29 January 2022 :
Year-end report by the KHRN, the NGO that focuses its work on the condition of the Kurdish minority within Iran.
This Annual Report 2021 addresses the human rights situation in 2021 in relation to the Kurdish people in Iran. As in previous years, the rights of Kurdish people have continued to be violated due to their language, religions, culture, genders, sexual orientations, and class and political affiliations by the Islamic Republic’s discriminatory laws and repressive and violent crackdowns by its security, military, judicial, and executive institutions. The statistics and information provided in this report only include those that have been confirmed or published by the Kurdistan Human Rights Network (KHRN) or, in cases where news and information from other sources have been used, the KHRN has independently taken the necessary steps to investigate and verify them. However, as KHRN, we believe that this report does not cover all cases of violations of the rights of the Kurdish people in Iran. There are certainly many other cases that have not been reported by news outlets and human rights organisations for various reasons, including the pressure of security agencies on individuals and families.
Kolbars and Tradesmen. - In 2021, at least 46 Kurdish kolbars lost their lives and 122 kolbars were injured in the border areas of the western provinces of West Azerbaijan, Kurdistan, and Kermanshah as a result of shootings by border forces, natural disasters etc.. Of the 46 kolbars that lost their lives, 17 were killed by Iranian military forces and four by Turkish forces. One child kolbar committed suicide after border forces confiscated his mules. In addition, five kolbars lost their lives due to the fall of avalanche, three as a result of frostbite, three due to falling from mountain heights, three due to heart attacks while carrying goods, one drowned in a river, and nine in road accidents. Also, from the 122 injured kolbars, 74 were shot and tortured by Iranian border forces, three kolbars were shot by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), three were shot and tortured by the Turkish border forces, and one was shot by Iraqi border forces, 12 fell from border heights, and three were injured in landmine explosions. In addition, 26 kolbars were injured in various other incidents. Also in 2021, Iranian military forces killed at least five Kurdish tradesmen and wounded one as a result of a direct shooting.
Killings of Civilians. - Iranian forces killed four Kurdish civilians throughout the year. Yasser Mohammadi was shot by special forces in a vehicle under the pretext that the people in the vehicle looked “suspicious”. Behzad Hatami-Asl and Farhad Zandi were shot by the police on the roads of Khoy, West Azerbaijan province, and Dehgolan, Kurdistan province, under the pretext of “fight against smuggling”. Additionally, military officers killed Habib (Hagh-Morad) Rostami near the Parvizkhan border in Qasr-e Shirin, Kermanshah province.
Executions. - Throughout the year, at least 30 prisoners were executed in various prisons in the western provinces of West Azerbaijan, Kurdistan, Kermanshah, and Ilam. These included 15 executions over murder-related charges and 14 for drug-related charges. Additionally, Iran executed a Kurdish political prisoner named Heydar Ghorbani in Sanandaj Central Prison on 19 December on the charges of “armed insurrection” (baghi). Ghorbani’s execution, which was carried out without the knowledge of his family and lawyer, was widely protested against by the people of Kurdistan and by human rights organizations.
Killings and Deaths of Civilians in Detention Centres and Prisons. - In 2021, six Kurdish prisoners were tortured to death in Iran’s detention facilities and prisons. These included Danial Zein Al-Abedini in Mahabad Prison, Nasser Karimi in Bukan Prison, Amir Rezaei in Orumiyeh Central Prison, Rahman Ahmadi in the detention centre of the Iranian Public Security and Intelligence Police (PAVA), Mehrdad Taleshi in the detention centre of the Criminal Investigation Department, Amir Hossein Hatami in Fashafuyeh Prison in Tehran, and Khosrow Jamalifar in Sanandaj Central Prison. Also, the Intelligence Organisation of the IRGC shot six Kurdish civilians named Ahmad Rassan, in the village of Mowlik in Maku; Yasser Mangouri, Osman Naderi, and Abdollah Naderi in Piranshahr; Asad Ramin and Davoud Rahimi in the village of Qarna in Naqadeh while detaining them. The IRGC intelligence service told the families of these civilians that they had been killed at the time of detention. However, it was not clear to the families how the victims lost their lives as they neither received the bodies nor death certificates of the victims. In addition, throughout the year, four Kurdish prisoners lost their lives either due to medical malpractice or lack of access to medical services. These prisoners were Shahab Darounpar, 35, in Eslamabad-e Gharb Prison; Iraj Alizadeh, 50, in Khoy Prison; Shamsaddin Tatari, 55, in Orumiyeh Central Prison; Ruhollah Maleki, 30, in Ilam Central Prison.
Assassinations of Political Activists Abroad. - In 2021, forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran assassinated four Kurdish political activists and members of the Kurdistan Free Life Party (PJAK) and the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (PDKI) overseas. These activists were Mehdi Rezaei (Zagros Mani), Ako Fathi (Shawgar Chia), Behrouz (Rebin) Rahimi, and Musa Babakhani in the cities of Penjwin, Sulaimaniyah, and Erbil in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq. Although the Islamic Republic of Iran, as in other cases, has not claimed responsibility for any of these political assassinations, the respective parties of the victims have blamed the Iranian government for the attacks.
Femicide. - In 2021, at least 32 cases of femicide were registered in Kurdistan. These murders were generally committed by the men in the family for various reasons.
Landmine Explosions. - In 2021, explosions of landmines and remnants of other explosives killed at least 14 individuals and injured at least 25 others. The victims included at least two children and two kolbars.
https://kurdistanhumanrights.org/en/annual-report-2021/