 13.7.82 Yazd
288 Qose . Mi IIedayat X X 27 tMh.ersity Student 19.7.82
289 Narallah Esfendiari X X 21 Worker 26.7.82 Tehran
290 Hoha d Mi ?4 a Rajabi X X 33 Radio Elployee 5.8.82 N
291 N ,b e Ne.atroshan X X 27 Officer 7.8.82
292 Hoasein Kaze.i X X 29 Retired 7.8.82
293 Nojeed Qa i X X 24 Self( 1oyed 9.8.82
294 Khosr i R ji Najafi X X 32 Teacher 10.8.82 ‘.
295 I 1 ossein Sessarnejad X X 31 Worker 11.8.82 “
2% Taleb Taheri X X 16 Student 15.8.82
297 Wohd All Pjcbari X X 15 Student 1 .8.82 “
298 *kbar Noorpour X X 22 Hoeap)oyed 16.8.82
299 Reza Rikehzanan Tc * i X X 41 Electrician 16.8.82
300 Hoh ed Shelcari X X 14 Student 13.8.82
301 Nehdi Neck Rave&) X X 15 Student 17.8.82 -
302 Iloh ed Au Sajedian X X 41 Real Estate Office Owner 18.8.82 N
303 Q 1 Ilos ein Yac iodi N ini X X 23 Driver 18.8.82 N
304 Shaban Au Hoadari X X 31 Cabbler 18.8.82 r
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Date
,O5 Abdol Hossein Ranjkeah X X 23 Carpenter 19.8.82 Tehran
306 Hat od fetheli X X 17 Stuent 19.8.82
301 Abdol Au aheri X X 35 Real (state Office Owner 20.8.82
308 Norteza Kafash Moh& ed Nejad X X 46 Mosque Servant 20.8.82 U
309 Irsj Hedayet X X 16 Student 23.8.82 U
310 Reshid Haji Motji X X 21 Worlcer 25.8.82 “
311 Jalil Kari*i X X Ii Sti.x 3 en 25.8.82 11
312 Hestafa Dieraghi X X 15 StudeRt 25.3.82 “
313 Sererahi Ashirieh X X 19 Housewife 26.C.62
314 Au Akbar Kfflwiadai X X 15 Student 26.8.82 “
315 Ahead Javid X X 26 Thedlogy Student 26.8.82 “
316 Abbas Hahloo Qcai. X X 31 Cooperative Worker 28.8.82 “
317 Reza Au S8iedi X X ‘ 5tuE ent 29.8.82
318 Javad Nagaksh Kerasni X X 27 briver 30.8.82
319 Nasrol lah Hohebi AshtiaflL X X 36 Air Force Worker 30.8. 8L “
320 14&..ood Zarei X X 44 Businessean 30.8.E2
321 Eholas Au Sasadi X X 32 ruit Seller 31.8.82 U
322 Hassan Sadegpour X X 23 Wire Han 31.8.82 “
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Date
Place
323 Au Hohadi Nasr adi X X 36 Electrician 1.9.82 Iehran
324 I e n Shirzadi X X 25 Worker 1.9.82 U
325 Kax ali Plahid l 1 ne- ein Sijar X X 24 Cloth Seller 1.9.82 U
326 Il id Beheood X X 31 Self E loyed 2.9.82
327 Ahead Javid X X 40 Clergy.an 3.9.82 U
328 As iarShafai X X 28 Fire.an 4.9.82
329 Sh oll Ranjbar X X 32 Self ( loyed 4.9.82 U
330 Mi A' i Daryan X X 23 Cr er 5.9.82 U
331 Abolfazl Khoshroo X X 27 Fruit Seller 5.9.82 II
332 Abol e 3 erzadeh X X 26 Bath er 6.9.82 U
333 Reza Abbasi X X 31 (aployee 6.9.82
334 Qa )aberzadeh X X 2c Bath Worker 6.9.82
335 Abbs Khaiilabadi Nabati X X 43 Tailor 8.9.82 U
336 Roahollah Sahrabi X X 13 Student 8.9.82 U
337 Bani l id ini X X 21 flair Dresser 11.9.02 U
338 ls.ael Noh adi X X 41 Crocer 14.9.82 U
339 Mir Ha.idi Benas X X 28 Butcher 15.9.82 U
348 Nasrol1 Torabi X X 42 Carpet Dealer 15.9.82 N
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341 Mm Noon Na oodara X X 26 Worker 16.9.82 lehran
342 Au Safari X X 26 Soldier 17.9.82 N
343 As ar Askari X X 38 Bycyele Repairer 17.9.82
344 Abbas Au J alian X X 16 Student 18.9.82
345 Hassan He tyar X X 34 Button Dealer 21.9.82
346 Abc! Fazi Au Akbani X X 23 Mobilization Vcrber 25.9.82 “
347 Seyed Ah.ad Ro4 ani Nevni X X !41 Worker LS. 9 . 82
348 Saeed Hoenigorb Kandi X X 5 Mobilization He er 1.10.82 .‘
349 Maood Daljni X X 56 Worker 1.10.82
350 Hat ood Eftekhari X X 31 lectrician 17.10.82 Bakhtaran
351 Abo!ghasst. H ibi X X 16 Student 20. 10.82
352 Fatemeh Yeganeh X X 28 Housewife 21 .10.L
353 Dawood Nazem Alboka X X 31 Warehouse man 23. !O. 82 “
354 All Qarueh Ebadi Ostad X X 34 Crocery 1.11.82 “
355 Moha d Ta i Beeharat X X 32 Majlis Deputy 28.12.82
356 Hossein Rezai X X 26 Medical Dector 9.3.83
357 Barat Au Asadi X X 49 Policeman 8.7.83 U
358 Abbas Bahrenian X 38 Directo 4.4.79 I sfahan
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Date
Place
359 Haj i Ai I a-Khale i X 26 Sergeant 21.4.79 Naghadeh
36() ALj (idani Abbas-deh X 20 Weiding grinder 30.5.79 Khorramshahr
361 j. sg ow Sadeh x 27 Worker 197.79 I4aku
362 Hosle . 4 ”jhi X 50 Teacher 19.7.79 Kaku
363 Hoosa—RaI i X 24 Sergeant 1.11.79 OShnavieh
364 Au Rakohi X 21 Policeman 25.1.80 Hoshad
365 Honirols d t Dabuyan X X 37 Housewife 29.2.80 Condad
366 kiid ffli g in Sang Tarash X 30 Bank (.ployee 10.3.80 Kerman
367 FathollII Ab llahi X X 42 P ilization Worker 30.3.80 Naku
368 SeifollII Rost adeh X X 24 Farmer 30.3.80 Haku
369 A.ll iyax P. .zai X X 41 Farmer 30.3.80 Haku
370 l 1 cjs jn Yazdani X X 32 Worker 3.4.80 isfahan
371 1 a s i Abdollazadeh X X 27 Tezcher 8.4.80 Haku
372 Pas l Abbllazadeh X X 23 Teacher 8.4.80 Haku
373 Fat Miryan X X 62 Self E loyed 9.4.80 Bazjoa Qaleh
374 Hoslehat-1 hrmai X X 20 Farmer 23.4.80 Sa ez
315 Chacha -Noroozi X X 20 Farmer 24.4.80 Sanandaj
316 ad—Vaia* X X 7 Student 25.4.80 Bakhtaran
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Occuption
Date
Place
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
I
Kaze.-Lholanqarpo or
Sat*ian—2 iadi
I ha..ad—Ta i Roostai
Ikaaein Asadi
Ebrahia BoIIan Haghighi
Rahi. Rezaizadeh
Reza Abdali
Q ol AU Pir Horadi
Aziz Setayeshgar
Sayed Zad Au Hossaini
AU Ilnssain Pir Horadian
.3awad Plonsaref
Seyed .3ala] Noor
H adi
Qasse. Hojdeh
Hoh ed Rezi
Asis Eskandari
Hahraa Samadzadeh
x
x
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x
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x
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x
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x
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x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
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29
22
34
20
38
20
23
29
35
25
23
18
22
42
29
32
41
43
University-E .ployee
Water Organization Eeployee
faroer
Soldier
Cendaruerie Hajor
Student
I.R.C.C Neaher
I.R.G.C.Officer
Woricer
Officer
Teacher
b orker
Neiiber of Islamic Requblic
Council Lanqrood
Conscript Soldier
First Sergeant
Self Eqloyed
Self Eqloyed
25.4.80
28.4.80
7.5.80
1.6.80
9.6.80
10.6.80
12.6.80
12 .6.80
13.6.80
13 6.80
13.6.80
19.7.80
27.7.81)
29. 7.80
29.7.81)
28.8.80
28.8.80
Bakhtaran
Iehran
P )t
Baneh
Firouzatad
F irouzabad
Semi ra m
See i ram
Shiraz
Seiin ram
SelDiram
Maku
Langrocd
Ahwaz
Ahwaz
Khalifan
Kha ii fan
S S S
Nase and Faaily NOal! Aqe Occupation Dote Place
395 Abbas Vesal X X 25 Steel Mill Worker 13.9.80 Baneh
396 Fathollah—Fathi X X 21 Worker 28.9.80 Piranshahr
397 Seyed Saeed Arfa X X 27 Worker 30.9.80 Jiroft
398 Nashallab Nahdizadeh X X 22 Student 3.10.80 Mahabad
399 Sadeg Nazayen X X 32 Self Erployed 6.10.80 Bagan Qaleh
400 Nahran Nowruzi X X 21 Student 12.10.80 Radar
401 Abdol Amir Noon X X 37 II e loyed 16.10.80 Bakhtarari
402 SaMatali J hidi X X 55 Farmer 27. 10.80 Mohanxned shar
403 Khosrow Norooyar X X 28 Self (.iployed 3.12.80 Mohai inedyan
404 Au Z en Dehghan X Aga Babakhani P1st Cuard 4.12.80 Shiraz
405 Hossein Bakehi Hakiai X X 60 Con ittee Official 4.12.80 I4ashad
406 Seyed Pkiha. d Seyedi Alavi X X ? Student 6.1.81 Nashad
407 Bayrss Javid X X 25 20.1.81 Jalbar
408 Akbar Khalili X X 23 Worker 25.1.81 Mahabad
409 Hossein As ari Sanadi X X 23 Theologian 19.2.81 Fouman
410 Honarvar—AbbaSSi X x 20 House Builder 4.3.81 Sagher
411 1edal Raji X X 19 Student 10.3.81 Saniram
412 Mohamed Hossein Sang Tarash X X 27 Bank L.loyee 10.3.81 Keraim
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Occupatiun
Date
Place
&1 3
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
Mba Akbari
Rah.atollah Baqeri
Au Asadi
Akbar Soltani
Hossein Peshohandeh
Au Fataa Karimi
Khavar-Noradi
Alcbac—Mir i
Hoosa—Vahedi
H id-Haqhian
Azia Shirazi
Bataan Saadatnejad
P d r.omj rzi
Sha IIaz Jahangiri
Abdol S aad Shamshiri
Hojatollah Fakhrai
Seyed Aiwan Mousavi
I4ota ed Mebdi Jawanmardi
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
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32
17
19
18
24
23
38
30
23
15
90
16
21
21
18
23
31
55
Wot ker
Student
Student
Student
Student
Drafted Soldier
House rker
Driver
Car-Painter
Boot Polisher
Worker
Mobilization Meaher
Farmer
Worker
Student
Medical Student
School Janitor
Mobilization Heater
7.4.81
8.4.81
13.4.81
14.4. 81
20.4.81
25.4.81
25.4.81
25.4.81
25.4.81
25.4.81
25.4.81
5.5.81
15.5.81
15.5.8)
25.5.81
27.5.81
31.5.81
11.6.81
Sh i raz
So i raz
Hahabad
Mahabad
At awaz
Shahrehord
I3akht aran
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OCCUp3LiUD
Date
Place
431 Awaz Nazari X X 19 Student 11.6.81 Shiraz
432 Parviz Karbanjani X 14 Worker 13.6.81 Bakhtaran
433 Shabeoe—Sarvari X 23 Cushion Maker 13.6.81 lehran
434 liassan Farhadi Ardakani X X 41) Driver 14.6.81 Shii-az
