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List of Murderers of the Massacre of 1988 in Iran

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  • List of Murderers of the Massacre of 1988 in Iran

    MidEastYouth.com
    Sept 1 2007

    List of Murderers of the Massacre of 1988 in Iran


    Jahanshah Rashidian (Iran/Germany)
    September 1st, 2007


    A Persian list of murderers and presumed culprits of the massacre of
    Iranian political prisoners in 1988 is today published in an Iranian
    internet site, http://www.roshangari.net. I recommend all Persian
    speaking people to read the list.

    As we read through the list, we can recognise many names who later
    promoted into key positions under President Rafsanjani and President
    Khatami. A number of them are now ministers of President Ahmadinejad.
    Some of these psychopaths tortured and raped their prisoners,
    according to the site.

    >From August to September 1988, a hideous crime was taking place in
    Iran. As Ayatollah Khomeini drank the `poison chalice' and signed the
    peace treaty with Saddam Hossein, he psychopathologically decided to
    take revenge from the Iranian political prisoners who were spending
    their prison terms. Khomeini ordered the complete massacre of them.
    He wanted absolute panic to reign over Iranians to avoid any
    political protest.

    Exact numbers of executions of 88 and the conditions of executions
    have never been officially reported by the IRI or their factions.
    Different numbers are speculated by both IRI's deserters and
    rescuers, from some 4485 names published in the opposition media up
    to 30000 executions, as estimated.

    Iran's political prisoners were simply asked two questions each, `Do
    you believe in Allah?', `Are you prepared to renounce your
    organisation?' The prisoners had no idea about the consequences of
    their replies. In fact a `No' to any of the above questions meant
    immediate execution. Many of the prisoners had already finished their
    prison sentences but were still not released; some were even brought
    back after they had been released.

    The victims included teenagers, whole families, men and women. During
    the months of August and September, all prison visits were cancelled;
    families were told not to bring any medicine or food for their loved
    ones. During this time the killing inside Iran's prisons continued.

    The slaughter was efficient and relentless. All day long, prisoners
    were loaded on forklift trucks and hanged from cranes and beams in
    groups of six at half-hourly intervals. Others were killed by firing
    squad. Those not executed were subjected to horrific torture. The
    killing was an act of violence and unprecedented in Iranian history,
    unprecedented in form, content and intensity,' wrote the historian
    Ervand Abrahamian in his book on Iranian prisons Tortured
    Confessions.

    Those executed were buried in unmarked mass graves on the outskirts
    of the towns. In Tehran, one mass burial was accidentally discovered
    by an Armenian priest who had become curious as to why stray dogs
    kept digging there for bones.

    It is a moral duty to mention that such massacres can always repeat
    as soon as political Islam exists. The historical justification of
    such massacres has roots in the epoch of the Prophet Muhammad when he
    came up with the idea that it is perfectly legitimate to kill
    `unbelievers' -the teaching of the Koran confirms it:

    `Those who resist Allah and his messenger will be humbled to dust':
    the Koran 58-5. Or: `I will instil terror into the hearts of the
    unbelievers', the Koran 8-12.

    These verses like a series of radical interpretations of the Koran
    justify not only Muslims' jihad against non-believers, but also have
    been used or abused for inner conflicts within Muslims, among their
    different sects and power-thirsty groups who have been mutually
    killing each others since the advent of Islam for being `the enemy of
    Islam'.

    IRI's version of Islam justified both categories of `enemy of Islam'
    namely the `Molhed' or unbelievers and the `hypocrite' Muslims of the
    Mojahedins`, both victims of the massacre.

    In the nineteenth year of the massacre, we all freedom-loving
    Iranians along with the families who lost their loved children in
    summer 88 want the international judicial authorities to summon the
    murderers of this genocide to an international tribunal to be tried.
    This is a natural right that was given to the victims of Nazi
    genocides to bring the culprits to the Nürenberg Court for their
    crimes against humanity.

    I hope the published list of Roshangari of the culprits can shed a
    new light on this forgotten massacre.

    http://www.mideastyouth.com/2007/09/01/ list-of-murderess-of-the-massacre-of-1988-in-iran/
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