Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Iran's Blood-Drenched Mullahs

By Nir Boms and Shayan Arya for The Washington Times

As a sign of the troubled relations between Tehran and the West, Rome Mayor Gianni Alemanno just renamed the street next to the Iranian embassy "July 9th St." - after the date symbolizing the 1999 student pro-democracy demonstrations in Tehran. Iran responded angrily, but at the same time released a statement by its foreign minister about possible progress in negotiations over its nuclear program. While the diplomatic rhetoric may appear ambivalent, Tehran's domestic actions appear much more clear and defiant. Last Tuesday, Iran hanged another teenager, 19-year-old Hamid Reza, who was convicted of murder. The country's parliament is also considering a bill that could result in the death penalty being used for those deemed to be promoting corruption, prostitution and apostasy on the Internet.

Ever since its establishment in 1979, the Islamic Republic of Iran has had an abhorrent human-rights record, including summary executions of hundreds of the late Shah's supporters, executions of thousands of political prisoners and daily reports of executions, public hangings, floggings and torture. Mass graves can easily be found in any large Iranian city. Iran also tops the list for executing juveniles in direct violation of the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child - currently there are more than 70 children on death row. Juvenile offenders Mohammad Feda'i, Behnoud Shojaee and Saeed Jazee face imminent execution, according to Stop Child Execution and Amnesty International.

Mahmoud Asgari (16, left) and Ayaz Marhoni (18) were publicly hanged in Mashhad, Iran.

Over the past few years, since the Holocaust-denying hard-line president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad came to power, the human-rights conditions in Iran have further deteriorated. There are virtually no segments of the Iranian population immune from these violations. Religious minorities such as the 300,000-member strong Bahai community, a peaceful nonpolitical offshoot of Shi'ite Islam, are under siege. Last May, seven members of its leadership group in Tehran were arrested. Fifty more were rounded up across the country in a deliberate campaign of terror and intimidation.

These young women of the Baha'i faith were convicted of the crime of teaching in a Bahai religious school and hanged in Shiraz, Iran on June 18, 1983. The women, ages 17 to 57, were led to the gallows one after the other. As there is "no compulsion in religion" under Islam, it is interesting that authorities were apparently hoping that as each woman saw the others slowly strangle to death, they would renounce their own faith. A rather persuasive argument of the superiority of Islam.

Since 1979 under the Islamic Republic, more than 200 Bahais have been executed. This campaign of terror and intimidation is not limited to the so-called "non-recognized" religious minorities such as Bahais. Ayatollah Borujerdi - a Shi'ite cleric who preaches a traditional nonpolitical version of Shi'ism - has also joined that list. Last year, Ayatollah Borujerdi, dared to question the Islamic regime's interpretation of political Shi'ite Islam. He was arrested during a violent clash involving his followers and was later severely tortured along with his entire family and many of his followers. There are reports that his condition is worsening.

The Sufis (the moderate mystics in the world of Islam) received their share of Islamist mistreatment in an unprecedented assault on the Sufi center in the city of Qom in 2005. Radio Free Europe reported that according to the deputy governor of Qom, Ahmad Hajizadeh, 1,200 worshippers (also known as dervishes) were arrested as police sought to close a Sufi house of worship. Sufi groups and human-rights activists put the number of the arrests at 2,000 and the number of injured at 350 people. Following the clashes, authorities demolished the house of worship as well as the homes of two leaders of the group.

Not only do the authorities torture and slaughter those who do not strictly adhere to their agenda, they take a perverse and ghoulish pleasure in their efforts. They brag about the suffering they inflict, they boast about stepping on the lifeless heads of their victims. Source: AmericanDaughter.com

Political dissent is likewise unwelcome. Amir Yaghoub-Ali, a 22-year-old student activist was arrested last year and has been sentenced to one year in prison. (He had been charged with having collected signatures on a petition seeking greater female rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran.) At least three other Iranian women's-rights activists - Nahid Jafari, Nasrin Afzali and Marzieh Mortaz-langarudi - received flogging and jail sentences for their participation in the same campaign. Political activists such as Mr. Arzhang Davoodi and Dr. Seyed Mostafa Alavi are under increasing pressure in jail and are being ill-treated by the authorities.

Iran's Executions [WARNING: Graphic Violence]

Last May [81-year-old] human-rights activist Hassan Abdul Hussein Tafah, an Iraqi refugee who later became an Iranian citizen, was sentenced to 15 years in jail and fined the equivalent of 130,000 euros. He was originally sentenced to death. His crime? He attended an international conference where human-rights issues were discussed. (At least Mr. Tafah appears to be somewhat prepared. Before seeking refuge in Iran he had spent 15 years in Iraqi jails during the rule of Saddam Hussein.)

What will a regime capable of committing such a widespread human-rights violations of its own citizens without a nuclear arsenal do to its citizens and others if and when it acquires nuclear capabilities? The international community will be well advised to ponder that question.

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About the authors: Nir Boms is the vice president of the Center for Freedom in the Middle East. Shayan Arya is an Iranian activist and associate researcher at the Institute for Monitoring Peace and Cultural Tolerance in School Education.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

The photo with Khatami is laughable photoshop job. And Italy armed Iraq with chemical weapons and helicopters to spray the stuff againt Iranians and Kurds so who cares what the mayor of Rome says about human rights anywhere.

covertress said...

Two Students Arrested in Iran

The United States is concerned by reports that Iranian authorities have stepped up their repression of student activists in the wake of the ninth anniversary of the July 9, 1999 student uprising. Two prominent student activists, Mohammad Hashemi and Bahareh Hedayet, were arrested on July 13, the latest in a series of arrests of members of the Office for Consolidating Unity.

Source: U.S. Dept. of State

http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2008/07/107042.htm

Winston said...

Well the picture of Khatami is not a photoshop. Indeed it is true. BUT it was taken in a so-called torture museum in downtown Tehran to mock the Shah's regime for its alleged brutalities against Islamists in jails. But that photo is real and not a photoshopped one.

As for Italy selling Chems to the Iraqis, I don't think it has any basis. The chemicals came from mostly Germany, Holland and UK. For these crimes a prominent businessman was prosecuted in Holland last yr. And just because Italy sold any thing to Iraq in 1980s, doesn't prevent them from criticizing the atrocities done in the name of Islam in Iran these days. Every good decent man should criticize the Iranian regime. Nuff said