435 Seye4 P4ia Housavi X X 39 Meie Schools Janitor 17.6.81 Shir z
436 Au J h Khavati X X 45 House Builder 18.6.81 Mashad
431 Sayed Hobsen Hashesi X X 20 Student 19.6.81 Isfahan
438 Seyed Hadi Iffl. in i Nia X X 16 Student 24.6.81 Mashad
439 Seifolish Ab lkarisi X X 39 Majlis Deputy 28.6.81 !ehran
440 Mir Choli Akhondi X X 49 Farmer 29.6.81 Kazeroon
441 Booranq-Oolbai X X 37 Uni bersity—Elrployee 29.6.81 Tehran
442 fatisa laleghani X X 4 30.6.81 Mahshahr
443 Kari Eghyalpour X X 18 Student 3.7.81 Shi raz
444 ALt Reza Noorani X X 33 Deputy Governor General 6.7.81 Rasht
445 Seyed Ah d Horshadi X X 24 evolutionary Guard 9.7.81 Kheir will
446 Sayed lili Hoae ini Jang.jou X X 26 Hygiene Technicain 16.7.81 Hashad
447 Mi Reza P zani Hoghaddam X X 1 H bilization Ne er 16.7.81 Rasht
448 Sayyed Moh ad Reza Zabet Chat . X X 22 Student 23.7.81 Rasht
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Date
Place
449 Kari. Es1 P& ast X X 26 E 1oyee 24. LBI Rasht
450 Nooreddin XIIiadi X X 18 Student 24.7.81 Sh i raz
451 ( arIIar—AktIIarizadeh X X 32 Bank E.ployee 24.7.81 I ebran
452 Ayatollah Mini X X 18 Construction Crusa 24.7.81 !sfahan
453 Dr. Moha..adi Minzadeh X X 33 Deputy to the Co erce Minister 29.7.81 Tebran
454 Hossein (afahani X X 23 Worker 31.7.81 Babol
455 Rahi. Taheri X X 24 Worker 31.7.81 Babol
456 Moh ed Shadab X X 26 Teacher 31.7.81 t.ahi Jan
457 Mohd NOkhtari X X 25 Trainee 31.7.81 Lahijan
458 Au Reza FeIIi X X 27 Student 31.7.81 Lahijan
459 Aziz Qiol i X X 17 Worker 31.7.81 Lahijan
460 Ia.ael S8de i X X 20 Student 31.7.81 Lahi Jan
461 Reza Nehrban X X 19 Student 31.7.81 Rasht
462 Hohaed Hossein Meheanian X X 31 Retired Tobbaco Monopoly EqJoy e 31.7.81 Shiraz
463 Robab Ismaili X X 27 Housewife 31.7.81 Shiraz
464 $ ed Hosaejn Isgnajli X X 52 Businessman 31 .7.81 Shi raz
465 Ahmed Ismaili X X 44 Businessman 31.7.81 Shiraz
466 Abdol Rah im Daneshjoo X X 48 Theologian 1.8.81 Kazeroon
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Dote
Place
467 Noha aed Reza Toosi X X 40 Cloth Dealer 2.8.81 Mashad
468 Habibollah—Salari X X 17 Student 3.8.81 Iranshahr
469 Aeghari Heidari X X 26 Theologian 3.8.81 Amol
470 Amjr Oalkhal X X 1 lineeployed 3.8.81 Bakhtaran
471 Najid Sajedi X X 38 Carpenter 3.8.01
472 Hossain Gojehee X X 12 Street Vender 3.8.81 .‘
473 Allah Horad Gorgechenai X X 30 Loader Driver 8.81
474 Hostafa Veisi X X 27 Driver 3.8.81
475 Farideh J li X X 32 Housewife 3.8.81 “
476 Hassod Fazaeli X X 22 lIns qfioyed 3.8.81 .‘
477 Asghar Halek Plaheoodi X X 30 Technical Worker 4.8.81 Bakhtaran
478 Au Bakhsh Amjadiari X X 23 Soldier 4.8.81 ‘.
479 Hoh ed Rafiezadeh X X 32 Worker 5.8.81 Rasht
480 Morteza Ezzati X X 22 Teacher 6.8.81 ianjan
481 Hajid Jannesar X X 21 Student 8.8.81 Amol
482 Horteza Yal X X 26 Shop Keeper 8.8.81
483 Ramazn NoIIakht X X 51 Worker in Mechanic Shop 8.8.81 Rasht
484 Ahead Hirzaifard X X 45 Worker 8.8.81 (stthhan
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485 Abbas Ali-Z& ri Zadeh X X 24 Worker 8.8.81 Estahb
486 Sayyed Ak ad Manafi X X 26 Sports Teacher 9.8.81 Sari
487 Abdol Azie Kheirabadi X X 20 Student 9.8.81
488 Yahya Kazemi X X 43 Butcher 9.8.81 Gabol
489 A'atollah Ziaie X X 21 Student 10.8.81 fl& twe& n
490 Ma1 iud Habi Pour X X 18 Student 10.8.81 CIiueni .hzihr
491 Sayyed Rahim Aziai X X 27 Worker 10.8.81 ClI Liu ..l 1 hr
492 Hedayat 4oha ad Nejad Ash X X 58 Clothes Sel}er 10.8.81 U .ht
493 Amanuhlah Ghadeen. X X 27 Bank Guard 11.8.81 Awul
494 Sayyed Hohauaad Sayed Baqeri X X 38 Employee on Service Duty 11.11.01 t;horIj1 ais
495 Cholam Reza Viezvari X X 26 Revolutionary Guard 11.0.111 t;u Jh ..ai
496 ltaj Jafar I'oha iad Ara i X X 53 Theologian 11.8.01 U kht ii - sa
496 Au Akbar t4oshrefi X X 22 Unemployed Diploma floldec 12.8.81 • Ji ii1
497 Cholam Re z Azimi X X 28 Worker 12.0.81 E taFi in
498 Moha*muad Re!a Taheri X X 31) Mason 13.0.81 Arnol
499 Hahdi Foroohar X X 20 Student 13.8.81
500 IIohsen Pashutan X X 22 reacher 14.0.01 1-I 1
5t Hojatollah Towhidi X X 35 Theologian 15.11.111 8 Lio1
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Age
Occupation
Date
Place
502 Qorban Babai X X 19 Student 16.8.81 Babol
503 Hostafa Kiyani X X 21 Student 16.8.81 Jsfahan
504 Kossein Eftekhari X X 22 Teacher 16. ..81 Rasht
505 Nesatullsh Ratu an Nej 'd X X 38 Business 16.8.81 Corghan
506 Shat our Hosseinzadeh X X 17 Student 7.8.81 Nasjid Suleimai
507 Nansoor Shafeie X X 26 Officer 18.8.81 Share Kord
508 Abbas Au Hekmatravan X X 22 Student 19.8.81 Isfahan
509 Hc d Hassan Shekarchi X X 20 Policeman 19.8.81 Zanjar
510 Nesatollab Qartari X X 25 Unemployed 19.8.81 Roodsar
511 Seyed Ismael Khalili X X 21 Student 19.3.81 Sari
512 Seyed Hahaood Bozorghi .]artaz X X 37 Businessman in Bazaar 19.8.81 Rasht
513 Noh ad Naeeb Bakhshandeh X X 25 Hayor 19.8.81 Prae Sar
514 Saeed Yazdani X X 19 Teacher 20.8.81 Sojnurd
515 Par-viz Yazdani X X 23 Teacher 20.8.81 Bojnurd
516 Roohollah Kari.i X X 15 Student 23.8.81 Zanjan
517 Khosr . Babal X X 41 Shop Owner 211.8.81 Cha Ions
518 Noh ad A iaienejad X X 10 Student 20.8.81 Corgan
519 Hossein Astaneh Parast X X 57 Teacher 22.8.81 Plashad
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Age
Occupation
Date
Place
520 Abkil Hossein Nourizn X X 36 Teacher 23.8.81 Bojnurd
521 Hassan Sepahi X X 22 Officer 23.8.81 Rasht
522 Aboiqassea ( idi X X I Worler 23.8.81 Islaniabad
523 Reza Nazarizadeh X X 38 Worker 23.8.81 Bakgtaran
524 Yusef Harh a X X 31 Teacher 2.8.81 Astara
525 Ieeaa Honfared X X 25 Student 25.8.81 Ra ht
526 Ya oub Hashayekhi X . X 41 8usiness an 25.8.81 I..a grood
527 Gholea I4ossein Ysetipour X X 14 Student 27.8.81 Shiraz
28 H ssan Aeghari X X 40 Th ologion 27.8.81 Rasht
29 Tataasb Bahari X X 22 Farmer 2'.B.B l
530 Abbas PiehIIpanah X X 26 Theologian 26.8.81 Babolsar
531 S jyed Hassai Sayyed Rezait. X X 31 Business man 29.8.81 Corgan
532 Reza Au Saidi X X 33 Officer 29.8.81 Tehran
533 Abbas X X 32 Painter 29.8.81 Sabzevar
534 Q* se Moradi X X 19 Shop Apprentice 30.8.81 Aniol
535 Sayyed Hohsen Housa Vinejad X X 20 Student 30.8.81 Zanjan
536 Jaafar Hassan Zadeh X X 25 Worker 30.8.81 Chaem Shahr
537 Iraj Torabi X 17 Student 30.8.81 Langroud
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Date
Place
538 Hob ad Reza Haxhemi Pour X X 54 Head of Oil Co any Security 3O 8.81 Cachsaran
539 Nohm ad Hohser our X X 22 Student 31.8.81 Babol
541) Jawed 5hM anzadeh X X 25 Taxi Driver 31 .8.81 Babol
541 Au Barzeqar X X 2o Student 31.8.81 Babol
542 Fet .eh Darabi X X 52 Housewife 31.8.81 Bakhtaran
543 4 jn 3ali li X X 32 Ice Crew Vendor 31 .8.81 Darab
544 Rat matoll Soltan Au X X 23 Worker 31 .8.81 Iehran
545 t4ejdar Neda ar X X 49 Shop Owner 1.9.81 Chaloos
546 Ghol Risoali X X 66 Confectiiinei 1.9.81 Chaloos
547 Sayyed Sedeq h ibse' l X X 39 Theologian 1 .9.dl Rasht
548 Morteza Khodadadi X X 32 Theologian 2.9.81 Has
149 Monir Seif X X 23 Student 3.9.81 Nahavand
%O Hehdi Faraji Qaviad X X 24 Officer 3.9.81 Rasht
561 HoosP.ang Afi ar X X 45 Driver 4.9.81 Nowshahr
562 Hoha d Ibrehim Ravani I 1 34 Worker 6.9.81 Hashad
563 Sayyed Abolfazi Naszvi X X 33 Theologian 7.9.81 Khomeini Shahr
5U N t ' Qeyratmand I X 22 Teacher 8.9.81 8a.chtaran
565 Nehdi Yet NoI, adi8fl X I 25 Pkibilization 1ee er 8.9.81 Isfahan
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Age
Occupat ion
Date
Place
566 kari . Pouya X X 22 Cook 9.9.81 Tehran
567 Mehdi Sha iaqhian X First Sergeant 10.9.81 Shiraz
568 Jaafar Ne atzadeh X 18 Student 11.9.81 Hashtpar
569 Moha d Taqi Ebrahimi X 24 Worker 12.9.81 Bojnurd
570 Behzad Yousufian X X 13 Mebilization He er 12.9.81 Isfahan
571 Au Reza Shafineia X X 25 Teacher 13.9.81 Bakhtaran
572 Nowrouz Nowdehi Ik*a ad Nosea X X 36 Shop Oimer 15.9.81 Sabzevar
573 Notewesselol Husseini X X 41 Worker in PIIlic Bath HCMJse 17.9.81 Yazd
574 R zan Mi A*ua&iejad X X 24 Teacher 18.9.81 P4oshad
575 Azeem Meradi X X 29 Officer 18.9.81 Khorr bad
576 Ahead Kakooie X X 26 Officer 18.9.81 Kaeoeshahr
577 Hossein Javid Asadzadeh X X 47 Bus Assistant Driver 18.9.81 Mashad
578 Aemeh Morad Safai X X 19 Student 18.9.81 Bakhtaran
579 Hohaemad Sadeqinejad X X 18 Mechanic 18.9.8 Hashad
580 Heidar Au Hollashafii X X 16 Student 19.9.8 Shiraz
581 Mehdi Firouzi X X 17 Student 19.9.81 Shiraz
582 Sayyed Karim Shaheed Hasssini X X 18 Theologian Student 19.9.81 Chorghan
583 Peerooz Shafeie X X 26 Worker 19.9.81 Rasht
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585
586
587
588
589
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591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
