Source: Amnesty
InternationalTwenty years after
the then Iranian authorities began a wave of largely secret, summary and mass
executions in September 1988, Amnesty International renews its call for those
responsible for the 'prison massacre' to be held accountable. There should be no
impunity for such gross human rights violations, regardless of when they were
committed.
The organisation is also calling on the present
Iranian government not to prevent relatives of the dead from visiting Khavaran
Cemetary in south Tehran, on or about 29 August to mark the anniversary and
demand justice for their loved ones. Hundreds of those summarily executed are
buried in the cemetery, many of them in unmarked mass graves.
Amnesty International fears that the Iranian
authorities may seek to impede or disperse any protests and reminds the Iranian
government of its obligations under international law to allow for those who
gather peacefully to express their views without fear of arrest.
International human rights law requires that the
Iranian authorities carry out thorough and impartial investigations into
violations of the right to life such as those which were committed during the
'prison massacre', which began in 1988 and continued into the following year,
and to identify and bring to justice those responsible. The failure to do so to
date and the time that has elapsed since the killings do not in any way reduce
this responsibility.
Those responsible for the killings - one of the
worst abuses to be committed in Iran - should be prosecuted and tried before a
regularly and legally constituted court and with all necessary procedural
guarantees, in accordance with international fair trial standards. If found
guilty, they should be punished with appropriate penalties which take into
account the grave nature of the crimes but which do not include the death
penalty or corporal punishments.
Background
Starting in August 1988 and continuing until shortly before the tenth
anniversary of the Islamic revolution in February 1989, the Iranian authorities
carried out massive wave of executions of political prisoners - the largest
since those carried out in the first and second year after the Iranian
revolution in 1979. In all between 4,500 and 5,000 prisoners are believed to
have been killed, including women.
Find out more information on the human rights situation in Iran
... Payvand News - 08/21/08 ... --