Opposition over death committees besieges Ebrahim Raisi in four European capitals
The Iranian opposition abroad
continues its campaign in major European capitals, including London, Paris,
Amsterdam and Berlin, to demand the trial of new Iranian President Ebrahim
Raisi for committing a crime against humanity by participating in the so-called
“death committees” that was behind the massacre of political prisoners in Iran
in 1988.
In the summer of 1988, 30,000 political
prisoners were murdered, 90 percent of whom were members and supporters of the
People's Mojahedin Organization (MEK), on the orders of then-Supreme Leader
Ruhollah Khomeini. Raisi was a member of the four-member death committee that
sentenced political prisoners to death in Tehran, executing thousands.
Reviving the
case
These moves come in conjunction with
the Swedish trial of Hamid Nouri, deputy assistant prosecutor of Gohardasht
Prison in Iran, which began on Tuesday, August 10, for his involvement in the
1988 massacre of political prisoners, as hundreds of Iranians participated in a
march in Stockholm to urge the international community, especially the UN
Security Council, to hold the leaders of the Iranian regime accountable for
their crimes against the people, especially the 1988 massacre.
In 1988, Khomeini issued a fatwa
ordering the execution of all members of the People's Mojahedin Organization
who were steadfast in their position and refused to repent.
Subsequently, death committees were
formed across Iran to liquidate political prisoners who were supporters of the
MEK, and within a few months, 30,000 prisoners were executed, more than 90
percent of whom were MEK members and sympathizers.
Raisi was one of the four members of
the death committee in Tehran, who directly participated in the execution of
thousands of prisoners in Evin and Gohardasht prisons.
Major campaigns are to be organized
about the massacre, which prominent international jurists have described as a
clear case of a crime against humanity following World War II.
Attempting to
hide evidence
The opposition MEK revealed in a
statement that in recent years, with the emergence of a litigation movement in
Iran, the regime resorted to a systematic plan to even destroy the secret mass
graves to hide any evidence of this crime.
On September 3, 2020, seven United
Nations special rapporteurs wrote to Iranian officials that the extrajudicial
executions of 1988 and the enforced disappearance of thousands of political
prisoners “may constitute a crime against humanity.”
The statement quoted the
secretary-general of Amnesty International as saying that Raisi’s ascension to
the presidency rather than an investigation of him for crimes against humanity
such as murder, enforced disappearance and torture is a grim reminder that
impunity prevails in Iran.
The statement also quoted Javaid
Rehman, the UN special rapporteur on the human rights situation in Iran, as
saying, “Over the years, this office has collected testimonies and evidence and
is ready to share it if the UN Human Rights Council or any other body conducts
an impartial investigation into the 1988 massacre.”