By 1988, there was nothing left of the "relatively free" (matter of opinion) atmosphere people acquired for a short period after the Iranian revolution of 1979.
The Islamic Republic of Iran (IRI)’s brutal machine of repression had already uprooted a great number of other thinkers.
Thousands of activists and sympathisers of the opposition groups had been already arrested, tortured, forced to repent or summarily executed, and their political rallies and media were banned.
The peak of atrocity was however a death-fatwa in summer of 1988 issued by Grand Ayatollah Rouhollah Khomeini, the founder of the IRI (Islamic Republic of Iran).
The fatwa was initially targeted against the MKO (People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran), a Stalinist-Islamic group who turned the back on their ex-brothers in power, but soon was accompanied by another fatwa ordering the massacre of any and all political prisoner who refused to repent and cooperate with the regime.
Until September of 1988, the executions continued in Evin prison in Tehran and other prisons of Iranian cities with all atrocity.
Exact numbers of executions in 1988 and the conditions of executions have never been officially reported by the IRI or their factions.
Different numbers are speculated by both IRI’s deserters and rescuers, from some 4,485 names published in the opposition media up to 30,000 executions, as estimated by most other sources.
Most of the victims were political prisoners, including a number of prisoners of conscience, who had already served a number of years in prison.
Most victims belonged to the MKO, but none of them could have played any role in the armed incursion of the Organisation in 1988, which was supposed to be the trigger of the massacre.
The prisoners were, in fact, in no position to take part in spying or terrorist activities because many of them had been tried and sentenced to prison terms during the early 1980s, many for non-violent offences such as distributing newspapers and leaflets, taking part in demonstrations or collecting funds for prisoners' families.
Many of them had been students in their teens or early twenties at the time of their arrest.
According to Mr. Abrahamian, an Iranian researcher of this genocide, the massacre was planned after the end of Iran-Iraq war and shortly before the MKO’s failed military attack on Iran called “Forough Javidan” in 1988.
(Alan note: while the MKO has generally been accurately described as a cult with political under-currents with Mariam Rajavi the object to be revered, it could well be the only group capable of "sandblasting" the Mullahs out of Iran.
The question remains as to whether, given a toe-hold, the MKO might not simply be a different, yet similar, repressionist dictatorship - of a Marxist flavor instead of theological).
So, the massacre was not due to this "attack" but in accordance to “eye-for-an-eye” law of retribution, otherwise called ”Qessas”, and inspired by the killing-concept of Islamism, which legitimates such a massacre.
According to the French influential leftist newspaper “Le Monde”, “…In March 1988 Khomeini summoned the Revolutionary Prosecutor, Hojjatoleslam Khoeiniha, to instruct him that henceforth all Mojahedin, those in prisons or elsewhere, must be killed for waging war on God”.
Trial consisted of various means of pressuring the prisoners to repent, to change their ways and confess.
The executions followed summary trials and soon included all other political prisoners--leftist and democratic opposition.
“Cases of young prisoners who were executed included some who were jailed about eight years earlier, when they were 12 to 14 years old, for taking part in public demonstrations”, added Le Monde.
A committee composed of Hojjatoleslam Nayeri, Mr. Eshraghi, both representatives of the Iranian judiciary, and a representative of the Information Ministry were formed by a Khomeini’s decree to coordinate the executions.
What took place in 1988 and what is carried out in the Iranian prisons are in flagrant violation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, to which "Iran" is a signatory. The massacre is the most criminal example committed by the IRI.
However not only it is ignored by the West because of their complex relations with the IRI, but also the UN and the international criminal court, the Hague Court, have been silent on the massacre for the last two decades.
While the genocide of the Nazi criminals against the Jews and that of the Ottoman Sunni Empire in Turkey against the Armenians are internationally recognised, a full investigation into the massacre of 1988 is required to shed light on the details of crimes and the culprits.
It is notable that the US occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq has a dubious relation with the Islamist attack of 11 September, but along with other key powers are always keen to remain in tune with the desires of the IRI by ignoring the massacre of 1988.
Apart from some humanitrian organisations, the major key leaders of the West yet again do not seem to show any interest in recognising this massacre of the IRI on their own Iranian citizenry.
The 1988 Massacre was the political continuation in the early years of the IRI when the newly established regime began nationwide crackdown on the opposition groups.
Soon after the 1979 revolution, the paramilitary thugs of Hezbollah regularly attacked, sabotaged and intimidated opposition groups and ravaged their sieges(?) and media.
Many newspapers were shut down, women were humiliated, minorities and ethnic groups were discriminated, and Friday prayer sermons turned into a place to spew out venomous invective and hatred against any voice calling for gender equality, social justice, democracy and secularism.
The historical justification of the massacre has roots in the epoch of the Prophet Muhammad when he came up with the idea that it is perfectly legitimate to kill “unbelievers” --the teaching of the Koran confirms it:
"Those who resist Allah and his messenger will be humbled to dust”: the Koran 58-5. Or: "I will instil terror into the hearts of the unbelievers”. the Koran 8-12.
These verses justify not only Muslims’ jihad against non-believers, but also have been used or abused for inner conflicts within Muslims, among their different sects and power-thirsty groups who have been mutually killing each others since the advent of Islam.
IRI’s version of Islam justified both categories of “enemy of Islam” namely, the “Molhed” or unbelievers and the “hypocrite” Muslims of the Mojahedins“.
Amnesty International has declared September 1st the International Day in Remembrance of the Massacre of political prisoners. The 1988 massacre of political prisoners in Iran is a crime against humanity but it is important to recognise that ayatollah Khomeini was not the only culprit of the crimes; in fact many other smaller, crimes did not end after his death in 1988.
