By Iraj Gorgin, RFE/RL
Relatives and survivors call it the "Flower
Garden," but others know it as the "place of the damned." It's the Khavaran
cemetery in the southeastern part of Tehran, housing the remains of religious
minorities, as well as Marxists, leftists, and other "anti-revolutionaries" and
"non-believers."
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Mourners at the Khavaran cemetery |
It's also the burial site of hundreds -- or perhaps thousands -- of political
prisoners who were executed at two main prisons in Tehran in the dog days of
summer in 1988. The prisoners were hanged after a brief informal questioning by
three men who became known as the "Death Commission."
Since the mass executions, relatives and friends have visited their mass graves
every year on the last Friday in August or the first Friday in September. Under
the watchful eyes of the plain-clothes security officers, the visitors sing,
pray, cry, give speeches or stand together in silence. After a few hours,
security officials ask them to leave the cemetery. Although the gathering is not
officially sanctioned, and security officials sometimes harrass the
participants, the commemoration has always been peaceful and without incident.
Today, however, the officials did not allow the gathering to take place, and in
the preceding days, police raided a house where the families of some victims
were gathered.
Of even greater significance to the victims' families is the fact that they have
never received an answer to why the revolutionary regime decided to send so many
young people to the gallows -- many of them political prisoners who had already
spent years in jail and were expected to be released soon.
The number of political prisoners buried at the cemetery also remains a mystery.
Claims range from 2,800 to 7,000, although one estimate stretches to 30,000.
None of those figures has ever been proven, and the Iranian regime has never
accepted the charges. Human rights organizations and some political activists
are calling for the formation of committees to uncover the facts.
Some of those who were in prison at the time and survived the period have
written about that dark period. One of them, Reza Ghaffari, a former professor
at Tehran University, claims that what happened in the summer of 1988 in prisons
had been planned for months.
"Six months before the acceptance of the United Nations' resolution on a
cease-fire, the regime was planning the execution of political prisoners,"
Ghaffari said. Officials "were visiting prisons and said that by the order of
Ayatollah Khomeini, an amnesty committee has been established and members were
asking the prisoners questions. I remember they came to our prison in Gohardasht
where I was a prisoner. They asked some questions and told us that the Imam's
Amnesty Committee had decided that there should not be any political prisoners
left in the prisons. At that time we had a lot of optimism and we thought that
by the end of war they would release the political prisoners."
A Temporary Lull
The summer of 1988 was a low period for Tehran's revolutionary regime. After
eight years of war with Iraq and hundreds of thousands of casualties, supreme
leader Ayatollah Khomeini accepted the UN Security Council's peace proposal,
Resolution 598, but compared "accepting peace with the aggressor" to "drinking a
chalice of poison." The decision came after a series of defeats to Saddam
Hussein's army, which had the support of the West and most Arab countries.
With rumors circulating that Khomeini was ill and a power struggle emerging
between him and his hand-picked successor, Ayatollah Montazeri, many people,
including political prisoners, were anticipating change. The atmosphere in the
prisons changed, political prisoners became more active, and a few small-scale
protests broke out.
Just a few days after the announcement of the cease-fire, an Iranian opposition
militia based in Iraq -- the military wing of the People's Mujahedin
Organization of Iran (PMOI) -- launched an incursion into Iran with the aim of
toppling the Islamic regime. With no support from the Iranian people, the
incursion was swiftly defeated by battle-tested Iranian soldiers and
revolutionary guards. Hundreds of militia fighters of the so-called National
Liberation Army of Iran, trained by the Iraqi army, were killed as they entered
Iran.
Thousands of PMOI members and sympathizers who were imprisoned across the
country wound up paying the ultimate price for the incursion. But many leftists
and other prisoners who had nothing to do with the attack were also caught up in
the purge.
Mehdi Aslani, a political prisoner at the time, says the PMOI attack on Iran
gave a pretext to those in the regime who wanted to get rid of all active
opposition elements.
"The pretext for the execution of religious and non-religious political
prisoners in the summer of 1988 was quite different," Aslani said. "Those with
religious affiliations who were mostly from the Mujahedin-e-Khalqh (PMOI)
organization went to the gallows as Mohareb [combatants with God], whereas the
leftists were executed as apostates. I was in the Gohardasht prison when the
Death Commission came there and [commission member] Mr. Nayeri's question was:
are you a Muslim or a Marxist? The destiny of those who answered they are
Marxist was predetermined."
Shrouded In Secrecy
Many memoirs and articles have been published on what the Iranian political
opposition now calls the massacre of '88. But some say that what happened in the
prisons is still a well-kept secret, and few know about the extent of the
executions. Hadi Ghaemi of Human Rights Watch claims that what happened in
Iranian prisons should be categorized as crime against humanity.
"In the contemporary history of Iran, the executions of '88 are considered among
the most important cases of human rights abuses," Ghaemi said. "Based on
international human rights laws, the vast scale of those executions and the way
that they were carried out unlawfully place those systematic killings in the
category of crimes against humanity. The Iranian government never openly
confessed to these executions, so the true scope, the number of executed
prisoners, and the precise place of their burial are unknown."
Banu Saberi, who spent months in jail, and whose husband and several other
relatives were executed in 1988, says that after 20 years, she is still seeking
accountability. "I have to know what happened. We want the truth," Saberi said.
"Those who were condemned [to prison terms] should not have been executed based
on what the clergy says... Why did they kill them? What did they want from them?
What did they ask? What did they mention in their wills? What conditions did
they endure? These are the things that I think should be cleared one day, and
until then, the wounds in our hearts will remain always fresh."
Abdolkarim Lahiji, a prominent lawyer and a deputy director of the Federation of
Human Rights Societies, has called for the executions to be acknowledged to
avoid similar crimes in the future. "Until the time when what is happening in a
society and the reasons for disasters and tragic events are examined, and those
who commit wrongdoing are recognized, such crimes could happen again," Lahiji
said.
Copyright (c) 2008 RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org
... Payvand News - 08/30/08 ...
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