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x
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x
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x
x
x
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Hosle .3avadi
3aafar Nouruzian
Nazar All Corzin
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Babullah IIesi
Au Au Pour
Nost.fa
Rs.i ollah ilavi
Qiol All Helki Deh 8ozorgi
Mostafa Ar
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Ilogsein Ilolla Noroozi
ME % Au Rajaie
Abdol Hossein Moba ier
Mostafa Nehrban
Diol f li
Batoul Bahoosti
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x
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x
x
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21
25
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27
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35
43
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He of Martyrs f sidat ion
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Driver in Pilavar Co
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19.9.81
21.9.81
21.9.81
21.9.81
21.9.81
21.9.81
21.9.81
21.9.81
21.9.81
23.9.81
23.9.81
24.9.81
26.9.81
27.9.81
28.9.81
28.9.81
29.9.81
29.9.81
Paresar
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C C C C
C Age Occupation Date Place
Name and Fa.ily Naae - ‘. c
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U x t Z
______________________________ I ____________________________
602 YaqIIali Hahdikhani X X 29 Crafts Han 29.9.81 Shatwe Kor
603 Al i Rah ooz X X 23 Teacher 3 ( 1.9.81 Bojnurd
604 Khosrow Nazari X X 30 Worlcer 30.9.81 Shir z
605 Ardeshir Dourangeb X 16 Student 1. 10.81 Is fahaf i
606 At ad Saleh Borujerdi X X 25 Assistant Driver L1D.81 1r hran
607 A.ir Pirdada Rimla X X 21 Hechanic 1.10.81 .
608 Cho1 Hossein HohaC-aadzadeh X X 16 Student 2. 10.81 Shi r
609 Hoh ad Taqi Hazet Jawav X X 19 Student 2. ifl n tt h -.-I
610 Farhad Joolideh Seerat X x ii Student 2.10.81 Shira
611 AIaad Keshavarz X X 15 Student 2.10.81 1 ,hr n
612 leila Zareh X X 25 Housewife 2.10.81 ..
613 Allahyar Zakipour X X 22 Student 3.10.81 Rahi'nahad
614 (brahim Sherafatian .3ahr ni X X 53 Razi School Principal 4.10.81 Shiraz
615 Au Hassanpour X X 35 Kerosene Seller 5.10.81 Iazd
616 Shokrollah Dirinohaninadi X X 16 Worker 6.10.81 Tehrari
617 Safio1lah . .Di Ol Iadi X X 11 Worker 6.10.81 li hran
618 Hohanm ad Hadi Firouz— Abadi X X 3 6. 10.81 Sliiraz
619 Ghol n Reza Taiaii X x Student 7.10.81 Shjraz
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620 Karim Heidari X X Student 7.10.81 Shira.
621 Saeed Jarahi X X Student 7.10.81 “
622 Sayyed Ebrahim Sharegian X X 45 Teacher 9.10.81
623 Sayyed Ebrahim fa ihi X X 33 I ctor 11.10.81 .‘
624 Rajabali Fallahfaz X X 24 Worker 12.10.81 I4ashad
625 Mi Akbar Ba hban X X 20 StuIInt 12.10.81 ‘I
626 Horteza Tazhik X X 21 Officer 14.10.81 Isfahan
627 Au Reza Tanbakouzadeh X X 16 Student 14.10 31
628 Hoh d Mi Barzegar X X 23 Officer 16.10.81 Shiraz
629 Es.ael Jahangiri X X 26 Worker 1&.10.O1 Seairain
630 Hobsen Soltani Parishani X X 21 Street Vendor 17.19.81 Mashad
631 Leila Noorbaksh X X 7 16.10.81 I biverdi
632 Abdolmajid Zokaian X X 19 Student 19.10.61 No shahr
633 Ayi Nirzaie Toularood X X 28 Teacher 20.10.81 Rasht
634 ‘ hmad Tanetdcar X X 25 Second Leiutenatn 20. 10.81 Burujerd
635 Nehdi Sa tan X X 21 Worker 20.10.8' Hashad
636 Ay Hirjaie X X 26 leacher 20.10.81 Pare Sar
637 Itasid Kahii X X. 22 Teacher 24.10.81 Hashad
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638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
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Reza Mohseni
Nasser Au Ahmadi
Sayyed E ae1 Moosavi
Ataad Rastegar Mo add
Sayyed Khazar Safavi
Hoh ad Reza I4a di
Moh ad Rafie
Safar Au (idi
Taqi Zaroori
Hossein Keshavarz
Hoha aad Hossein Rezaie
Moh ad Saleh Hazandarani
Morteza Hotallebi
Hoha ad Taqi Geraie]i
Rasool Qanbari
Sayyed Qasse*a Hosseini
Uabibollah Shariati Fard
x
x
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x
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x
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x
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x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
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x
x
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x
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26
20
50
49
56
46
22
19
22
39
20
17
26
26
27
49
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Air Force Naster Serqent
Worker
Student
Grocer
Farset
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Driver
Worker
Student
Mobilization Heiber
Deputy Student Affairs
Hale C issioned Soldier
Student
Teacher
Teacher
Worker
Theologian
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
24.10.81
25.10.81
26.10.81
27.10.81
31. 10. 81
1.11.81
3.11.81
5.11.81
5.11.81
5. 11.81
6.11.81
12. 11. 81
13.11.81
13.11.81
13. 11.81
14. 11.81
15.11.81
15.11.81
Hashad
Shiraz
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656
657
658
659
660
661
6..2
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
h ad Reza Shariati Fard
J sheed Do oi
Mahaood Hat i
Hossein Balali
Beitullah Shirzad
Shojah Asadi
Hanouchehr Borzooi 5ta eh
Bat an Kaka Au
Abolghass i Nassirnia
Ghol Ilasan Au Heidari
(brahis Khoshnood
Gholan Al i Hahdizadeh
Hassan Kaviani
Sayyed Abdol Rasool Saadat
Sayyed t4ohan nad laghi Dastgheib
Rajab Au HIIibza
Akbar Honshi
l4ohauinad Reza Abdollahi
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
23
16
30
23
31
41
41
25
13
24
27
16
14
31
29
31
26
Worker
Student
Teacher
Worker
Teacher
rag wer
Fruit Seller
High School Graduate Worker
Officer
Student
Worker
Officer
Student
Student
Worker
Teacher
Worker
Worker
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Salinas
Shi rap
1 . 11.01
1811.81
21.11.81
23.11.81
28.11.81
28. 11 .81
29.11.81
29. 11.81
4.12.81
6.12.81
it 2.81
7. 12.81
8.12.81
11. 12.81
11.12.81
11. 12.81
Ii. 12.81
11.12.81
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674 I4oha ad Beza Rahimi Javarinarai Student 11.12.81
x
675 Mohai ad Au Jabbari X 29 orricer 11.12.81
x
676 Seyed t4orteza Jaafari X 27 Officer 13.12.61 Amok Fores
x
677 Jaafar Rafie X 46 Policeman
x 22.12.81
Au Shahrow 36 Worker
678 R zan X 22.12.al Mashad
x
679 Emamgholi Jaafarzadeh X 26 Teacher 4.1.62 Ashrafieh
x
680 Mojtaba Est ki x 28 Tezcher 5.1.82 Iurujercl
x
681 Akbar Shokt Gozar X 7 Student 6.1.82 Rurujerd
x
682 Khusro Goudarzi X 51 Worker 17.1.82 Fare Sar
x
683 Abol Hasan Fadaie x 37 Butcher 18.1.82
x
684 Mehr Au Bahramiafl X 75 Farmer 27.1.82 Rezvn Shar
x
685 Hossein
Nowzad 53 Farmer 28.1.82 tiiandoab
x
686 Ali .)aafari X 16 Student 29.1.82 .
x
40 Farmer
687 A4 1 PI X 3.2.82 Amol
x
688 Kian Faraje x 20 Worker 5.2.82 tiahabad
x
689 Rahim Azizzadeh X 17 Student 5.2.82
x
691 Ghorban-NOOri
690 AbdolaziZ Asadi X 19 Mechanic
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Date
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692 Shahgoldi Aimaasi X X 50 Farmer 12 . 2.82 Rezvansh .hr
693 Shafaqqat Almaaai X X 15 Farmer 12.2.82 ‘.
694 Sheer Au Almaasi X X 17 farmer 12.2.82 .‘
695 Yousuf Oar Khoosh X X 17 Student 20.2.82 Sabad Kooh Jun9le
696 Khalil Kajani X X 28 Driver 21.2.82 Haji Jaafan
697 Sayyed Hossein Hosseini X X 20 Battery Maker 25.2.82 Isfahan
698 Bahra Saeedi X X 26 Driver 25.2.82 Isfahan
699 Khusro Dawoodian X X 43 Worker 26.2.82 Sh i rgah
700 Qorbanali Doostali Zadeh X X 17 Student 26.2.82 Shirgah
701 Rahean Azizpoor X X 43 Theologian 28.2.82 Tehran
702 Qorban Naderi x X 41 Police—Staff Sergent 7.3.82 Rasht
703 Mahdi Karimi X X 20 Student 7.3.82 Bakhtaran
704 Sade Nazari X X 35 Driver of Coveri or 10.3.82 Khorramabac
705 Hoh ad Salem Toosi X X 25 Teology Student 12.3.82 Tehran
706 Sayyed Ebrahim Sharagian X X 40 Teacher
707 Bahean Rouzban X X 31 Bank Worker Karaj
708 Chader Kakhrash X X 35 Worker ‘1 rw shahr
709 Bahean An arian X X 15 SLudent Iaj Ilosseir
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Place
710 Au Motu mm d Moghaddam X X 19 Student 23.3.82 Bandar Turkman
711 Awaz Mir Chaffari X X 18 Student 2.. .3.82 Kovar
712 Assadollah Dartoj X X 22 Worker 30.3.82 Oroomieh
713 Muhaamad Au Hag Pariah X X 25 Teacher 6.4.82 Chaem Shahr
714 Hossein Mozaffari X X 26 Worker 6.4.82 Chaem Shahr
715 .]amshid Khodaparast X X 30 Of Ficer 6.4.82 Chaem Shahr
