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by Tony Duheaume
The
Iranian regime lives in constant fear of an uprising to overthrow it. Such is
its paranoia where opposition groups are concerned it has spent the whole
period of its existence, eliminating dissenters.
The approach to any form of opposition shows how insecure this regime has become. But as far as extreme brutality is concerned, it could not be more prevalent than that of the regime’s treatment of dissidents at Evin Prison, where guards use torture to humiliate their captives before executing them.
The approach to any form of opposition shows how insecure this regime has become. But as far as extreme brutality is concerned, it could not be more prevalent than that of the regime’s treatment of dissidents at Evin Prison, where guards use torture to humiliate their captives before executing them.
Through the despicable acts taking place here, the lack of
humanity shown by the prison authorities toward all those who speak out against
the regime, mirrors the insecurities of the entire state.
Located at the foot of the Alborz mountains in northern Tehran,
Evin Prison was originally constructed in 1972, under the reign of Mohammad
Reza Pahlavi. It was then operated by his infamous security and intelligence
service (SAVAK).
Opponents of the Shah
Thousands of political prisoners were incarcerated there during
that period, including many supporters of the Peoples Mojahedin Organisation ofIran (PMOI/MEK), fierce opponents of the Shah, and it was from this point on,
its reputation of hell on earth had begun.
With Evin Prison being one of the most notorious prisons in the
world, just the mention of its name conjures up emotions of fear and foreboding
in the hearts of ordinary Iranian citizens, as it has become synonymous with
political repression, mass hangings and torture.
This infamous place is where those entering find themselves at
the mercy of brutal prison guards, who at this point in time, operate under the
control of the Islamic Republic of Iran’s Secret Service (VAVAK).
No legal representation
Teachers, writers, journalists, students, lawyers and academics,
in fact anyone who speaks out against the regime, can find themselves thrown
into Evin Prison. After trials without legal representation, the accused are
found guilty of vague crimes on erroneous evidence, and are either condemned to
serve long prison sentences.
Although the Iranian regime has continuously denied it, Evin
Prison is known to be a virtual torture factory, where countless numbers of
inmates have met their fate. Due to the number of intellectuals imprisoned
within its walls, the prison has been nicknamed Evin University.
With Evin being a prison that is extremely overcrowded, hygiene
is poor and in Iran’s sweltering hot summers, the heat can reach up to 45
degrees Celsius. There is no form of air conditioning, and the air within cells
becomes rank with sweat and human waste. Water quality is bad and food comes in
meagre portions and is barely edible. Medical facilities are virtually
non-existent.
Breaking resolve
This whole process is designed to break the resolve of political
prisoners, where the pressure for a confession is kept up until the captive
breaks his silence. Then designed to add to this anguish, all contact with the
outside world is cut off, family visits and telephone calls are forbidden, and
even the guards are ordered to be silent.
Countless numbers have been driven insane by this treatment,
many smashing their heads against the wall of their cell in anguish, while
others have attempted suicide, but such is the security at Evin, no prisoner
has been known to have escaped.
Inside Evin’s fetid dungeons, there are vents on the wall
opposite the window, where a sturdy metal door stands, and at the bottom of the
door is fitted a flap, for the prison guard to slide food through to the
prisoner, while at the top of the door there is a flap used for communication.
One group of prisoners that has suffered the most at Evin Prison
is the PMOI/MEK, thousands of its members have been held there over the years
since the revolution.
The 1988 massacre
With countless numbers having been incarcerated at the time of
the now infamous 1988 massacre, thousands of their number can be added to the
30,000 dissidents that were murdered across Iran. This was done under the
orders of the then Supreme Leader Ruhollah Khomeini to execute all those who
opposed his regime.
After the execution, corpses would be transported in the dead of
night to one of the numerous mass graves, which came in the form of deeply dug
channels, secretly excavated in various isolated locations across the country,
areas dubbed by their executioners as Lanat-Abad (The Place of the Damned).
But to this very day, nothing has changed at Evin. Untold abuses
still take place, while the words of human rights activists fall on deaf ears.
Rather than denouncing the regime with the harsh condemnation it rightly
deserves, the world has virtually ignored the abuses carried out in its prisons
and on its streets, offering the leadership more in the way of lucrative
transactions like the Iran Deal, rather than that of hard-hitting sanctions
that cut deep.
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