A number of the culprits of the massacre are now the close colleagues of the Iranian President, Mr. Mahmoud Ahmad-Nejad and continue violating the most basic rights of human dignity in Iran.
(Alan note: for instance arresting a mind boggling 150,000 women for a variety of reasons, mostly poor Islamic dress code - all in a matter of THREE days!)
Some generals of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), which is the main composite of his government, and Minister of Interior Hojjatoleslam Mostafa Pourmohammadi (he was one of three members of a committee that ordered the summary execution of inmates in Tehran's Evin prison) and Minister of Information Hojjatoleslam Qolamhossein Mohseni Ezheh’i were the brutal butchers of the massacre.
According to a well-documented paper of Human Rights Watch in 15, December 2005, the involvement of “Mr. Pourmohammadi and Mr. Ezheh’i” has been confirmed.
The IRI, its factions, and all "insiders or outsiders” sympathisers of late ayatollah Khomeini, consider any information related to this genocide as taboo and secret and would not release any report of the details concerning the number and circumstances of executions.
In the nineteenth year commemoration of the massacre, many thousands of Iranian families who lost their loved relatives in the summer of 1988 want the international judicial authorities to establish a tribunal to bring these genocide criminals of the IRI to justice, to be punished according to the same international laws which condemned the Nazi criminals in 1946 in the Nürenberg Court.
Mr. Rashidian is a political activist and commentator living in Germany. His articles appear in many Iranian intrernet sites, including IPS
More commentary:
Nineteen years ago, during the months of August to September, a hideous crime was taking place in Iran.
As Ayatollah Khomeini drank the “posion chalice” and signed the peace treaty with Saddam Hossein, he feared the release of the Iranian political prisoners would result in organising the mass discontent of how the war was handled, into a serious political challenge to the continued regime of the Islamic Republic.
Thus personally, in his own handwriting, Khomeini gave the go ahead for the massacre. He wanted absolute fear to reign over the population in the aftermath of the war.
Iran’s political prisoners were called in to face kangaroo courts of three clerics.
The prisoners were asked two questions each, “Do you believe in Allah?”, “Are you prepared to renounce your organisation?”.
The prisoners had no idea about the consequences of their replies. In fact a ‘No’ to either of the above questions meant immediate execution. Many of the prisoners had already finished their prison sentences but were still not released, some were even brought back after they had been released.
The victims included teenagers, whole families, men and women.
During the months of August and September, all prison visits were cancelled, families were told not to bring any medicine or food for their loved ones. All this time the killing inside Iran’s prisons continued.
Those executed were buried in unmarked mass graves on the outskirts of the towns.
In Tehran, one mass burial was accidentally discovered by an Armenian priest who had become curious as to why stray dogs kept digging there for bones.
Even the successor to the position of the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Montazeri, could not stay silent about the crime and protested to Ayatollah Khomeini.
His protests resulted in his removal from the position of successor to Khomeini and his house arrest for the last 19 years. Yet while an Ayatollah protested at this massacre, the rest of the world remained silent and offered no sympathy.
Watch the documentary, The Tree That Remembers, to learn more about the 1988 massacre of Iranian political prisoners.
SHORT VERSION VIDEO click here
Further Commentary:
The MKO/MEK (Mojaheddin al-Khalq or People’s Fighters) are Communist-Islamist terrorists.
(Alan note: Still on the USA terror list but recently removed from that appellation in France, which also refunded money confiscated from them).
Before the 1979 Revolution in Iran they targetted and killed Americans in Iran and were enemies of the Shah.
During the Revolution they were a vital part of the Revolution which originally wasn’t an “Islamic Revolution”.
It was a Revolution of pseudo-Islamists, Marxists and other leftists Students.
As in all Revolution the strongest faction later eliminates the weaker partners. The Islamists around Khomeini targetted their Revolutionary partners on the left.
(Alan note: the Mullahs usurped what was a Soviet inspired and controlled revolt, using the Tudeh Communist party and Marxist MEK, orchestrating and operating out of the Soviet Tehran embassy, only when the mosques they had in place all over the country became the only national netowork through which the country could function at a neighborhood and nationwide level).
Now on the hit-list of Khomeini the MKO turned to Saddam in Iraq and became mercenaries, thugs and partners in crime of Saddam Hussein during his war against Iran, the Kurds and Iraqi Shias.
The MKO were terrorists, communists and pawns of Saddam Hussein. Their opposition to the Iranian regime doesn’t make them good guys.
"THE ROOT OF ALL EVIL"
and the reason for
MILLIONS of deaths around the globe.
Communist-Islamist Jimmy Carter
The Iranian theocrats also did what many other modern revolutionaries did in their bid for power - they hijacked Persian nationalism (”the Shah was a tool of western imperialists”).
They subverted it for their initial victory, submerged it beneath their theocracy and now openly try to destroy support for any reference to Persian history that is not Islamic.
(Alan note: including drowning the tomb of King Cyrus the Great, founder of the first "Declaration of Human Rights" as etched on a mud scroll and proof positive).
That hijacking of the native nationalism, for their own subversive political ends, is common to the rise of all despotic regimes, most of which have been from the left, not theocracies like Iran.
The one thing that the Shah was clear about, and which is why he was particularly unforgiving with Iran’s Shia clerics - he knew they were not saints. He knew of their corrupt mind sets and had placed them on a State welfare payment rogram.
When the USA insisted he stop this "charity" Prime Minister Amouzegar ordered it ended and set the corner stone for the theocratic isery that ensued.
Guess who was American President. Yes, Jimmy Carter.
Evil Carter a true TERRORIST and i as an IRANIAN am his SINCERE ENEMY .
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