Shapour Bakhtiar
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Shapour Bakhtiar | |
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In office 4 January 1979 – 5 February 1979 |
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Monarch | Mohammad Reza Pahlavi |
Preceded by | Gholam Reza Azhari |
Succeeded by | Mehdi Bazargan |
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Born | 1914 Iran |
Died | 1991 Paris, France |
Political party | National Front (Iran) |
Religion | Shia Islam |
Shapour Bakhtiar (Shapour Bakhtiar ) (also Shapur Bakhtiar) (Persian: شاپور بختیار Shāpūr Bakhtīār) (born 1914 or 1915 - August 6, 1991) was an Iranian politician and the last Prime Minister of Iran under Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. After the Iranian Revolution, he soon went into exile and was assassinated in Paris in 1991 by Ruhollah Khomeini's sympathizers.
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[edit] Early life
Shapour Bakhtiar was born in 1914 or 1915 in southwestern Iran to Mohammad Reza (Sardar-e-Fateh) and Naz-Baygom, both Bakhtiaris. Bakhtiar's maternal grandfather, Najaf-Gholi Samsam ol-Saltaneh, was appointed prime minister twice, in 1912 and 1918. Bakhtiar's mother died when he was seven years old. He attended elementary school in Shahr-e Kord and then secondary school, first in Isfahan and later in Beirut, Lebanon, where he received his high school diploma from a French school.
[edit] Time in France
In 1936 he left for France. He received his PhD, in political science (in 1939), as well as degrees in law and philosophy, from Sorbonne. As a firm opponent of all totalitarian rule, he volunteered for the French Foreign Legion and then fought with the resistance against the occupation by Germany in the Orleans battalion.
[edit] Political career in Iran
Shapour Bakhtiar returned to Iran in 1946. In 1951 he was appointed by the Ministry of Labor, first as director of the Labor Department in the Province of Isfahan, then he even headed up the Labor Department in Khuzestan, center of the oil industry. In 1953 Mohammad Mosaddeq was briefly in power in Iran, before being deposed. Under his premiership Bakhtiar was deputy minister of labor. After the Shah was reinstated by a British-American sponsored coup d'etat, Bakhtiar remained a critic of his rule. In the mid-1950s, he was involved in underground activity against the Shah's despotic regime, calling for the 1954 Majlis elections to be free and fair and attempting to revive the nationalist movement. In 1960, the Second National Front was formed and Bakhtiar played a very crucial role in the new organization's activities as the head of the student activist body of the Front. He and his colleagues differed from most other oppositionists in that they were very moderate, restricting their activity to peaceful protest and calling only for the restoration of democratic rights within the framework of constitutional monarchy. Despite these moderate demands, the Shah refused to cooperate and opted to outlaw the Front and imprison the most prominent liberals. From 1964 to 1977, the imperial regime refused to permit any form of anti-state activity, even from the moderate liberals like Shapour Bakhtiar. In the following years Bakhtiar was imprisoned repeatedly, a total of six years, for his opposition to the Shah. He even rose to the position of deputy chief of the illegal National Front in late 1977 when the group was reconstituted as the Union of National Front Forces with Bakhtiar as head of the Iran Party (the largest group in the Front).
At the end of 1978, as the Shah's power was crumbling; because Bakhtiar had been a leader in the resistance, he was chosen to help in the creation of a civilian government in place of the military one, which had existed up to this point. He was appointed to the position of Prime Minister by the Shah, as a concession to his opponents, especially the followers of the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. Although this caused him to be expelled from the National Front, he accepted the appointment, as he feared a revolution, in which communists and mullahs would take over the country, because he thought this would ruin Iran. In his 36 days as premier of Iran, Bakhtiar ordered all political inmates to be freed, lifted censorship of newspapers (whose staff had until then been on strike), relaxed martial law, ordered the dissolving of SAVAK (the former regime's secret police) and requested that the opposition give him three months to hold elections for a constituent assembly that would decide the fate of the monarchy and determine the future form of government for Iran. Despite these conciliatory gestures, Ayatollah Khomeini refused to collaborate with Bakhtiar, denouncing the premier as a traitor for siding with the Shah, labeling his government "illegitimate" and "illegal" and calling for the overthrow of the Monarchy. Bakhtiar made some key mistakes during his premiership including allowing Khomeini to re-enter Iran. In the end, he failed to rally even his own former colleagues in the National Front behind him and his government was overwhelmingly rejected by the masses, except for a very small number of pro-Shah loyalists and some moderate pro-democratic elements. The opposition was not willing to compromise and the Shah was forced to leave the country in January of 1979; Bakhtiar left Iran again for France in April of the same year.