716 Yazdanb&.chsh Dehghan X X 38 Teactc 9.4.82 Mahoor
717 Norollah Afshari X X 3D Tedcher 9.4.02 Mahppr
716 [ slam Mohaamad Au Khani X X 43 Worker 9.4.82 Tehran
719 Amanollah Yusefi X X 45 Teacher 9.4.82 t4ahoor
720 Hassan Khalilian X X 23 Teologian 9.4.82
721 Jan Choli Ranjbar X X 24 Development Worker 10.4.82 Shiraz
722 Mostafa Samiizadeh X X 18 Student 15.4.82 Carmsar
723 Ahaad Poorqoli X X 22 Farmer 16.4.82 Rezvan Stoehr
724 Hajid Owji Fard X X 38 Worker 17.4.82 Shiraz
725 Itamid Kiiniai X X 22 Sugar Factory Worker 17.4.82 Shiraz
726 Abdollah Tahvili X X 28 Worker 18.4.82 Firouzabad
727 Toufigh Sharbati X X 44 Teacher 19.4.82 Poonel
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728 Hashem Zareh X X 19 Student 23.4.82 F iroozabad
729 Matvnood Barat and X X 16 Student 23.4.82 F iroozabad
730 Rahjm Darkha X X 25 Teacher 23.4.82 F iroozabad
731 Aathife Abadzadeh X X 4 26.4.82 Poonel
732 Kaisdar 32 Officer 8.5.82 Chaemshahr
73 Raze Behzad aij x X 40 Bank (uard 20.5.82 Shiraz
734 A em Khodai X X 16 Student 23.5.82 Chastune Kabood
35 SaYYed Shahabeddin X X 1? Theology Stuilent 24.5.82 Savadkuh
736 Sohrab Abdollahzadeh X X 29 Engineer 27.5.82 Haku
Al d Borjalizadeh X 27 Teacher 15.6.82 Tehran
738 Qassem 3iranzadeh X X 31 Bank Nellat Treasurer 15.6.82 Shiraz
739 Hooshang Sa .sRmi X X 26 Bank Mellat Eeployee %5.6.B2 Sh,raz
Au Dad Nadi X X 41 Po!.jce .an 16.6.82 Shiraz
741 Siroos Khaleej x X 20 Gendarmerie Soldier 21 .6.82 Anal
742 Hoha ad Parnian X X 32 Officer 24.6.82 Qon
743 Gholam Au E v di X X 52 Vegetable Dealer 25.6.62 Iranstiahr
744 Nader Khair Khah X X 39 Teacher 28.6.82 Maasal
745 H-ha t SaM x x 25 Serger nt 1 .7.82 Hasht Pare
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146
747
748
749
750
751
753
754
755
756
757
758
759
760
761
762
763
jid qhajanpour
Zafar Au Hagh Perast
Sayyed Majid Kssein.&
Esmael Fallah Astaneh
I4jhanmiad Au Am .Lni Nejad
Nina khan Zaeni
Ebtahim ‘Jnoranian
lsmael Navidi
Hoost•• rg Tahmasebi
Nader Alinadi
Hassan Naleki
Nina (MIIavat
Sayved Lateef Ibosavi
Nasibollah Lashgari
Shirali Aoubakri I4aku
Kh 1ed Navidi
Plaj Id Sha faghzadeh
Hohama 4 Au Shahri
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
24
37
23
18
23
60
20
29
22
31
86
54
33
29
45
33
24
Student
Sergeant
Worker
S'udent
Theolpgian Student
Shepherd
S'udent
Aniaal Husbandry
Workcr
IJnemployed
unemployed
Housewife
Worker
Worker
Ministry of Education
Animal Husbandry
Animal Husbandry
Teacher
x
1.7.82
1.7.82
2.7.82
4.7.82
11.7.82
13. 7 . 82
ZZ 7.82
30.7.82
31. 7 . 82
11.8.82
11. 8. 82
11.8.82
11.8.82
12. 8 . 82
15.8 82
15.8.82
15.8 . 82
16.&82
i3i ha lan
Rezvansha r
Rezvanshar
Ashrafieh
Tehran
Mashad
Babo 1
Plaku
Kasma
Azadi Forest
Pza i Forest
Tehran
Noorahad
Mashad
I-*aku
t4aku
Gharnshph
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Age Occupatior Date Place
Na.e and ra.ily Nasa .... e i
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x .. x u,
— - —
764 I4oatafa Hagheheflas X X 19 Student 25.8 .82 A-ak
765 Ismael Gholami X X 17 Student 25.8.82 Arak
766 Ebrahim Hohamaad X X 25 Drivarin crusade 25.8.82 RaIIt
767 Rahean Rak X X 30 Worker 25.8.82 Rasht
768 I4irza Hoeeein Yusefzadeh X X 60 Farmer 28.8.82 Shaft
169 Ahead Afkhami X X 26 Animal Husbandry 30.8.82 14aku
110 Feisal Noha d Zadeh X X 14 Driver 6.9.82 Haji Jaafar
771 Ahead Ahasdivar X X 29 Driver 6.9.Bi Haji Jaafar
772 P haoaad Hassan Nazari X X 30 Worker 7.9.82 Kaemshahr
713 AU adi X X 54 Animal Breeder 8.9.82 Mahoor
774 Taghi Taghizadeh Rahim.i X X 44 Crocery Seller 12.9.82 (aIIt
775 Asghar Asghari X X 45 Bycycle Repairer 14.9.82 Arak
776 Aziz Agha Nooreddini X X 15 Student 15.9.82 Azna
777 Zahra Astaraki X X 40 Huusewife 15.9.82 A ma
778 Hossein (eza Pour X X 41 Bank Employee 15.9.82 Chorgan
779 Qiassem Jaberzadeh X X 61 Worker 16.9.82 Tehran
780 Abbas Al! Jamal ian X X 26 Teacher 18.9.82 Shahran
781 Kasgol Zabanbor x X 61 Farmer 19.9.82 Shaft
‘- V
Q Q
Na.e and Family Name . Age Occupation Date Place
782 Ebrahim Fi reh X X 25 Teacher 19.9.82 Rasht
783 IChalil Qorbanian X X 18 Student 22.9.82 Babol
784 Gholaa Reza Pout Nalayer X X 41 Woolen GoodS Dealer 22.9.82 Prak
785 mael Vousufi X X 58 Fa r 22.9.82 ICurdovan
8. Ah ad Ka.al X X 19 Student 30.9.82 Isfahan
787 Saeed Hoeeni Kard Kar4 X 20 Student 30.9.82 Tchran
787 Au P hanadi X X 19 Worker 1.10.82
788 Ahaad Hoha adi X X 20 Business Plan 1.10.82
789 Au Deidi X X 29 Officer 3.10.82 Arak
HOhammad Rauf Hosseinzadeh X X 31 Self Employed 5.10.82 I-Iehoeanear
791 Abubakr Hosseinzadeh X X 27 Self Employed 5.10.82 Ilehmandar
792 Moha, ad Ilosafer X X 22 Worker 5.10.82 Arak
Mohai ad Aziz Riazi X X 24 Pfficer 6.10.82 Foiinan
‘ ‘ .3awarmiard Davtalab X X 50 Worker 9.10.82 Nagadeh
795 Ilahai ad Rostampoor X X 19 Student 9. 10.82 Piranshahr
796 Nader Abbasi X X 27 oldier 14.10.82 Shiraz
Attaullh Ashrafi X X 82 Friday Prayer Leader of 15.10.82 Bakhtoran
Bakhtaran
I .
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Age
Occupation
Date
Place
798
799
800
801
802
803
804
805
806
807
808
809
810
811
812
813
814
Au .sghar Rasaf
Moho ad Taghi Shirali Poor
Ahead Faraji
Ra.azan Au M eni
Haj Ghorban Saghafi
Yaghoob Tilani Daghli
Nader Kheirichah
Qiolam Reza Akbari
Nahairaad Haghighatzadeh
Abdul Hossein Haghshenas
Qr olam Hassan Zaheatkesh
Ahead Sorkhmard
Haazeh Teyebi
Abdol Hossein Rezai
NabjolLh )1k4 an.&
Sayyed Hassan Houssavi
(zzatollah
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
2:
21
21
19
50
22
38
31
39
33
47
27
55
18
21
17
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
Gold Dealer
Electrician
Student
Student
Shop Keeper
Student
Teacher
Rasht Municipality Employee
Bus inessian
Employee Housing foundation
Theologian Homber of Housing
Foundation
Shop Keeper
Teacher
Teologian
Student
Worker
Student
19.10.82
23.10.82
27.10.82
17.11.82
23.11. 82
25.11.82
26.11.82
29.11.82
13.12.82
15. 12.82
21.12.82
31.12.82
10. 1.83
18.1.83
27.1.83
3.2.83
Shi raz
S rv
Foignan
I ranshahr
Marivan
Gorgan
Haasal
Founan
Shiraz
Rasht
Burujerd
Kordkooi
Bibalan
Kordkooj
Tehrai
Hasht par
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j Place
Date
815 I4e r Iaa1i Douranj X X 25 Shepherd 10.2.83 Rezvanshah
816 Amanullah Yazdani X 17 Student 10.2.83 Bojniird
817 Morad Motia adi X X 39 Private Work 11.2.83 Qaemc h
818 Ja shid Saranja X X 23 Teacher 13.2.83 Hianr h
819 Sayyed Mohaninad Taghi X X 27 Teacher 17.2.83 Roodbar
Hakhzan Mousavi
820 Abbas Hadieh lou X X 39 Karaj Police 21.2.83 Karaj
821 Au Bakhsh Oehghan X X 17 Student 17.3.83 Kazerppr
822 Taghi Iran Estakhr X X 19 Student 20.3.83 lahijan
823 Mohaii iad Haheoodzadeh X X 20 Worker 22.3.83 l3cukan
824 Nadali ( nidru3 X X 20 Worker 26.3.83 Mahabad
825 Hassan Haljaii X X 36 In Charge of Post 4.4.8) Chomsheh
826 Bijan Hodafeh X X 21 Teacher 14.4.83 lahijan
827 Pan Akshi X X 32 Self Employed 19.4.83 liohainmad Shah
828 Hohaimiad Rev Alizadah X X 18 Student 30.4.83 Pjranshah
829 Qiassem Azar Anjomand X X 27 Teacher 2.5.83 [ angr d
830 Koeei 1 Farzanegan X X 44 High School in Charge 2.5.83 Ghomsheh
831 Qiassem Jalali X X 26 Teacher 5.5.63 Kordlcooj
C
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Family
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Date
Place
832 Abojafar .Jafari X X 21 Farmer 11.5.83 Sanandaj
833 Javad Nauouchehri X X 26 Worker 14.5.85 Kordkcoi
834 Horad Au Beigi X X 23 Worker 4.7.83 Pasureh
835 Bakhtiar Zareh X X 29 Worker 4.7.83 Pasureh
836 Mehdi Hanoi Nejad S man Rat nan. X X 18 Officer Ic-hrar
837 Au Hohannad Ansari X X 18 Student Ahui.*r EOirIfl
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Age
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gaLe
Place
838 Horteza Ayatulahi Tabatabaie Z X 59 Clergyman
839 Hajeed Atimadzadeh Ardabili Z X 19 Student
840 8ehzad Akhavan X X 22 Student
841 Husien Isasi X X 20 Student
842 A.ir Ebraheesi Darbandi X X 25 Clerk
843 Iiasoud Asiri Hoghadam X X 22 Student
844 Nehdi Ahmadi X X 31 Cleric
845 Hohaad Kusien Allah- dad X X 18 Student
846 Katie Arjamandi X x 29 Clerk
847 Hojtaba Afzali Hosavi X X 37 Clergyman
848 Picd aad Husien Amir Aheadi X X 37 Household gooks seller
839 Hasan Agha Baigi X X 39 Clerk
850 Davoud Arjcandi X X 20 Student
851 Husien Estabragtu X x 36 Armyman
852 Aliakbar Asiri X X 44 Driver
853 Akbar Ayinehband X x 26 Worker
854 Taher Eghdami Golafzaie X x 19 Student
855 Charban Eta'ati X X 40 School Attendant
C . , .
