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Execution of Navid Afkari

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Navid Afkari
Personal information
Native nameنوید افکاری سنگری
Birth nameNavid Afkaari Sangari
Born1993
Shiraz, Iran
Died12 September 2020(2020-09-12) (aged 26–27)
Adel-Abaad prison, Shiraz, Iran
Resting placeSangar, Sepidan
NationalityIranian
OccupationWrestler
Years active2005–2015
Criminal charge(s)Insulting the Supreme Leader, Spreading propaganda against the Islamic Republic, Hirabah, disturbing public order, organizing a group, participating in protests, Murder of security agent[1]
Criminal penaltyTwo capital punishments
Criminal statusExecuted

Navid Afkari (Persian: نوید افکاری; 1993 – 12 September 2020)[2][3][4] was an Iranian wrestler who was sentenced to death and executed in Iran, after he was convicted of murdering an IRGC security guard during the 2018 Iranian protests.[5] His execution caused a global outcry, and many argued that Afkari's conduct during the protests had been peaceful, the confession obtained from Afkari was under duress, and the reason for execution was because Afkari took part in the protests.[6][7] Afkari's brothers Vahid and Habib were sentenced to 54 and 27 years, respectively, in prison in the same case.[8] While Afkari initially accepted the murder charge, he would later state that it had been a forced confession, with him having been tortured into making a false confession.[9] Despite the Islamic Republic's efforts to portray Afkari's execution as retribution for the deceased security guard, the murder charge was never proven.[10][11][12] Afkari's death was followed by worldwide condemnation of the regime,[13] ranging from individual to national statements, including statements released by the EU,[14][15] the International Olympic Committee IOC,[16] and individuals like UFC president Dana White and Reza Pahlavi, the last crown prince of Iran.[17]

Afkari was executed in the early morning hours of 12 September 2020 in the Adel-Abad prison in Shiraz.[18][8]

In September 2020 the United States blacklisted several Iranian officials and entities over alleged gross violations of human rights that also included the case of Navid Afkari's execution.[19]

Wrestling career

Afkari had been a wrestler and had participated in several national Iranian wrestling events, as a teenager he was placed 2nd in 69kg catagory of "2009 teenagers greco-roman wrestling competitions"[20] , later on his wrestling career he had managed to gain 8th place in 71kg catagory of "2016 general national greco-roman wrestling competitions".[21]

Charges

Afkari was among the people who took to the streets during the 2018 protests in Iran, opposing the dictatorship of Khamenei[22] and the ever-worsening living conditions nation-wide. He was charged with multiple offenses after his sudden arrest shortly after the protests. Among his charges were "insulting the supreme leader", "waging war against God (a.k.a. moharebeh)", and the alleged case of Hasan Torkman's murder.[citation needed]

Torkman was a secret security agent of IRGC which were tasked with silencing the protests and after his death he was buried as a "martyr" by the regime, signifying his position.[23] Torkman was also working as a security guard for Water and Sewage company of Shiraz.[24]

According to Younesi, they used the CCTV footage of a street near where Torkman was found dead; The footage was from more than some two hours before Torkman's death and henceforth, one cannot base that as a piece of evidence for finding someone guilty of murder.[25] In it, there is nothing out of the ordinary; Afkari was walking on the sidewalk while talking on the phone with someone.[26]

In an audio recording from the court, the prosecutor did not present the so-called evidence to the defendant.[27] In his hearings, Afkari pointed that out to the court and asked the head-judge for the mentioned video to be presented before everyone; so that one can infer guilt, if that was the case. However, the head-judge Mehrdad Tahmtan was ignorant of his request.[28] To be exact, no footage from the moment when the felony took place exists.[11][29]

In addition to the CCTV footage, the court used eye-witness accounts as the other evidence for linking Afkari with Torkman's murder case. The accounts were later dropped by the people that initially testified against Afkari. One testified under pressure, another said that their testimony was not right or accurate and another one mentioned that they had met Afkari for the first time during the court.[30][12]

Despite all the flaws in the murder case with no actual footage of the murder scene and the false testimonies, the court persisted with holding Afkari accountable.

For his involvement in the protests, and further the alleged murder case, the court led by the head judge, Mehrdad Tahmtan,[31][32] sentenced Afkari with two capital punishments.