[edit] French exile and series of Assassinations
Out of Paris, Shapour Bakhtiar led the National Resistance Movement of Iran, which fought the Islamic republic in his homeland. In July 1980 he escaped an assassination attempt in his home in the Parisian suburb, Suresnes, which killed a policeman and a neighbor. But on August 7, 1991, Bakhtiar was murdered along with his secretary, Soroush Katibeh, by three assassins in his home. The inquest found that he was stabbed by a knife matching a nearby blood stained bread knife. Bakhtiar's dead body was not found until at least 36 hours after his death, despite the fact that he had heavy police protection and that his killers had left ID (presumably faked) with a guard at his house.[1] Two of the assassins escaped to Iran, but the third, Ali Vakili Rad, was apprehended in Switzerland,[2] as well as an alleged accomplice, Zeyal Sarhadi, a great-nephew of the president of Iran,[3] and both were extradited to France for trial.[4] Vakili Rad was sentenced to life in prison in December 1994, although Sarhadi was acquitted.[5]
Shapour Bakhtiar is buried in Montparnasse Cemetery, in Paris.[6]
Hours after the assassination of Shapour Bakhtiar, a British hostage was released from Lebanon, presumably held by Hezbollah, but a French hostage was taken.[7] Although many in the Iranian exile community speculated of official French complicity in Bakhtiar's death,[8] the second kidnapping casts a shadow over such theories, since the French would seem unlikely to support an operation that included the kidnapping of another French hostage in Lebanon.[1]
[edit] Notes
- ^ a b Riding, Alan. "France Vows to Press for Release of Newly Taken Hostage", New York Times, 10 Aug. 1991. Retrieved 5 Nov. 2007.
- ^ Rempel, William C. "Tale of Deadly Iranian Network Woven in Paris", Los Angeles Times, 3 Nov. 1994. Retrieved 5 Nov. 2007.
- ^ Greenhouse, Stephen. "French Ask Swiss on Jailed Iranian", New York Times, 28 Dec. 1991. Retrieved 5 Nov. 2007.
- ^ Riding, Alan. "3 Iranians Go on Trial in France in Slaying of Exiled Ex-Premier", New York Times, 3 Nov. 1994. Retrieved 5 Nov. 2007.
- ^ U.S. State Department, 1994 Human Rights Report: Iran. Retrieved 5 Nov. 2007
- ^ Photograph of Shapour Bakhtiar's graveside in Paris: [1]
- ^ Schmidt, William E. "Pressure Mounts on Israel to Free Its Arab Hostages", New York Times, 10 Aug. 1991. Retrieved 5 Nov. 2007.
- ^ Kadivar, Cyrus. "Dialogue of Murder", The Iranian, 23 Jan. 2003, noting that "Many Iranians, including the families of the victims, blamed France's diplomatic rapprochement with Tehran for the deaths. Two years earlier, in February 1989, Roland Dumas had visited Iran to discuss trade opportunities and on July 27, 1990 President Mitterand had ordered the release of the Lebanese terrorist, Anis Naccache, who had led the first attempt on Bakhtiar's life in 1980. Relations between Tehran and Paris led to lucrative contracts and greater restrictions on the activities of the Iranian opposition." Retrieved 5 Nov. 2007.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Website dedicated to Dr Shapour Bakhtiar: (English), (Persian).
- Interview with Dr Shapour Bakhtiar on Tuesday 6 March 1984 in Paris (in Persian):
Shapour Bakhtiar, Iranian Oral History, Harvard University Center for Middle Eastern Studies:
— Audio 1a (29 min 30 sec), Audio 2a (30 min 35 sec), Audio 1b (29 min 18 sec), Audio 2b (30 min 44 sec) - A Leaf from the History of Iran - Dr Shapour Bakhtiar, a video documentary in two parts (in Persian):
— Part 1 (9 min 30 sec), Part 2 (8 min 47 sec). - Iran Chamber Society--Historic Personalities: Shapour Bakhtiar
- Persian Iran page about Bakhtiar
- A list of human rights violations committed by Iran including the assassination and assassination attempt on Bakhtiar
- Article about Bakhtiar's role in the Islamic Revolution
- Detail audio report about Dr. Bakhtiar's Murder by the Qods Force
- Interview with Dr Shapour Bakhtiar on Democracy and Iran, in Persian: YouTube.
- Photograph of Shapour Bakhtiar's graveside in Paris: [2].
- Payman Arabshahi, Memory lane - Chronology of events leading to the fall of the monarchy, February 11, 2001, The Iranian.
- Fariba Amini, The first moderate, January 8, 2003, The Iranian.
- Darius Kadivar, Shapour Bakhtiar the Last Democrat, December 26, 2007, The Iranian.
Note: The literary quality of this essay is wanting; at places the text is almost incomprehensible.
[edit] Published works
- Habib Lajevardi, editor, Memoirs of Shapour Bakhtiar, in Persian (Harvard University Press, 1996). ISBN 0-932885-14-4
Preceded by Gholam Reza Azhari |
Prime Minister of Iran 1979 |
Succeeded by Mehdi Bazargan |
Persondata | |
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NAME | Bakhtiar, Shapour |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Bakthiar, Shapur |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | Iranian politician |
DATE OF BIRTH | 1914 or 1915 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | |
DATE OF DEATH | August 6, 1991 |
PLACE OF DEATH | Suresnes, France |