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Age ‘ Occup.tIoii Date Place
a
Name and Family Home -. a c
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U x i I
856 P jh ad All Agharajab' X X 35 Armyman
857 bdulah At adi X X 38 Building material dealer
858 I4j a ad Au Amininejad X X 23 Clergyman
859 It*i ad Au Alcbari X X 33 Carpet dealer
860 Barat As di X X 28 Arayman
861 Abas Au Agha Abedi X X 34 Carpenter
862 Al i Asi ipour Forghani X X 17 Student
863 Natsoud (rtekhari X X 51 EleCtrician
864 (shrat Eskanda i X X 26 House Wife
865 iar ar (shkavarchorteh X x 31 Revolutionary Guard
866 Asghar (brnheemzadeh X X 47 Textile dealer
867 Akbar Aslani X X 19 Stedent
868 Anir Asadulah-Zadeh X X 17 Student
869 Abdulah Asadimanesh X X 24 Worker
870 Pbi a ad Ja' far Asadj w% st1 X X 26 Driver
871 Khosrow At di X X 22 Teacher
872 Hasan Esfandiari X X 25 Worker
873 Bat an Akbari X x 20 Student
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875 MaJ ud saai1i X x 45 Jihad Ik!abcr
876 I*jshang Afshar X X 45 Worker
877 Jafar Agharazi X X 33 Carpet dealer
878 x 29 Teacher
879 Hek.at Aghaie x x 15
880 I4i ad t ati X 35 Worker
881 Zahra Astaraki X 45 Housewife
882 Taghi Aaini Yavari X X ‘ ‘ Student
883 Ht# ad Ardanj i X X 14 Student
884 Husien Esfahani X X 33 Officer
885 Hest atu1ah M adpour X X 31 Worker
886 Q ases Azararj and X X 27 Teacher
887 Husien Astaneb-Parast X X 57 Teacher
888 Ahmad Ahanchian X X 44 Shopkeeper
889 Esaa.i Asadian X X 41 Worker
9O Pkjh ad laghi Aybagh X X 38 Ar yman
891 Huhai ad Abuhaidari X X 25 Tear icr
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893 Husien Eftekhari Banihashemi X X 21 Student
894 Taghi Aaini Yavari X X 19 Student
895 I jeed Aghajanpour X X 18 Student
896 Au Akhavien Ansari X X 44 Governor
897 Hasan Esmaili X X 22 Worker
898 Lines Asqhari hro&u X 22 Worker
899 Raheem Ebrahiqour Khayati X X 21 Student
900 Az ir Ostad Ebrahis X X 23 Teacher
901 Hehdi A5inzadeh X X 32 Ph.D.in econimics
902 Qmdratulah Abtahi X X 4 1 Arsyman
903 Pkih ad Au Asiri X X 40 Worker
904 Rahim Asghari x X 29 Officer
905 fatulah Akbarzadeh X 21 Worker
906 Ahaad Asani Qurani X X 24 Teacher
907 Au Adami aarian X X 36 Grocer
908 Nematulah Anvari X X 31 Officer
909 Behzad Bahraini X x 17 Student
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Shahbaz Bayat
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Abbas Badiei
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Ahmad Bolandghaiatpour
Hehdi Behrouzimutlagh
Abas Banaei
Q arIIar Bayatlou
Javad Borjalizadeh
Ebrahim Bazrafshan
Husien Behnoud
Hameed Behnoud
Hasan Bahadornejad
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913
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916
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929 Mi Barzegar X X 34 Worker
930 Abulghasea Bazr Atibar X X 23 Officer
931 Mehdi Bazaz—zadeh X X 17 Student
932 Ahmad Borjalizadeh X X 26 Teacher
933 Akbar Bat —ban X X 20 Student
934 Abas Barghamdi X X 30 Painter
935 Faramarz Bahador X X 34 Jihad He er
936 Vaheed Babaie X X 19 Student
937 Khalil Bolaughi X X 22 Teacher
938 Tah.aseb Bahari X X 18 Student
939 Khosrow Babale X X 41 Tradesman
940 Abdulkaria B khradian X x 43 Clergyman
941 14jhasmad Au Barzegar X X 17 Student
942 I4ashem Bagherzadeh X X 21 Soldier
943 Hasan Bozorgi x X 18 Student
944 All Barzegar X X 24 Bicycle Mechanic
945 hola Reza Barari X 19 Student
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947 t4uha ad Taghi 6arzeqar Azad X X 20 Student
948 ( liola Reza Sagha— 8'3ustani X 36 Worke-
949 t4*h ad Nasib Bakh-Shandeh X X 25 Mayor
951) Manouchenr Borzou X X 42 Fruit seller
951 Huha ad &akhtiari Rakht—Azmai X X 25 Clerk
952 Husien Balali X X 21 Worker
953 Huha ad Au Bahra .ian X 36 Butcher
954 Huhauinad Barjasteh X
955 Hasan BamdRd X X 21 Soldier
956 Mahaoud Bakhtiari X X 18 Student
957 Abuighasem Bargeer X X 44 Car spare parts seller
958 Husien Babaie X x 28 Accountant
959 &thau iad avad Bahonar X X 48 Prime Minister
960 Hansour Panehi X x 30 Worker
961 A 1 del Pedram X X 23 Teacher
962 Ja!il Pourma'rouf Husjenj X X 23 Book Seller
963 Huhamgnad Paknej d X X 42 Majlis Deputy
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965 Hasan Pileh-chi K
966 Mahamead )avad Peeri—jaberi X K 19 Tradesman
967 Taghi Pajou.—ivanestakhri K K 17 Student
968 ahamaad Pourvali x K 25 Coemercial Manager
969 Hohsen Paoutan K X 22 Worker
970 Kari. Pouya K K 22 Teacher
971 Abulfazl Peerzadeh K X 25 Teac..er
972 Au Parsa Khatibi X X 21 Worker
973 Ah.ad Pourgholi X K 22 Cattleman
974 Parviz Peer-chourti K X 20 Student
975 Hehdi Pakdel X K 20 Student
976 A1 ad Piran X X 17 Student
977 Yahya Pesteh K X 44 Worker
976 Abbas Parham K X 49 Farmer
979 Hussien Pirmoradi K K 33 Officer
980 Soraya Tashkeeli X K 52 House Wife
981 Huhaniuad Torabi—azar X X 27 Golds 'nth
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983 Marhamat Sani X X 25 Armyman
984 All Akbar Tudeh Deh an X X 35 Armyman
985 Nasrulah Torabi X X 24 Carpet Dealer
986 Hojatulah TouheeII-rad X X 35 Clergyman
987 Fatulah Servatyari X X 42 Armyman
988 Ahmad Saghafifar X X 18 St ident
989 Seyed Reza Tafreb. X . X 19 Worker
990 Nasr-ulah Tafavot X X 25 Farmer
991 Ahmad Tondkar X X 23 Armyman
992 t4ansour Taghavi X X 26 Clerk
993 Nader Taghipour X X 32 Teacher
994 4iha ad Tourani X X 24 Teacher
995 Bahaan Turkeman X X 42 Butcher
996 t4orteza Tajeek X X 19 Student
997 lraj Touabi-peerkouhi X X 17 Student
998 Reza Torabi X X 24 Student
999 Mahmoud Taf—vizi x X
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1000 Pkjha ad Taghiei X X 25 Worker
1001 Huha ad Reza Tavasoli X X 66 Farmer
1002 Abulghasem Taghipour X X 15 Student
1003 l4jhamaad Reza Sabet -ghadam X X 20 News Reporter
1004 Sha'banali Torabi X X 23 Worker
1005 Jamshid Tajeek X X 18 Student
1006 Abduirasoul iamsheeII X X 24 Teacher
1007 Mahmoud Judieri Kahnoudi X X 39 Officer
1008 Huhamaad Husien Jamsheedi X X 33 Clerk
1009 Aba9 Jalali X X 26 Teacher
1010 Mal oud Ja'fari X X 18 Student
1 1011 Hhamaa Reza Jalaiepour X 26 Worker
012 All J 'fari X X 50 5 hepherd
1013 Saeed Jarneii X X 23 Mechanic
1014 Husien Jalali X X 19 Shoe—maker
1015 Ahmad 3aveed X X 20 Clergyman
1016 Abuighasem Jaber-zadeh X X 40 Bath Atendant
! 1017 Reza Jadeedi x X 30 Officer
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1018 Abas Jahanbakh-sh X X 37 University Professor
1019 Hashem Ja'fari t4oeiri X x 51 Surgeon
1020 Davoud Ja'fari X X 23 Teacher
1021 Ilajeed Jan-nesar X X 19 Student
1fl2' Pircuz Joudaki Nourozi X X 40 Driver
1023 Ajjreza Javeedi X X 20 Worker
1024 Javad Jafari X X 31 Officer
1025 Husien Javeed Asadzadeh X X 47 Vendor
1026 Nohdi Jabar-zare X X 58 Grocer
1027 Abdulah Jengeer X X 32 Farmer
1028 Imamgholi J i'farzadeh Sainani X x 36 Governor
1029 I&jslem Ja .di X X 27 Driver
t030 Jalal Fafarian X x 42 Worker
1031 Rahinatulah Javan-mard X X 28 Driver
1032 Alamdar Jokar x x 28 Policeman
1033 Au Choupan Jamjordi X X 25 Teacher
1034 Huhanwnad Chavoushi x x 32 Clergyman
1035 Davoud Chahardouri X X 22 Student
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1036 Chodratulah Chegeeni X X 40 Teacher
1037 Alireza theragh—zadeh X X 28 MajIis Deputy
1038 Hustafa cheraghi X X 17 Student
1039 Huh adali Haghpanah X 25 Worker
1040 Shahpour Husienzadeh X X 17 Student
1041 Asgar Heydari X X 24 Clergy .an
1042 Ja'far Hasanzadeh X 25 Teacher
1043 Au Husieni Jany X X 26 Techr ician
1044 Hehdi liusienpour horabadi X X 21 Student
1045 Chase. Husieni X X 21 Worker
1046 Horteza Hasani X X 22 Worker
1047 All Hesari X X ia Student
1048 Yahya Husleni-nejad X X 21 Student
1049 All Husieni Anvari X X 35 Grocer
1050 I&iha ..d Hablbulah zadeh X X 17 Student
1051 Farajulah Husieni X X 42 Clergyaan
1052 Husien Husienian X X 19 Student
1053 )kjP aaoead Taglil Haj-Heydari X X 51 Dairy product seller
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1056 Abuighasem Itabibi X X 23 Worker
1057 Rasheed Hajiaghmioni X X 17 Worker
1050 Amir Hameedibenani X X 23 Worker
1059 Hasan Heydari X X 20 Stud?nt
1060 Hir Sha'ban Kusieni X X 16 Student
1061 Abulfazi Haj_Rezaie X X 22 Teacher
1062 Reza Hatami X X 16 Student
1063 Hameed—Reza Heydari X X 17 Student
1064 Ali-akbar Husien Baigi X X 19 Student
1065 Huhau nad Au Haji Miinuhan ad X X 36 Clerk
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1066 Abas Heydari X X 37 t4ajlis Deputy
1067 Alireza Husieni X X 23 Technician(Tavanir)
1068 Alimirza Husieni X X 54 Police officer
1069 Huhaa iadreza Hadadi X X 28 Worker
1070 Abuighasem Hazeri X X 43 Mason
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1073
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1075
1076
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1078
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1080
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1082
1083
1084
1085
1086
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Husien Husieni
Safarali Haghparast
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Amir Flussieni Nejad
Abulfazi Khoshrou
Nizamuldin Khala' tbari
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1088 Nader Khiarkhah X X 38 Teacher
1089 Akber Khodadadi X X 18 Worker
1090 P iha ad Khoushzaban X X 19 StudenP
1091 Husien Khaljlj X x 32 Tradesman
1092 Norteza Khodadadi X 32 J ' ad HeiIIer
1093 Ahmad Khouban X X 36 Tradesman
1094 Esmail Khalili X X 21 Student
1095 A eem Khairabadi X X 20 Student
1096 Daiesh Khojair X X 30 Soldier
1097 Husien Davoudi X X 22 Worker
1098 Reza Darvishvand X X 19 Book sel r
1099 liajeed Damerchel i X X 21 Student
1100 Alireza Dehghan X X 19 Student
1101 Abas Darabi X X 42 Garments seller
1102 Parviz Dastarbandani X X 21 Teacher
1103 Abdulmajeed Dialemeh X X 27 Najlis Deputy
1104 Akbar Dehghani Zamani X X 30 Air Force Ei 1oyee
1105 Abdulhusien Daftarian X X 37 Clerk
