- Was born in the city of Sablagh (Mahabad) in the year 1962.
- He completed his primary, secondary and high school education in 1981 in this city.
- In 1983 he went to the country of Germany.
- 1990 to 1991 he worked in the field of bookkeeping and accounting.
- 1990 to 1991: He went to the College of the Frankfurt, Germany, where he studied Germanic.
- 1991-1996 Studied journalism and didactics in German at the University of Dortmund, Germany he finished his masters degree in that university.
- 1998-1999 German language teacher within the framework of an EU project.
- Since 2000, he has been the official German translator of the German judiciary.
- Worked for a while within the framework of his doctoral thesis on Reflection of the Kurdish National Issue in the German Media
Journalistic activity
He has written and translated 80 important articles related to the national cause and published them in the magazines Mahabad, Voice of Kurdistan, New Way, Shout, Work, and ``Kurdistan Heute,, (Kurdistan Today), “Politics”, “Our Scream”, “Ezadgi” and several other Kurdish, Persian and German publications, as well as on the Internet sites to serve the legitimate Kurdish issue. Naser Iranpour has been running a personal website called http://www.iran-federal.com for a year.
The topics he has worked on in the form of translation and research so far include:
o Federalism (Germany, Switzerland, Canada)
o The right to self-determination
o Types of democracy
o Several crucial European treaties on the rights of languages and national minorities
Political activism
As a child and young man, Nasri Iranpour was a supporter of the Iranian People's Martyrs' Guerrilla Organization and later the Iranian People's Martyrs' Organization (Aksariat).
He was a political activist in the ranks of the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (KDP) in Germany.
He is currently an independent civil activist and does not belong to any political organization.
Political beliefs
Naser Iranpour considers himself a social democrat and supports federalism, democracy and the right to determine the fate of the Kurds in Iran through a referendum. It is too early to decide on this issue, he said. He believes that if national rights are guaranteed, both in the form of citizenship rights and collective rights as a nation, there is no need to secede from Iran, but it is wrong to swear by Iranian territory at any cost. He believes that the Kurdish movement in particular is a legitimate national movement, not a nationalist one.[1]