After that, Afkari found this ruling unjust, and he voiced his concerns. In one of his voice calls from the Adel-Abaad prison, he said:

My audience are noble people that have a bit of honor in them. Your complacency means rooting for oppression and the oppressor. It means supporting the execution of an innocent. Means I will be getting closer, step-by-step, to the hanging platform. [33]

He insisted his innocence stating:

People! It is only logical that I will fight for my life; and as per the evidence, all clues are an affirmation to my innocence. All the evidence that we have collected and everything that I am saying right now, is only here to let you know that if I ever get executed, in the 21st century and with all the human right organizations, the UN or security council or the whatever else, an innocent human being, which had tried to the best of his might and fought, to have his voice heard, was hanged.[34][13]

He warned people about the systemic corruption infesting the judiciary system of Iran and how innocent lives get taken by their unjust rulings, stating:

Know and be aware that if the innocent me gets executed, this won't be the first victim of the unfairness of this so-called 'justice-oriented' unjust court".[35]

Forced confessions

While Afkari initially issued a confession accepting the murder charge, he would later take it back stating he had been tortured into making a false confession.[11][36] During the hearings in the privately held court, Afkari stated:

I told the inspector that neither do I know the secret agent (that has been killed), nor have I heard his name! But under torture, and to save my family, and for Vahid (one of his imprisoned brothers), I gave them what they wanted.[12]

His parents sent a letter to the chief justice of Iran claiming their son endured torture.[37]

In his voice-call from the prison, he clarified that he had been indeed tortured, to wrongly confess about murdering someone which he had not. He comes to the realization that this whole ordeal is not actually about the murder and rather the regime's irritation because of his participation in the protests, as the last thing they wanted to see, was a public figure in the protests alongside the people rallying against the dictatorship.[10] His words are as follows:

Once I had been freed from the pressure of solitary confinement, the basement, and the tortures, once I stepped back onto the prison, I immediately wrote to the judicial offices and filed my complaint (against their use of torture) and screamed (my innocence); that I am not a murderer. I requested them to take me to the forensics bureau (for medical examinations of his scars). Per their report and eye-witness account (of my torture) and other evidence, it was made clear that I had been tortured. No matter the countless times I wrote (and pleaded) that all my confessions were obtained under (pressure and) torture; or how there is not a single shred of evidence in this damned case that could prove my guilt, but they did not want to hear our voice. I figured they were looking for a neck for their noose.[38][39]

The eye-witness account that confirmed Afkari's torture came from Shaahin Naaseri who was in the police department when Afkari was being forcefully interrogated under pressure. In his report he clarified:

I heard screams, shouting, and pleas for help in the alley of the police department of Shiraz. The sargent accompanying me asked me to remain in the alley until he returns. He went and opened up a door. Out of curiosity, I too went to see what's going on. I saw two officers dressed in unofficial uniform cussing and hitting Navid with batons and metal pipes mercilessly. They would tell him: "the truth is whatever we say", "will you write what we are saying or not?!". Navid was begging, "please! stop; don't hit me... I didn't do anything!". He covered his head with his arms. One of the inspectors that I later learned was Inspector Abbasi, hit Navid in a way that he went unconscious after a gut-wrenching scream.[40]

Naaseri, who was an eye-witness to the tortures of Afkari, was later taunted and put under psychological pressure by the inspector of the national security court due to his testimony about the tortures.

I testified before 3 separate courts. When I went to testify before the court responsible for breaches of national security, the Inspector of the branch told me "what have you seen in the police department?!". I went over my observations. Then the Inspector told me in a very condescending tone that "you are interfering with a security case, I will make you pay for it! I will force these officers to testify against you for your lies and false accusations! I will melt you!"[40]

Recently, Naaseri has disappeared and his family have not been able to make contact with him since Afkari's execution. It has been said that he has been given to the same organization that he testified against their officers' use of torture on Afkari.[41]

Death sentence

Afkari was given two death sentences for his charges.[36]

According to human rights activists in Iran, Afkari's brothers Vahid and Habib were sentenced to 54 and 27 years in prison for charges stemming from the same case.[36]

Reactions

Afkari's death sentence sparked global outrage and calls to overturn his execution.[24]

Notable figures, including from U.S. President Donald Trump, International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach, and UFC President Dana White, pled for Iran not to execute Afkari.[42][8][43][44] Trump tweeted on 4 September 2020:

Hearing that Iran is looking to execute a great and popular wrestling star, 27-year-old Navid Afkarai [sic], whose sole act was an anti-government demonstration on the streets. They were protesting the “country’s worsening economic situation and inflation”. To the leaders of Iran, I would greatly appreciate if you would spare this young man’s life, and not execute him. Thank you![45]

U.S. State Department spokeswoman, Morgan Ortagus, tweeted: "We join the world in outrage at the Iranian regime's death sentence for Navid Afkari, who was tortured into giving a false confession after participating in peaceful protests in 2018. The regime also tortured his two brothers and sentenced them to decades in prison. Let them go!"[8]