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1106 Aliakbar Dehghan X x 33 P4ajlis Deputy
1107 kihamaadkazim DaneSh X X 42 Majlis Deputy
1108 Yousefali Dorkhoush X x 27 Teacher
1109 Yazdanbakh-sh Dehghan X x 27 Teacher
1110 kistafa Dadashi X X 18 Student
1111 Asghar Dabaghian X X 31 Covernor
1112 4iha adali Dourani X X 35 Shepherd
1113 Khosrow Davoudian X x 3
1114 Muha adhusien Darouzi X X Salesman
1115 Cholaareza Danesh X X 51 Plajlis Deputy
1116 Ahoad Dousti X X 20 I reacher
1117 Abdulmajeed Zokaian X X ‘‘ Student
1118 Esfandiar Zolfaghari X X 21 Student
1119 Nuhamaa hdi Oaneshgar Moghad X x 38 Bank Employee
1120 Aliakbar Ramazani X X 21 Student
1121 Nuhamaad Ramazandoust X X 17 Student
1122 P4uhamaadtaghi Reza Marghoubkar X X 27 Clerk
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1124 Faribourz Radafzoun X x 22 Worker
1125 Hehdi Rajab Baigi X x 24 Clerk
1126 Khosrow Rasouli X x 19 Student
1127 Abas Rahmat—nejad X X 58 Ar y.an
1128 Fer-idoun Rajabzadeh X x 22 Teacher
1129 Alijan Rezaie X x 49 Household goods seller
1130 Husien Rasoulzadeh X x 25 Worker
1131 Au Rezaian X x 18 Student
1132 Shaasulah Ranjbar X X 34 Paints Seller
1133 Khosrow Rlyahi Nazari X x 31 Teacher
1134 Abdulhusieri Ranjkesh X x 46- Carpenter
1135 Heydar Riyahi X x 26 Clerk
1136 Hushang Ritv .. d X x 43 Sandwich Seller
1137 Ahead Roughani X 33 Worker
1138 Nosratulah Ramazan-nejad X x 16
1139 Gholamreza Rasheedi X x x 18 Student
1143 Farzad Raeiszadeh X 26 Student University
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1141 Touheed Razmjoumeen X X 30 Mechanical Engineer
1142 Huhamad Ravaghi X x 32 Managing Director
1143 Fakhareldin Raheemi X x 37 Majlis Deputy
1144 Mi Rezaie X x 20 Student
1145 Hameed Roustaie X x 26 Armyman
1146 Muhamadhusien Rezaie X X 39 Deputy for Students Affairs
1147 Aliashgar Raheemiasi X x 19 Jihad Me er
1148 Nematulah Rahman-nejad X x 38 Cloth Merchant
1149 Jamal Raheemi X X 20 Student
1150 HLjhaadaziz Riyazi x x 24 Worker
1151 Batiman Rouzbari X x 30 Bank ( ioyee
1152 Mahmoud Rat iani X x 20 Student
1153 Husien Ranj-garan X 30 Officer
115 Naser Rasouli X X 22 Student
1155 Gholam Rasouli X x 66 Mosque Attedant
1156 Mahmoud Room ipour X x 19 Student
1157 I4jha adreza Ranazani Khalghla x X 23 Driver
1158 Huhamaad Ali Rajaie X X 44 President of Islamic Republic
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1159 Jangholi Ranjbar X X 24 Jihad He er
1160 t4i ad Rafeie X X 44 Driver
1161 Abdulhusien Rezaie x x 55 Clergy.an
1162 Au Raha.ouz X x 23 Teacher
1163 Hofatulah Rastegari X X 15 Student
1164 Q io1a.reza Raie X X 19 Student
1165 Husien Rezapour X X 41 Bank Manager
1166 I4 j ad Rafjzadeh X X 28 attle.an
1167 I4jsa Raje x x 21 Worker
1168 Sharang Raaouzi X X 18 Clerk
1169 Abchjlhusien Rezaie X X 21 Student
1170 Abasalj Ranjbar Pazouki X X 44 Grocer
1171 Morteza Rafie X X 23 Teacher
1172 pj ag li Rostamj. X x 52 Cloth Seller
1173 Husien Riyazi x X 23 Worker
1174 A ljreza RaJieemjsefat X X 25 Clerk
1175 Au Rah.anj X X 30 Officer
1176 Reza Reeshsefeidi X X 26 Officer
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1177 Reza Rikezanan X X 51 Salesman
1178 Behrouz Raza — Kh&i X X 23 Worker
1179 I4istafa Rafa'tipourshatls X X 34 Driver
1180 Q olamreza Rahmati X X 20 Student
1181 Raze Rahi.i X X 35 Officer
1182 Jamal Rezvani X X 25 Student University
1183 14jhaad Taghi Rostaie X X 30 Teacher
1184 Hassan Ravanan X X 29 Worker
1185 Nst udreza Zeinali X X 24 Hatter
1186 Mataoud Zareie X X 42 Tradesman
1187 Mansaur Zartosht X X 35 Mechanic
1188 Naser Zaaanlou X X 26 Student
1189 kasqol Zabenbor x X 61 farmer
1190 Au Zolfi X X 45 Clerk
1191 Piirzakhan Zayeri x X 40 Fisher
1192 14ahaamadreza Zabarjedi N X 27 Teacher
1193 Hasen Zanqaflet% X X 18 Student
119(i Abasali Zahrizadeh x X 22 Worker
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1195 Mansour Zareie X X 20 Student
1196 Gho1a Wisien Zahsatkesh X X 40 Clergyman
1197 Husien Soheili X X 17 Student
1198 Norteza Saeedi X X 34 Bank Eq,loyee
1199 Husien Sahami Mehrban X X 39 Driver
1200 Rat atulah Sutan — ahi X X 23 Officer
1201 Muhammad Sorbmehri X X 29 Teacher
1202 Hasan Seyedziaie X X 31 Tradesman
1203 Maser Salem I X X 23 Worker
1204 Naser Saifan X X 23 Worker
1205 Au Seyednaseri X X 23 Worker
12( (sail Saleemi X X 28 Engineer
1207 Vaheed Sarshsr X X 18 Student
1208 Saeed Sultani X X 25 Clerk
1209 Muhammad Sat- reshtehdari X X 18 Student
1210 Javad Sobhani x x 46 Household GoodS Seller
1211 Siefulah Seyed Nasrulah X x 57 Ice Seller
1212 Muhammad Mi Sajedian X X 50 Real— State Worker
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Name and Family Name 0 1. C t
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X 22 Worker
1213 Pkjhamaad Au Seyed Sadri X
1214 Javad Sarfaraz X X 28 Clerk
1215 I4ihamd Bagher Sorbi X X 50 Furniture Seller
1216 Abulhgasem Sepehri X X 51 Tailor
1217 Ezatulah Sabzkhah itlagh X X 49 Carpet Desler
1218 Chanbarali Sotoudeh X X 29 Tradesman
1219 Gholareza Samarghandi X X 53 Clergyman
1220 Habi .iah X X 37 Tool9 Seller
1221 HLi mad Seye agheri X X 38 Officer
1222 Ahead Seerjani X X 22 Tailor
1223 Hohsen Sultani Parishan X X 21 Student
1 24 isamaad Scleyazrii X X 19 Soldier
1225 Bahram Saei II X X 26 Driver
1226 jhamaadreza Sisi X X 17 Student
1227 Pkistafa Saaiezadeh X X 21 Worker
1228 Ahead Sazesh-hasani X X 37 Shopkeeper
1229 Pkihamaadhasan Sepahi I X X 19 Student
1230 Nadali Saleecii I x x 56 Policeman
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1231 Meh ad .Javad Sarkhoush X X 35 Doctor
1232 Delavar Sangtarash X X 25 Shepherd
1233 Au Akbar Saleemi X X 43 Teacher
123k !Iasar Saeet.i X X 32
1235 Yahya Saeedi X X 35 Dentist
1236 Akbar Saleri X X 19 3i ad Member
1237 Javad Sarhadi X X 43 Managing Director
1238 Husien Sa'dati X X 25 Clergyman
1239 Ja far Sepehri X X 47 Armyman
1240 Ahad SorLhmard X X 47 Shopkeepei
1241 Yousefali otouoeh X X 26 Building Materials Seller
242 Muneer Sief X X 22 Houe Wife
1243 Asghar Sief X X 46 Clerk
1244 Seyed Ja'far Sadatkhah X X 23 Worker
1245 Hassan Soleymani X X 45 Farmer
1246 Abbas Soukati X X Student
1247 tluhamaad Sale. Houssi X X 24 Clergyman
1248 Husien Sheikhi X X 24 Drycleaner
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.
.
x
.
—.
,
,
.
0
.
--,
.
x
.
—
.
U'
A e
Occupation
Date
Place
1249 Bahram Shokri X X 24 Doctor
1250 Naser Shams x X 24 Clerk
1251 Hadi Shahrabi X X 18 Student
1252 karim Shirgir X X 20 Haberdasher
1253 jhai ad Hadi Sha'banpour X X 21 Teacher
1254 Husienal i Shayeste hr X X 18 Student
1255 Reza Shekarabi X X 21 Worker
1256 Kazim Sharabi X X 21 Worker
1257 Bebnam Shahmuhamadi X X 19 Student
1258 Shamsulah Sheidaie X X 29 Worker
1259 Mahmoud Shirbiuki X X 39 Mason
12 0 Safrali Shanejani X X 34 Worker
1261 Nahmoud ShaIiee X X 29 Officer
126Z Kasran Sheikh X X 21 Driver
1263 Hasan Shirzadi X X 72 Worker
1264 Parviz Shafie X X 24 Clerk
1265 P& haamad Shekari X X 16 Student
1266 P4jhaamadsaeed Shadkar X x 25 Teacher
E V Q
Nase and Fa.ily Na.e Age Occupation Date Place
1267 Husienali Shamsipour X X 27 Student
1268 Aliakbar Shiraziha X X 35 Shoe - Maker
1269 Hasan Shojaie X X 20 Clerk
1270 Behzad Shahriyari X 27 Hajlis Deputy
1271 Muhanaiadjavad Sharafat X X 54 Majlis Deputy
1272 Cholassali Shariefi Hoghadam X X 40 Police Warrant Officer
1273 lraj Shahsavari X X 35 Vice Minister
1274 Abas Shahavi X X 20 Vive nister
1275 Javad Sha'banzadeh X X 25 Driver
1276 Aliasghar Shafahi X X 27 Clerk
1277 Abdulrasoul Shoiebi X X 26 News Reporter
1278 Reza Sham'azri X X 46 Paints Seller
1279 Habibulah Shari'atifard X X 49 Clergyman
1280 Muhanunadreza Shari'atifard X X 23 Student
1281 Isa Sharjefi X X 28 Worker
1282 Fatulah Shokri X X 24 Tailor
1283 Akbar Skorgozari Chouri X X 47 Officer
1284 Muhanunad Shadab x X 24 Teacher
- -
------
e
•
c
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ii
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..
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m
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Age
(Jccispation
Date
Place
1285 Katie Shaheed Nusieni X X 18 Clergyman
1286 Huhaninad All Shaari X X 24 leacher
1287 Shokrulah Shabbazi X X 50 Restauranteur
1288 oufigh Sharbati X X 44 Worker
1289 ( Beytulah Shirzad X X 31 Teacher
1290 Sadegh Shariefi X X 29 Worker
1291 t4ansour Shafiee X X 26 Driver
1292 Ghadamali Shafiee X X 25 Weaver
1293 4shammad Hasan Shekarchi X X 20 Student
1294 Naser Sharieflnia X X 29 Vendor
1295 Hameed Saemi X X 34 Clerk
1296 Husien Safaie x X 28 Pliniber
1297 Au Sedighian X X 19 Student
1298 Abduihameed Sabuchi X X 17 Student
1299 Huh adreza Sadeghpour X X 21 Teacher
1300 Abuighasem Sedghi X X 25 Teacher
1301 Yadulah Sadeghi X X 51 Clerk
1302 Batoul Safdari X X 30 House Wife
-
—
—
—
—
C
a
-
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U
Nasa
and
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.
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Age
Uccupiiion
Date
Place
1303
1304
1305
1306
1307
1308
1309
1310
1311
1312
1313
131L
1315
1316
1317
1318
1319
1320
Essail Safdari
Ikisien Sadeghpour
Au Safari
l ho1aaali Samadi
Itaseed Zaighi C imi
Essail iadeghi Laha hri
Au Sedighian
Ayatulah Ziaiee
Taghi Zaroori
Abulfazl Za.eeri
I4isa Safaralizadeh
Au Salehi
t4jhz ad Taghi Safarivafa
I4shassad Reza ;c3
Y'aghoub Taylani
Sttehrokh I a asebi
Abdulali Taleli Koulaie
P4jhassad Reza Tahernejai
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
y
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
38
37
21
29
19
20
19
21
19
19
39
56
48
43
22
28
32
.
—
Worker
Cable Jointer
Sol er
Fruit Seller
Student
Student
Student
Student
Student
Student
Officer
Farmer
Vendor
Textile Dealer
Teacher
Worker
Worker
H ison
0
C
C
.
q
.
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.
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and
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,
x
.
