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1999 World Report Entry on Iran  
Background Briefing On The Killings in Iran
Five Iranian writers have been killed in the last four weeks in Iran. All of the writers were critics of the government; all lived in Tehran. The police have so far not announced any suspects.


Related Material

Iranian Writer Escapes Possible Murder Attempt
Press Release, December 16, 1998

Another Missing Iranian Writer Dead Under Suspicious Circumstances
Press Release, December 9, 1998

Human Rights Watch Deplores Pattern of Harassment and Killing of Opposition Figures in Iran
Press Release, November 25, 1998

Human Rights Watch calls for Release of Iranian Journalist
Press Release, October 7. 1998


*Jafar Pouyandeh, a translator and writer, disappeared on December 9 while on his way to a meeting of publishers at 2.00 p.m. in midtown Tehran. His body was found on December 13. The family was contacted by the police who informed them that his body had been found in Shar-e Ray, a suburb of Tehran, and had been moved to a Tehran city morgue. According to the family, Pouyandeh was apparently strangled although no autopsy has yet been carried out.

*The body of Mohammad Mokhtari, a writer and poet, was found in a Tehran city morgue on December 9. He was last seen alive on December 3, going to a local shop. Marks on his head and neck made it appear that he had been murdered, possibly by strangulation. Pouyandeh and Mokhtari had been summoned with four other prominent writers on October 1998 by the authorities in connection with their attempt to establish an independent writers association.

*The body of Majid Sharif, a prominent writer and political critic, was found by police in a Tehran street and the family was able to identify it at the Tehran city morgue on November 24. He had disappeared on November 20. Sharif's articles criticizing government policies appeared in a monthly magazine, Iran-e Farda (Iran's Tomorrow), which was closed down by court order on December 5.

*Darioush Forouhar, and his wife Parvaneh Forouhar (née Eskandari),were stabbed to death in their Tehran home on November 22. Forouhar was the leader of the banned Iran Nation Party and a former minister of labor in the transitional government of Mehdi Bazargan. His wife Parvaneh was a prominent critic of the Iranian government. The Forouhars frequently protested the restrictions placed on their nonviolent political activities by the Iranian authorities and had expressed fear about their personal safety.

These murders appear to be part of a pattern of government-condoned repression directed against critics in Iran going back many years. Many killings of government critics over the last ten years remain unsolved. They include: Dr. Kazem Sami, a former minister of health in the transitional government of Mehdi Bazargan and leader of a liberal Islamic movement, who was stabbed to death in his office in Tehran in November 1988; Bishop Haik Hovasepian Mehr, who came to international prominence while leading a campaign for the release of Pastor Mehdi Dibaj and was murdered in January 1994; Hossein Barazandeh-Lagha, an independent Islamic scholar critical of the government, who was murdered in the city of Mashhad in March 1994; Pastor Mehdi Dibaj, who converted from Islam to Christianity, and had been imprisoned in Sari, northeast Iran from 1983 to 1994, and was killed in July 1994; Haji Mohammad Ziaie, a Sunni Muslim leader from Bandar-Abas, known to be critical of government policies, who was found dead in July 1994; Dr. Ahmad Mir-Allai, a member of the editorial board of the cultural magazine Zendehroud, who was found dead in the street in Isfahan in October 1995; Professor Ahmad Tafazzoli of Tehran University who was found dead in Punak, a suburb northwest of Tehran in January 1997; Ebrahim Zalzadeh, a publisher whose body was discovered at the morgue in the Tehran city coroner's department in March 1997; and Molavi Imam Bakhsh Narouie, the prayer leader of a Sunni mosque, who was killed in the town of Miyankangi in Sistan va Baluchestan province in June 1998.

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