Uniting for Freedom, Democracy & Equality​

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Filter by Categories
1988 Massacre
Activities
Activities Outside Iran
Annual Grand Gathering
Articles
Coronavirus
Death Commissions
Economic
Free Iran 2020 Global Summit
Free Iran 2021
Free Iran 2022
Free Iran 2023
Free Iran 2024
Free Iran World Summit
Free Iran World Summit 2023
Grand Gathering 2016
Grand Gathering 2017
Grand Gathering 2017- Videos
Grand Gathering 2018
Grand Gathering 2018- Videos
Grand Gathering 2019
Grand Gathering 2020
Human Rights
International Supports
Iran Protests
Iran Revolution
Iranian Assemblies
Iranian Resistance
Maryam Rajavi
Media Gallery
National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI)
News
Opinion
Partial list of speakers & dignitaries at the 2018 Free Iran Gathering
People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran(PMOI/MEK)
Quotes
Reports
Resistance Activities Inside Iran
Socio - Economic Crisis
The Free Iran World Summit 2019
The Free Iran World Summit 2021
Videos
Women

Raisi to Speak to UN as Iran Mourns Executed Wrestling Champion Navid Afkari

12 September, first anniversary of the execution of Iranian wrestling champion, Navid Afkari
12 September, first anniversary of the execution of Iranian wrestling champion, Navid Afkari

The National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) reported on September 12 that as Iranian citizens acknowledged the first anniversary of the execution of Iranian wrestling champion, Navid Afkari, it was announced that Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, who was involved in the execution, is set to address the United Nations General Assembly on September 20.

The NCRI said, “Navid Afkari was arrested during the major Iran protests in 2018 in Kazeroun along with his two brothers. Navid was falsely accused of killing a security guard based on a confession extracted under the month of torture. Navid had denied having killed the security guard and appealed to the Judiciary.”

They said the Raisi, who was then acting as Judiciary Chief, declined Afkari’s appeal and despite objections internationally, he was ultimately executed. His brother Vahid subsequently requested a retrial which was also rejected by the Iranian regime’s Supreme court. Saeid Dehgan, the Afkari brothers’ lawyer posted on Twitter saying that the retrial was rejected, even though the case had many contradictions. He said that ‘there were enough legal reasons to accept a retrial as the verdict contains 24 contradictions and three lies’.

The NCRI said, “Mistreating political prisoners, killing them secretly, and violating international norms, has been the regime’s modus-operandi. Raisi, now the regime’s president, has been known for fully implementing the regime’s doctrine in dealing with prisoners of conscience.”

Raisi began his career in the regime in the 1980s, first serving as a prosecutor where he issued many death sentences. In the summer of 1988, he became a member of the ‘death commission’ in Tehran, where under orders from then-Supreme leader Ruhollah Khomeini, he sent 30,000 political prisoners to their deaths.

His penchant for brutality is what led him to become Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s preferred candidate for the presidential role in this year’s election, and on June 19, he was announced as the new Iranian president, formally being inaugurated in early August.

Following his selection, Amnesty International Secretary-General, Agnès Callamard stated, “That Ebrahim Raisi has risen to the presidency instead of being investigated for the crimes against humanity of murder, enforced disappearance and torture, is a grim reminder that impunity reigns supreme in Iran.”

The NCRI said, “In recent years, the killing of Iranian protesters in November 2019, the subsequent mistreatment of the detained protesters, and the execution of Navid and other political prisoners are examples of the devastating impact of the world community’s inaction and the crisis of impunity in Iran.”

Calls continue to grow for the international community to hold Raisi accountable for his human rights violations and end the impunity that surrounds the officials within the regime. By exercising universal jurisdiction and launching independent investigations, Raisi and other regime officials could finally be prosecuted for their crimes against humanity.

Agnès Callamard went on to say, “It is now more urgent than ever for member states of the UN Human Rights Council to take concrete steps to address the crisis of systematic impunity in Iran, including by establishing an impartial mechanism to collect and analyze evidence of the most serious crimes under international law committed in Iran to facilitate fair and independent criminal proceedings.”

Recent Posts

Raisi to Speak to UN as Iran Mourns Executed Wrestling Champion Navid Afkari