Destroying evidence

Khavaran mass graves under threat

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Destroying evidence
by Veronique Mistiaen
17-Feb-2009
 

Last month, the Iranian authorities began bulldozing the site of mass graves in the district of Khavaran in southeast Tehran, planning to turn it into a public park. They have already covered a large area with soil - having possibly removed bones - and planted rows of trees. In these unmarked graves lie thousands of political prisoners killed by the Islamic regime in the 1980s - most of them during a secret mass massacre in the summer of 1988.

Amnesty International is calling on the Iranian authorities to "immediately stop the destruction of hundreds of individual and mass, unmarked graves in Khavaran, south Tehran, to ensure that the site is preserved and to initiate a forensic investigation into the site as part of a long-overdue thorough, independent and impartial investigation into mass executions which began in 1988."

Iranian human rights advocates, including Nobel Prize winner Shirin Ebadi, have also condemned the destruction of the graves. The Centre for the Defence of Human Rights, headed by Ebadi, issued a statement recently condemning "this ugly and appalling act and (noting) that everyone, including the authorities is required to maintain the dignity of the dead," according to Agence France-Presse.

The area being destroyed in Khavaran is a desolated plot next to the cemetery of religious minorities. Families of the victims call this place "the rose garden of Khavaran" - for a rose, in a culture where it is often safer to use poetry, represents a fallen freedom fighter. The Iranian leadership calls it the "place of the damned" or the "graveyard of the infidels".

There are no gravestones, monuments or markings there because the government hasn't allowed any, but families of the victims have quietly gathered at the Khavaran cemetery every September over the last 20 years to commemorate what they call "the national catastrophe" - the largest state crime in Iran's modern history.

Families of the victims fear that the building work will irremediably destroy all evidence of the massacre and render identification of their loved ones impossible. "The authorities don't want this place to become a symbol. They are afraid of the bones because the bones can testify of their crimes," says Monireh Baradaran, a writer who survived the massacre and now lives in exile in Germany.

Amnesty International agrees: "The organization fears that the actions of the Iranian authorities are aimed at destroying evidence of human rights violations and depriving the families of the victims of the 1988 killings of their rights to truth, justice and reparation."

Families of the victims and human rights activists are circulating a petition addressed to Ms. Navanethem Pillay, the United Nations High Commissioner of Human Rights, demanding she uses all her power to stop the destruction of Khavaran. "For us as well as for the families of the victims, Khavaran represents the resistance and struggle of a revolutionary generation killed by the Islamic regime. Destroying this landmark would be whitewashing a crime," says Babak Emad, International Secretary of the Association of Iranian Political Prisoners (in exile).

Throughout the 1980s, the Islamic regime carried out waves of executions of political prisoners. They culminated in a secret massacre in the summer of 1988, during which thousands of men, women and children - all prisoners of conscience - were put to death in prisons across the country.

The Islamic regime has never acknowledged these executions, revealed how many were killed (Amnesty International estimates the number of victims between 4,500 and 10,000), explained why they were killed nor told relatives where the bodies have been buried. Families of the victims only discovered Khavaran mass graves after heavy rain unearthed some remains in the months following the massacre.
The execution of such a large number of people within such a short time, without any due process, violates many international human rights treaties to which Iran is signatory. The Iranian authorities have the obligation to investigate the massacre and bring to justice those responsible, Amnesty International says. "Destruction of the site would impede any such future investigation and would violate the right of victims, including families, to an effective remedy."

Amnesty is also urging the Iranian government to let the UN Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions visit the country and the Khavaran site.

"We need justice," says Rakhshndeh Hosseinpoor, whose husband and two brothers were killed by the Islamic regime. She now lives in exile in Germany. "I want those who have committed these crimes to be put to trial. I've lost three members of my family, but some families have lost six or seven. So many children are without fathers and mothers, so many young widows, so much pain that never goes away."

Veronique Mistiaen is a London-based journalist writing about social and humanitarian issues and human rights. She has researched the 88 massacre over the past few years.

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Bachaa Hassan Mord

by Anonymous2 (not verified) on

.
.
.Wheel of Fortune

Life
Is like a merry-go-around
You hop on it in a season
That could be spring, winter, summer, or fall
And then begin to see
Season after season before your eyes
In rotation
Without boredom despite repeat and repetition
Until it stops in a season
That may or may not
Correspond to the season of your entry

AH DANESH, Spring-


default

Che Ghadr koshtan aadami zaad be ensaan mazzah meedad...

by Anonymous2 (not verified) on

Run: Take Side Before It''s Too Late

There are
Two kinds of running
A man who runs
To kill another man
And a man who runs
To save the life of a man
Just in the same way
The wind blows in the season of fall
To put the trees in sleep
And the same wind blows in the season of spring
To awaken the sleeping trees back to
life
Just in the same way the same rain
Brings death and life
Depending upon in which season
It is pouring...

--Dr. Abol H. Danesh


IRANdokht

Dear Veronique: Thank you for the report

by IRANdokht on

There is a heartbreaking video that shows footage of the old days and the mothers of those buried in Khavaran who became activists:

Madaraneh Khavaran

//www.iwsf.org/video_pop.php

and thanks to Amnesty International and human rights groups for their statements and actions.

IRANdokht


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Mediation on Stake and broild Chicken

by Abol "Socrates" Danesh (not verified) on

Omr barf asto aaftaab tamooz
Andaki maandeh khajeh gharreh hanooz


MRX1

where are

by MRX1 on

the liberal idiots, hollywood morons,general media, peace loving adovate of constant dialogue on this issue? TOTAL SILENCE. Now if an Isreali soldier slaps a palestenian we will never hear the end of it! but when a sick brutual regime kills tens of thousends if not hundred thousends Iranian not one word. We live in amazing times my friends: end of social political ethical and moral sanity. 


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tahe jahanam......

by ali132 (not verified) on

that's where the dirty akhoonds are all going for their horrendous crimes against iran and it's people!
they burned 400 innocents in abadan, hired palestinian mercenaries to kill soldiers in jaleh sq, murdered thousands of innocent officers in cold blood, and on and on.....including these poor soul who were killed in 88,89.
i don't know how that scumbag khamenei sleeps at night!
so many families sent to mourning....

this is what u get when you unleash mullahs to rule a country....and when you complain that the shah is a butcher and a monster....he had his issues of course, but none of us would have been here, if khomeini had been taken care of!


default

Can the international

by dfs (not verified) on

Can the international community take the IRI to court? Why is the media has kept silent about this?


Benyamin

Silent cry

by Benyamin on

Very painful Silent.


LalehGillani

وای

LalehGillani


مثل شکوفه
پر از عطر زندگی
در گردباد زمان
پرپر زده ام.
مثل درخت
در تپه های خاموش اوین
ایستاده
به خاک کشیده ام.
خشت مرا در گرد خاوران
پنهان کرده اند.

با یاد من،
وای،
چه میکنند؟