Azerbaijani MP Asim Mollazadeh talked to Israeli newspaper The Jerusalem Post about Navid Afkari's death sentence:

I’m against death penalties and our country [is] as a member of the Council of Europe has joined to European standards on this issue. Not only this poor wrestler and his brothers are victims of totalitarian regime. Hundreds of Azerbaijanis in Iran have been punished because they wanted [to]study their mother tongue. I’m joining all of you and declaring no death penalty for Navid Afkari.[46]

The World Players Association urged for the Iranian judiciary to issue a stay of execution.[24]

Iran's semi-official Tasnim News Agency dismissed Trump's tweet in a feature story, saying that US sanctions had hurt Iranian hospitals amid the pandemic, "Trump is worried about the life of a murderer while he puts many Iranian patients' lives in danger by imposing severe sanctions," the agency said.[47]

This execution is not the first execution of an Iranian athlete, In August 1988, Foruzan Abdi also was executed in Evin prison.[48]

Talks over banning Iran from the Olympics in the wake of Afkari's execution

Due to his unfair sentencing and the fabrication of pieces of evidence to show him guilty of a murder he did not commit, there have been talks whether Iran should be banned from the Olympic Games.[49] Australian sports administrator Brendan Schwab, executive director of the Switzerland-based World Players Association, which represents tens of thousands of professional athletes around the world, stipulated that:

We can’t think of a more grievous attack on the humanitarian values of the Olympic movement than the horrific execution of an athlete through a coerced confession obtained through torture.

Schwab stated that Afkari's execution "must result in Iran forfeiting its right to be a part of sport's universal community".[50]

Death and burial

File:Navid Afkari Toronto.jpg
The vigil held for Afkari at Mel Lastman Square in Toronto

On 12 September, it was announced that Afkari had been executed.[36][42] No one exactly knows how this was done. His burial was done at night-time with high-security presence and only Afkari's immediate family members. His execution was rushed, and that raised a lot of speculations as to why that might have been, especially with a massive global outcry urging Iran not to carry out the execution.

According to the lawyers, his execution was unlawful.[51][52][30] Given the pieces of evidence, the execution of Afkari cannot be considered the execution of a judicial verdict, and it is more of a "heinous crime" apparently aimed at poisoning the protesters and turning a blind eye to international public opinion.[53]

Officials say that Afkari was hanged; however, there is a lot of controversies regarding that narrative due to multiple anomalies. For one, Afkari was (supposedly) executed in the month of Muharram, during which the executions never take place as it is haram and forbidden to kill[54] by sharia law, also written in the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Furthermore, apparently the family of Torkman was about to agree to drop their call for qisas. They were to have a meeting to discuss the matter with the other side the day Afkari was announced dead. His brother receives the news of Afkari's death through a call shortly before his plane was due to depart for Shiraz in order to go and visit the Torkmans. And so that adds to the lead that this was a politically-motivated murder of Afkari by the regime, as had the Torkman family would have dropped their call for qisas, Afkari should have been spared.[55][54]

Moreover and based on the law, any prisoner on the death row can have a meeting with their family the day prior to their execution. Also their family would be notified when their child is a day or two away from execution. Not only was Afkari stripped of his right to see his mother or father, but also their family did not know either that their son was about to be executed.[54] It just happened so abruptly. The last voice call from Afkari was made at night and hours before his death, during which he is completely unaware of his fate.[56]

On top of all that, according to the witnesses, there were clear signs of blunt trauma on Afkari's body. His face was deformed and he had a broken nose.[54] The family members were only allowed to see Afkari's face and they were forbidden from seeing his body.[57] The cloth with which his body was carried to the burial was stained with blood from the inside. This begs the question as was this an actual execution by hanging or perhaps it was a mishap where Afkari had been tortured to death, so officials said he was executed in order to avoid an even greater public anger.[58][59][57]

The Iranian diaspora held vigils in cities all around the world, notably in Toronto,[60][better source needed] Winnipeg,[61] Edmonton,[62] Frankfurt,[63] Paris, Berlin, London, Gutenberg, The Hague, Bern, Brussels, Copenhagen, Rome, Malmo, Hamburg and Washington, D.C.[citation needed] in order to commemorate the life of Afkari and also to condemn the Islamic Republic's actions in taking his life without a fair trial.

Navid and his death was the inspiration for the song titled Navid Azadi (lit. beacon of freedom) by Iranian artist King Raam.[64]

See also

References

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