Iran: New evidence reveals deliberate
desecration and destruction of multiple mass gravesites
لینک به سایت عفو بین الملل
لینک به سایت عفو بین الملل
- Bulldozing, road construction, mass rubbish dumping and new burial plots used to compromise and destroy mass graves
- Iranian authorities deliberately eradicating vital forensic evidence that could hamper the rights to truth, justice and reparations
- At least 4,000-5,000 people secretly buried in mass graves after bloody 1988 massacre
New evidence including
satellite imagery, photo and video analysis shows that the Iranian authorities
are deliberately destroying suspected or confirmed mass grave sites associated
with the 1988 massacre in which thousands of prisoners detained for political
reasons were forcibly disappeared and extrajudicially executed, according to a
report released by Amnesty International and Justice for Iran today.
Criminal cover-up: Iran destroying mass graves
of victims of 1988 killings reveals that the Iranian authorities are bulldozing,
constructing buildings and roads, dumping rubbish or
building new burial plots over mass grave sites. These tactics are destroying
key evidence that could be used to establish the truth about the scale of the
crimes and obtain justice and reparations for the victims and their families.
These sites have been under constant surveillance by security agencies, which
suggests that judicial, intelligence and security bodies are involved in the
decision-making processes related to their desecration and destruction.
“These are crime scenes
and must be protected as such until proper and independent forensic
investigations are carried out to identify the remains and the circumstances of
what happened to the victims,” said Shadi Sadr, the Executive Director of
Justice for Iran.
In another shocking
example from the city of Qorveh in Kurdistan province, the authorities
bulldozed gravestones and commemorative signs put up by grieving family members
in July 2016, saying the land had been designated for “agricultural” purposes.
For nearly three
decades, the Iranian authorities have persistently concealed the fate and
whereabouts of the victims. This practice amounts to enforced disappearance,
which is a crime under international law.
Today, it is still not
known exactly how many prisoners were extrajudicially executed in 1988,
although minimum estimates are between 4,000 and 5,000. No Iranian official has
been investigated or brought to justice, and some of the alleged perpetrators
continue to hold political office or influential positions in the judiciary.
Families have been
forbidden from holding commemorative gatherings or decorating the mass grave
sites with flowers and memorial messages, an important part of burial rites and
custom in Iran. They have also faced prosecution and imprisonment for seeking truth and justice.
“It is three decades
since this ruthless slaughter took place and it is high time the authorities
make real efforts to reveal, rather than conceal, the truth. The memory of
those killed cannot simply be erased or buried beneath concrete,” said Philip
Luther.
“These horrific crimes
must be properly investigated and all those responsible for committing,
ordering and concealing these crimes brought to justice in fair trials without
recourse to the death penalty,” said Shadi Sadr.
Justice for Iran
estimates that there may be more than 120 locations across Iran that contain
the remains of the victims of the 1988 massacre.
The report identifies
seven suspected or confirmed mass grave sites that have faced destruction
between 2003 and 2017. They are located inside or near Behesht Reza cemetery in
Mashhad, Khorasan Razavi province; Behesht Abad cemetery in Ahvaz, Khuzestan
province; Vadieh Rahmat cemetery in Tabriz, East Azerbaijan province; Golestan
Javid cemetery in Khavaran; Tazeh Abad cemetery in Rasht, Gilan province; the
Baha’i cemetery in Qorveh, Kurdistan province; and the grounds of the former
premises of the Revolutionary Court in Sanandaj, Kurdistan province.
Background
The 1988 massacre began
shortly after the end of the Iran-Iraq war and an unsuccessful armed incursion
by the then Iraq-based People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran in July of that
year. Prisoners detained for political reasons from across the country were
held incommunicado. In August and September, reports began circulating that
prisoners were being executed in groups and buried in unmarked mass graves.
Distraught family members searched through nearby cemeteries for signs of
freshly dug trenches. The fate and whereabouts of most victims remain unknown
to this day.
From late 1988, victims’
families were verbally told by the authorities that their relatives had been
killed without providing any additional information about the circumstances
surrounding the killings. The bodies were not returned and most of the
locations of burial sites were not disclosed.
Most of those
extrajudicially executed were serving lengthy prison sentences, often imposed
for their peaceful dissent, including for activities such as distributing
newspapers and leaflets, taking part in peaceful anti-government
demonstrations, and having real or perceived affiliations with various
political opposition groups. Some had been released several years earlier and
were re-arrested in the weeks leading up to the killings. Others had already
completed their sentences but had not been released because they refused to
make statements of “repentance”.
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