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.
x
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Age
Occupatiun
Date
Place
Huhaad Jafar Tabatabaie
Maheoud Zarinia
&ishang Iahsasehi
Raheem Taheri
Davoud Talesh Sharifi
Ebrahim Toufani
*,h ad Tahaasebi
Mir Hussien Taheri Otaghsara
Ebrahi. lahan Sofia
Husien Asgar Beshicani
Reza Amen
Gholashusien Abasi
Reza Abasi
Huh d Ab j1husieni
P jeed Abasian
Yackilah Asgari
Say fulah Abdulkareemi
Hasan A aspour
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
52
44
45
24
17
16
27
32
57
19
30
30
47
21
23
35
48
37
Tradesman
Armyman
Stone Cutter
Teacher
Student
Student
Eapployee of Martyr's Found
Officer
Clerk
Student
Bank ( loyee
Key Haker
Clerk
Student
Teacher
Tradesman
Hajlis Deputy
Minister of Energy
1321
1322
1323
1324
1325
1326
1327
1328
1329
1330
1331
1332
1333
1334
1335
1336
1337
1338
f iLy
.
x
.
u .
k
.
z
.
u *
1339 Davoud Omarieh X x 33 Worker
1340 Fatimeh )shrieh X X 17 House wife
1341 Hasan Azodi X x 35 Doctrate in (conooics
1342 Mohsen Alikhani X X 16 Stu&nt
1343 Safarali Eidi X 22 Bakez
1344 NulIa Rahman Azizpour X x 41 Clergyman
1345 Abas Efatrai esn I X X 38 Sh maker
1346 Agheel Abas Monfared X X ii District Covernor
1341 Raheem Azeemi X X 27 Clerk
1348 Babulah Abasi X x i St it
1349 Esmail Alinia Roudsari X x 38 Clerk
1350 Q olamreza Azeemi X x 28 Driver
1351 I4ihai ad Ebrahee. Att.aran X x 52 Tradesaan
1352 Karim Fateh Darian X x 22 Clerk
1353 Mehdi Forohar X x 21 st t
1354 MuhalliDad Ifusien Farsian X 2 Teacher
1355 I4usien Fierouzian X x 27 Teacher
1356 Ifuhasmad farshi Moghadam X X 39 Dryfruits Seller
C
a
.
U
Nase
and
Fasii
Nasc
X
,
E
V
i
.
Q
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k
L.
W
X
O
- t
u
Age
Occur;iL&un
DaLc
Place
1357 Taghi Fatah Bajchshi x x 43 Shoe—.aker
1358 Au FaII karimi x X 22 Araysan
1359 Najtaba Feroghtabar X X 19 Student
1360 Nader Farkhondeh Oghani X X 15 Student
1361 ihaad Au Felinejad X X 25 Welder
1362 14iiaadreza Fatahi.enesti X X 19 Student
1 63 *t ad Fallehi X X 30 Worker
1364 All Husien Fayazi x x 23 Sandeitch Seller
1365 Au Akbar Fallah X X 41 Teacher
1366 It ad Au Fayezbakhsh X X 44 Minister of Health
1367 AI ad Foroughi X x 29 OlacksmiII
1368 Al ad Fagheehi x x So Clergyman
1369 IIamaad Husien Foro4ii X X 45 Dairy product Seller
1370 (email Fallah Astaneb X X 11 Student
1371 Mirza I4iie d Husien Fakr X X 48 Clergyman
Bonab
1372 Feridoun Fartiad Kian X x 20 student
1373 Abbas Au Fazeli X X 16 Student
a
0
J
Na.e
and
(a.ii
Nasa
.
.
I
e
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e
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.
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.
.
I
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c
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u
Age
Occupation
Date
Place
Shaasulah Farajulsouti
Nahdi Forohar
Al.ireza FaIIidokht
Kosiel Farzanegan
Nader Farahnak Sorkhabi
Ebrahee. Fatel
.iiaad Ebraheen
Al iashraf Faraji
Hasanali Farahi
Nader FaralIIaf Aheadipour
Hohsen Qaseai
Qw1a 'tusien Qurbani
Khosrow Qadiani
Plehdi Qayoumi
Feridoun Qaseezade
Reza Qadeer Z'are
Abdulvahab Qasemi
Au Quaian
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
):
x
x
x
x
x
x
K
K
K
K
x
x
x
x
K
x
x
x
x
K
K
x
K
K
23
20
17
44
51
25
34
55
25
21
22
27
19
30
16
48
3-
Worker
Student
Student
Teacher
e eper
Worker
Doctor
Worker
Teacher
Student
Clerk
Oath Attendant
Student
Officer
Student
Clerk
P4ajlis Deputy
Worker
Faghihi
—
1374
1375
1376
1377
1378
1379
1380
1381
1382
1383
1384
1305
1386
1387
1388
1389
1390
1391
C . . .
a — .— -
- E c Age Occupation Date Place
- Na.e and Fa.ily Plaee S
o . . . .-‘
(.) x i . x U'
1392 Au Q'ane X X 42 Cloth Mar-chant
3 Student
•393 Javad Qase.i X
1394 Au Qodousi X X 54 Prosecutor General
1395 Abbes Qase.i X X 27 Worker
1396 Gholaa I4ii d Qaderi X X 42 Ar .y.an
1397 Neaatulah Danbari X X 25 Driver
1398 Ka.al Qorieshi X X 47 Carpenter
1399 Khali Qurbenian X X 18 Student
1400 A.anulah Qadeer X X 25 Bank Guard
1401 I iia ad All Qodsia'ab X X 29 Cooler Mechanic
1402 Qase. Qase.irad X X 54 Clerk
1403 Hamsed Qalanbar X X 21 Student
1404 Rasoul Qanbari X X 26 Teacher
1405 Sami'ull&h Qanbari X X 17 Student
1406 Maser Qezavati X X 28 Officer
1407 Haj-toud Qandi X X 37 Minister ot 0 ost&lelegraph
1408 Key.ars Kara i X X 27 Clerk
1409 Feriborz Karami X X 21 Worker
C
(
Name and Family Name
a
—
m
-4
a
a
.
a
-4
a
—4
o
Age
OccupaLion
Date
Place
a
X
a
U.
a
X
U,
1410 Hasan Kazimlou X X 16 Student
1411 Hanaf Kuh'zare X x 16 Student
1412 Muhammad Reza Kakaie X X 21 Teacher
1413 Qudartulah kazjmj X x . 44 Cloth Merchant
1414 Ja'far Kalhorei X X 16 Student
1415 Mohsea Karamianj X X 22 Clerk
1416 Saeed Kabkanjan X 20 Student
1417 Jali Karimi X X 18 Student
1418 Husien Kazimi X 53 Trandesman
1419 Muhammad Reza Kardan X x Court Employee
1420 Zahra Kurdi X X 30 House wife
1421 Husien Kaseb Qane X 42 Tradesman
1422 Ramazan Kavianpour X X 20 Student
1423 Ahmad Kamal X x 20 Student
1424 Mustafa Kiani X X 21 Teacher
1425 Abuihosan Karimi Dardashtj X x 38 Prosecutor
1426 Ahmad K rshnuchi Aqdam x X 56 Farmer
1427 Au Kamalabadi X X 46 Cemetery Attendant
S I
.
—
C
a
-i
0
J
Nase
and
F ami1
Nasa
.
Z
.
-.
E
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- .-
14
-.
X
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—I
Qt
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Age
flecupat
ion
Date
Place
1428
1429
1430
1431
1452
1433
1434
1435
1436
1437
1438
1439
1440
1441
1442
1443
1444
1445
HehII Kariminahr
Uusi.rn Keshtkar
Karim Karami
Rohulah Kareemi
I&iha iad Sagher Lavasani
I+ jh .aa ad Le'aii
Gholai usien avaie
Nasibulah Lashgari
Behrouz Layeqi
Husien Kuzafari
Baratali Nahdavi
Azim Horadi
Ya'qoub Mashayekhi
Rohulah Moulai
Rezagholi Mehrizi
Yousef Marhaba
Alireza Hashatan
Hasan Hull anourouz i
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
18
17
24
15
38
26
—
42
27
36
18
27
41
25
24
31
22
18
Student
Student
Teacher
Mechanic
Majlis Deputy
Teacher
Tradesman
Officer
Worker
Teacher
Student
Driver
Grocer
Clerk
Teacher
Clerk
Vendor
Student
C
E
.
.
.
.
0
Name
and
Family
Name
.
a
E
.
a
1 .
a
c
Age
Occupation
Date
Place
z
t .
x
u
1446 Javad Hoddares X X 24 Worker
1447 Hasan Het andoust X X 31 Teacher
1448 Abmad Nir Sade i X X 33 Clerk
1449 Au Akbar tloshrefi X X 20 Student
1450 Ahmad Hir Heydari X X 28 Worker
1451 Hashem Hehaanpour X X 14 Student
1452 Rahmatulah Huhamaadian X X 31 Teacher
1453 Rahmatulah Hirzakhani X X 24 Armyman
1454 Nir (small $ savi X X 20 Student
1455 Mahaoud Houlai X X 17 Worker — Carpenter
1456 Abulfazl 4,savi X X 23 Clergyman
1457 Ahmad I4anafi X X 26 Tradesman
1458 Ghola uslen Husavian X X 46 Book Seller
1459 Nuhamaad Nirzakhan X X 3D Watch-maker
1460 Alireza tioulavi X X 52 Clerk
1461 Heydar Pladadkar x X 49 Tradesman
1462 All Moradipour Oakhel X X 23 Fartner
1463 Ahwad Hesgarian X X 20 Student
C
.
.
Nase
and
Fa.ily
Naae
a
.
x
;.;
•q
a
.
i
.v
.
—I
i
.
x
oi
.
u
Age
Occupatiu.
Date
Place
1464 Bizhan Nodafe X X 25 Teacher
1465 Mirza Ahead Mirzaie Fard X x Worker
1466 Q ol iusien 4.i adi X X 23 Vendor
1467 Ayoub Hirzaie X X 26 Teacher
1468 Naeer I4ohaenipour X X 17 Student
1469 Muatafa Mahajereen X 54 Metal Sheet- worker
1470 Mataoud Hirzaie X X 46 Officer
1471 Saeed Huhaad zadeb X X 20 Soldier
1472 P4aser Handegari X X 26 Welder
1473 Hedayat b i a&iejad Asi X X 41 Cloth Merchant
1474 Reza Hehrban X X 18 Student
1475 4jhamaad Hasan Haljaie X X 37 Carpet Dealer
1476 Fatulah I4onfared X X 28 8ook Seller
1477 Abbas Hahdavi Panah X X 26 Clergyman
1478 )a'far Haleki X X 34 Clerk
1479 Huhamaad Mahsenpour X X 22 Student
1480 Qasem Horadi X X 17 Worker
1481 Isa Montared X X 24 Student
-
-.--
C
I
‘
Name
and
Fa.ily
.
Name
(
a
I
.
—
a
E
-
,
.
. l
s
.
I
.
-
c
—
In
Age
Uccup iLaun
Date
Place
1482 Jamstieed Mougoie X X 15 Student
1483 Ikisien Motaveseluihusiefli X X 49 Bath Attendant
1484 Abdulhosien Mobasher X X 35 Employee of the Martyr Found
1485 Esmail Muhai adi X X Cloth Merchant
1486 Abbas Mahiouji Qumi X X 23 Clerk
1487 Nabi'ulah Momeni X X 34 Barber
1488 Masoud Nokhberi X X 20 Student
1489 Alt I4iha adi Nasrabdi X x 46 Electrical APPliance Seller
ia9O Nasrulah Mohebi Ashtiani X x 38 Clerk
1491 Esmail t4istafazadeh X x 36 Jeweller
1492 Ebraheem Moradi X x 53 Worker
1493 Mohauwaad Mullatayefeh X x 22 Worker
1494 Hohsen MohammadUashem Jasebi x x 20 Soldier
1495 Hasan t4ullazadeh Shahroudi X x 36 Carpet Dealer
1496 t4ahmoud Mortezapour X x 28 Bank Employee
1491 Ah*nad I4aseeh X 28 Employee of Radio & TV
1498 Reza Hirzaie X x 21 Student
1499 Reza Hahrouzi X X 18 Student
I I
0 I
C . ,
. - , .
