by Hassan Mahmoudi
Since its foundation, by Ayatollah Rouhollah Khomeini, the regime of Iran has succeeded in maintaining its absolute power through the massive use of torture and executions of its citizens. They are now trying to cover up their crimes.
The ugly reality is that thousands of Iranians were sent to the gallows and torture chambers for absurd and preposterous charges of “enmity against God” or “spying for external powers.” In the 1980s, thousands of educated youth of Iran, who had been sympathetic to the opposition groups, were executed by the mullahs. In summer of 1988 alone, based on the decree of Khomeini, 30,000 political prisoners, most of whom were members or supporters of the Mujahedin (PMOI or MeK), were executed.
Four decades of savage suppression by the mullahs has frustrated Iran's people who now look for any opportunity to show their abhorrence for the government. Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, President Hassan Rouhani and other Iranian officials are, more than ever, frightened of another mass uprising. According to the report from the National Council of Resistance in Iran (NCRI), Amnesty International has launched a campaign on Monday calling on the authorities of the Iranian regime to “urgently stop the destruction of a mass grave in the southern city of Ahvaz.”
At least “a dozen political prisoners killed during a wave of mass extrajudicial executions in August and September 1988 are buried” in the mass grave.
Film footage obtained by Amnesty International “shows the site is gradually being buried beneath piles of construction waste” after a construction near the area began earlier this year.
“Bulldozing the mass grave at
Ahvaz will destroy crucial forensic evidence that could be used to bring those
responsible for the 1988 mass extrajudicial executions to justice. It would
also deprive families of victims of their rights to truth, justice and
reparation, including the right to bury their loved ones in dignity. By joining
Amnesty International’s campaign, people can help to press Iran’s authorities
to stop the imminent destruction of the site,” said Philip Luther, Amnesty
International’s Research and Advocacy Director for the Middle East and North
Africa.
He added: “Instead
of desecrating the mass grave with piles of rubbish and waste and further
tormenting families, who face repression for their efforts to protect the
memory of their loved ones, the authorities should be upholding their duty to
preserve all Iran’s mass grave sites so that investigations can be carried out
into the 1988 extrajudicial executions and other mass killings.”
Amnesty
International is calling on people to join the campaign by promoting the
hashtag #MassGraves88 on social media.The Iranian regime executed more than 30,000 political prisoners, the overwhelming majority of whom were activists of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK), upon a direct fatwa by Khomeini in July 1988.
The victims were buried in secret mass graves. The 1988 massacre was described as the worst crime in the history of the Islamic Republic by the late Hossein-Ali Montazeri, the heir apparent of Khomeini, the founder of the regime, at the time.
Many perpetuators of this crime currently hold high positions within the regime.
Hassan Rouhani, the president of the Iranian regime and many of his cabinet’s principal figures held positions of influence in the summer of 1988 and were well aware of the massacre. Some were prominent participants in it, and indeedRouhani’s first-term Justice Minister, Mostafa Pour-Mohammadi, was one of four members of the Tehran death commission.
Last month Pour-Mohammadi was replaced by Alireza Avaie. He filled a similar role on the death commission in Khuzestan Province, the same province in which a mass grave is being destroyed.
A few days after the replacement, upon an order by Ali Khamenei, Pour-Mohammadi was appointed as an advisor to head of the Iranian regime’s judiciary Sadegh Larijani.
Source: http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2017/09/iran_is_bulldozing_the_mass_grave_from_the_mullahs_1988_massacre.html
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