Prominent politicians and army officers in the Iranian army have come from Bijar. Amir Nezam Garrusi (1820–1900) was born in Bijar to a Kabudvand family. As colonel of the Garrus Regiment, he took part in
Mohammad Shah Qajar's unsuccessful
Herat Campaign. As a diplomat in Paris, he had dinners with
Napoleon III. He later acted as an Iranian diplomat to the
Sublime Porte. General Garrusi joined in the 1880 suppression of the Kurdish uprising by the
Sheikh Ubeydullah of Neri. He also played a part in the
murder of Cewer Agha, the predecessor of
Simko, the Kurdish leader. The family of Rear Admiral
Gholamali Bayandor (1898–1941) came from Bijar. Among academic figures from Bijar is Dr Kamran Nejatollahi (1953–1978), a young civil engineering professor in the Polytechnic University of Tehran (now Amirkabir). He was killed during a peaceful sit-in at the university, presumably by
Savak snipers. He is now regarded as an early martyr of the Islamic revolution and is buried among "political dissidents" in
Behesht-e Zahra in
Teheran. The poet
Fazel Khan Garrusi (1784–1843) was born into a Bijar family before moving to
Tehran.
Abdollah Ramezanzadeh, the spokesman of the former
Khatami government, was born and raised in Bijar. He was the governor of
Kurdistan Province 1997–2001, but has been in prison since the disputed 2009 presidential election.
Farhad Aslani (1966– ) the actor was born in Bijar. Other prominent Bijaris include bodybuilding champion Baitollah Abbaspour (1979– ) and footballer Eshaq Sobhani (1984– ). ==See also==