Nai and Na.e E c Age 0ccu iat . i. Date Place
a . . , —
L) x L. X fl
1500 Huhaginad Esmail Halek X X 56 Clergyman
1501 hs.,n Hanafizadeh X X 19 Armyman
1502 Zulfeqar P4'umeni X X 21 Stuoent
1503 Gholaareza Maghsoudian X X 20 Student
1504 Reza Plalekian Jebeli X X 16 St.udent
1505 Bahra. Mehrenejad X X 17 Student
1506 Abbas t4iqee.izadeli X X 29 Teacher
1507 Hehdi Mehdizadeh Fazeli X 32 Key maker
1508 Y'aqoubali Nehdikhani X X 29 Worker
1509 Hameed Huffarahi X x 22 Worker
1510 Au Hansouri X X 22 Driver
1511 Rasoul Pkisavi X x 28 Worker
1512 Hehdi Hansouri X x 27 Taxi Driver
1513 Aicbar Hi; Husieni X x 26 Electrician
1514 Abduireza Hcjtabaie K x 27 Student
1415 Huhaad Hirvakeeli K x 17 Student
1516 Davoud Ilobieni Kasheb K x 23 Clerk
1517 Horteza t4ehdizadeh K 21 5tudent
. . .
Na.e and Family Name Age Occupation Date Place
1 51J3 Husien $ozafarmai am X X 53 Clero,.an
1519 Abdulkarim Mohkber X X 55 Clergyman
1520 Abbas I4aschi X X 31 Driver
1521 HomayOUn Hahvi X X 23 Teacher
1522 Huha d I43ntazerulzohour X X 22 Jihad me er
1523 Huhaad Plirzaie X X 21 Officer
1524 Husienali Noradi X X 47 Officer
1525 AJ d Nazhabdar X x 18 Student
1526 Hohsen Hit Sharifi X X 26 Clerk
1527 Au Noh adzadeh X X 20 Student
1528 Huhamaad Reza Noh ad Raheemi X X 23 Student,Teacher
1529 Huhamaad Hoemenin X X 21 Policeman
1530 x x 23 Worker
1531 Yahya Nohtasham X X 59 Carpet Dealer
1532 Habib Haleki X X 26 Governor
1533 P4ohsen Houlai x x 21 Student
1534 Javad Haleki X x 29 Teacher
1535 Habibulah kehdizadeh X x 30 Jihad IDeaher
c
E
U
W se
and
Fa.ily
Nae
X
.
;
.
I
-
(fl
Age
Occupatu i.
Date
Place
1536 Ikjhaad Mesavifar X X 23 Clergyaan
1537 Habib Me anchi X X 31 Vice Minister
1538 Q olai li Moeta di X X 33 Vice Minister
1539 Kazi. Jsavi X X 46 Vice Minister
1540 Au I4ih d Hajcedi X X 35 Civil (ngineer
1541 KaraaEil i Iki d Mesien X X 32 Cloth Merchant
Bichenar i
1542 Hasan I4.i ad (mi X X 3D Clerk
1543 Hohsen Hir Jalili X X 16 Student
1544 44 a ad Musafer X X 22 Worker
1545 Akbar Maq Oudi X X 37 Clerk
1546 Safdar Hokhtarian X x 51 Worker
1 C,47 Ba ‘haudin Pk*%aad I iaqi X x 53 Hauls Deputy
1 ,48 Asadulah Madani x x 67 Friday Prayer Leader
1 .49 Ta ii Mebdi Sultani X X 42 Far.er
1550 Reza Mesavi X X 25 Driver
Raheem Mirzaie X x 20 Officer
1552 Mestafa Hehreban X X 59 Clerk
C
C
—
0
C- )
Nase
and
F asily
Nase
.
•
x
.
•
t-.
J
.
.
z
.
.
u
Agi
Iiccupzation
DaLe
Place
1553 P4ih ad P ntazeri X X 37 Majlis Deputy
1554 Hohsen P isav inejad X 20 cLudent
1555 Mu Hashes Mir Q afari X X 16 Student
1556 t4jhaad Reza I hades Deylasi X X 22 Student
1557 P4iha ad All ii ci s li x x Officer
1558 Chase. ‘ crteza Choli X X 65 Clerk
1559 P&iha ad Reza P jsavi X X 39 Farmer
1560 Abulghasem Hirzaie x x 37 Vender
1561 4ihaa ad Tagi Hakhzan Husavi X X 44 Teacher
1562 Husien Mirvakili x X 31 Worker
1563 Husien Niasari X X 23 Worker
1564 Ja ‘far Neaatzadeh X X 19 Student
1565 Davoud Nazimulboka X X 35 Carpenter
1566 Mabmoud Nasbi X X 40 Accountant
1567 Javad Naqash Ker ani X X 29 Taxi Driver
P.568 Abuiqasem Naseernia X X 39 Revolutionary Guard
1569 KeyKhosrow Varihee X X 45 Army nan
1570 Hehdi Nourouzi X X 28 Student
C
E
C
0
.
.
0
c_
Na.c
and
F .miIy
Na.e
.
—
.
x
.
E
.
‘-
I
‘-
.
x
c
.
u'
Aqe
Occupation
Date
Plai-e
1571
1572
1573
1574
1575
1576
1577
1578
1579
1580
1581
1582
1583
1584
1585
1536
1687
1588
Hehdi Naseeri
Shareza Naseeri
Aliasghar Naseri
Abbas Nourouzi Esfahani
I4jhawmad lazari
Abbas Au Nateqnouri
Majeed Nourouzi
Husien Namjou
Qurban Naderifar
Abdulhusien Nourouzian
Qase. Naqdi
Rahee. Ja.sheed Plasi r Saranja.
Saeed Noun
Huh ad Husien Plouri
Iraj Hedayat
Q asemali Hedayat
Vaheed Homayounieh
Ezatulab Hiezomi
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
48
51
27
23
23
46
19
31
39
36
19
22
19
26
17
22
51
x
‘-
x
x
x
x
x
x
I4ajlis Deputy
Retiied clerk
Worker
Worker
Clerk
Hajlis Deputy
Student
Clerk
Ar .yman
Teacher
Student
Student
Student
C le k
Student
Student
Student
Metal Worker
I
—
—
—
C
—‘
cJ
fJa.e
and
lamily
Name
C
a
X
a
—
C
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a
I .
D
a
I.
.
a
I
—I
c
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Age
Occup iLion
Date
Place
1589 .d'a ad Reza Hiezomi X x 18 Student
1590 Hasan Hematyar X x 44 Stitching material seller
1591 Zia Hashemi X x 25 Clergyman
1592 Husjen Hasheajan X 25 Worker
1593 Au Hashemi Sanjabi X x 51 Kajlis Deputy
1594 Alijan Hemati Fard X x 38 Clerk
1595 Abdulkarim Hasheminejad X x Clergyman
1596 Kazim Houviezavi X . x 20 Grocer
1597 Javad Hazaveie X x 34 Worker
1598 Hohsen Haslemi X X 20 Student
1599 Rahmat Houstuoer Mahjoub X x 18 CarpenterWorker
1600 Gholamhus ian Yousefipour Kermai X x 12 Student
1601 Amanulah Yazdani X x 17 Student
1602 Saeed Yazdani X x 19 Teacher
1603 P4ematulah Yaqoubi X x 19 Jihad me er
1604 Horteza Yal X x 34 Tradesman
1605 Au t&shamaad Yazdani X x 24 Chalk artisan
1606 Husien Yazdani X x 31 Worker
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1607 Nehdi Yarsuhamsadian X x 23 T _cher
1608 Naser Youse [ ian X x 31 Driver
1609 Nirza Husien Yazdi AU X X 16 St nt
1610 Ilusien Yousefzadeh X X 60 Far Ser
1611 Behzad youaefjan X X 19 Student
APPE DIX III
ist of names and particui.ars of persons allegedly arrifisted,
; arrested or executed. p ov.tded by a witn
Arrested in 1981, rearrested in 1982 and finaily
arrested in 1984. She had undergone four surgical
operations due to sewere torture and was serving a
4-year prison sentence.
Rearrested in 1986. She was serving a 7-year prison
term.
Rearrested, she was serving a 10-year prison term.
to the execution of the following female prisoners:
Arrested in 1981 and serving life imprisonment.
Arrested in 191U. and serving life imprisonment.
Arrested in 1982.
Arrested in 1981.
Arrested in 1981 and serving life
Arrested in 1981 and serving life
Arrested in 1982 and serving life
Serving life imprisonment.
Arrested in 1981 and serving a 12—year sentence.
Arrested in 1981 and serving a 10—year sentence.
Rearrested in 1985 and serving life imprisonment.
Arrested in 1982 and serving a 1.2-year sentence.
Arrested in 1982 and serving a suspended death
senteuce.
Sorving a suspended death sentence.
Arrested i 1982 and serving a 12-year sentence.
Arrested in 1981 and awaiting release after having
served a 6—year sentence.
Azadeh Tatib:
Mahboobeh Haj-Ali:
Mansooreh Moslehi
In addition, I was a witness
Faselat Allangh:
Farangis Lalantar
Xheirieh Saffaii:
She kar Mohainmad-Zadeh:
Mariarn Saghari:
Simm Kiani:
Ghodsi Hava-Keshian
Sohei].a Fattahian:
Mariam Tavanagian-Fard:
AC agh Dok-Nama
Mogegan Sorbi:
Mal /heh Aghvami:
Hoorieh Beheshti—Tabar:
Rona Radmanesh:
Sohei].a Mohammad-Rahimi:
Soodabeh Mansoor i:
Fatemeh Hamzenii:
imprisonment.
imprisonment.
imprisonment.
—1—
Arrested in 1981 and awaiting release after having
served a 6-year sentence.
Awaiting release after having completed her term in
1986.
Arrested in 1981 and awaiting release.
Arrested in 1981 and serving a 15-year sentence.
Arrested in 1981 and awaiting release after having
completed a 5-year term.
Arrested in 1981 and serving a 7-year sentence.
Arrested in 1981 and serving a 12—year sentence,
Arrested in 1981 and serving a 12—year sentence.
Re-tried for demanding prisoners' rights after having
completed her first sentence.
Arrested in 1982 and serving
Arrested in 1982 and serving
Arrested in 1981 and serving
Arrested in 1981 and serving
Arrested in 1981 and serving
Arrested in 1981 and serving
Haoedam Azimi Arrested in 1981 and serving life imprisonment.
Zahra Falahati:
Mehri Zarimian:
Masoomeh Karimian
Mahtab Firoozi: Awaiting release since 1987.
Leili }iosseini: Arrested in 1981 and serving a 10-year term.
Nahid Zarkani: Awaiting release.
Soheila Rahimi• Arrested In 1981 and without a sentence.
Al]. the above-mentioned political prisoners served in the Evin prison before their
executions,
—2—
Mahboobeh Safab:
Chamar Azkia:
Ashraf Abmadi:
Razieh Ayatollah-Zadeh
Shirazi:
Monireh Ra avis
Mogegan Kamali
Parvin Haeri:
Farangis Keyvani:
Zahra Bijan-Yar:
Ashraf Khodah:
Mahboobeh Kiaei:
Azam Sadegh-Darreh:
Soodabeh Shahpar:
Zahra Zia-Mirzah:
Zahra Shabzendeh-.Dar:
Monir Abedini:
a 15-year term.
a 12-year sentence.
a 15-year sentence.
life imprisonment.
a 15-year sentence.
a 10-year sentence.
Rearrested in 1986 and awaiting trial.
Awaiting release. A heart patient.
APPENDIX IV
Open letter providt d by a witness
Department of Public Instruction
File No: 283
Date: 5 October 1987
Montazevi High School
We the students of this high school, declare that this high school is an
important place to be defended from imperialism. We must save a gun and we must
defend 131am until we obtain victory for Islam. Under these circumstances, we must
defend all schools like a very strong place, like strong trenIIes and if we hear
gossip or see anything wrong in this high school we must find, denounce and
demolish the guilty. We must recognize unnormal people belonging to misguided
sects and people who gossip. We must identify them.
We, the students, how can we see that they laugh at ur ideas and how can we
watch the misguided Baha'i sect in this high school do so:. iething against Islam. We
say to all the people t iat we do not accept these things (what the misguided Baha'i
sect people do) and we must do something against them. With this letter, we show
that we students do not like to see the misguided Baha'i sect in our high school
and we warn these people not to coma back to this high school. If we see them
after the 10th October 1987 in these holy trenches, they will be responsible for
any accident that may occur to them.
Montazevi High School
Signed by the students of this high shool
Signature: Abrahime
Notes at the end of the page:
- Please forward to other people
- We hope that the Islamic Flag will fly over imperialistic places and we hope
victory for Islam against the United States of America and all its allies.
—1—






