Mostafa Naderi: Iran’s leaders ‘are responsible’ for executing 30,000 political prisoners
A survivor of the 1988 massacre says he is ready to testify before the UN about the role of Iran’s leaders in the extrajudicial killings I was only 17 in the autumn of 1981 when I was arrested in Tehran for supporting and selling the publication of the People’s Mujahedin of Iran (MEK), a political organisation opposed to the Islamic Republic of Iran.
I spent almost 11 years in
Ayatollah Khomeini’s prisons in Evin, Ghezel Hesar and Gohardasht until I was
finally released in the spring of 1992. During my time in prison I faced
torture and mock executions. I was kept in solitary confinement for five years.
But my most daunting experience was witnessing the infamous 1988 massacre.
On 19 July 1988, Khomeini, supreme leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran, issued a fatwa, or religious edict, charging all political prisoners affiliated to the MEK with “waging war against God” and ordering the execution of all those who refused to renounce the group. Death Commissions were set up in prisons across Iran. They interviewed prisoners for no more than a few minutes before executing them. Their bodies were buried secretly in mass graves under the cover of night.
In recent weeks, authorities
have begun to destroy and build over Iran’s most famous mass grave, the
Khavaran Cemetery in Tehran, prompting the victims’ families to hold protests
at the site…..
https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/north-africa-west-asia/irans-leaders-are-responsible-for-executing-30000-political-prisoners/
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