 At the end of 1998, the Iranian public was horrified and amazed by
the brutal murders of four prominent intellectuals, later to be
described in the Iranian media as the “chain murders”.
The
first to die were Dariush Forouhar, the 70-year-old leader of the Iran
People’s Party, and his 54-year-old wife Parvaneh. Outspoken but
apparently tolerated critics of the Iranian régime, they were stabbed
to death on Sunday November 22, 1998 in their Tehran flat, on the
anniversary of the suspicious death of Dr Kazem Sami, another
dissident, in 1989. Mr Forouhar was decapitated, and one of Parvaneh’s
breasts had been cut off. The barbaric mutilation of the corpses
was reminiscent of the killing of Dr Shapour Bakhtiar, the Shah’s last
Prime Minister, whose head and hands were cut off by the murderers -
agents of the Iranian regime's Ministry of Intelligence and Security
(MOIS) - who killed him at his Paris home in August 1991.
Forouhar’s
flat was under surveillance and therefore every move was being
recorded. How could the murderers have penetrated this permanent
intelligence cordon and then escaped without being noticed? The
likeliest explanation, in the light of subsequent developments, is that
the murderers were known to the authorities, who deliberately took no
action. A news agency told the story:
“Friends who called
on Dariush Forouhar and his wife one afternoon in late November grew
worried when no one answered the doorbell for hours. Since the
husband and wife had the flu, it was odd for them to be out for so
long. Then a close friend climbed over the iron gate of the house
to see if all was well. He came out running, his face
ashen. The couple, longtime critics of the Iranian government,
had been slain”.
“Forouhar had been stabbed some 15 times
in the heart with a knife. His blood-soaked body was slumped
behind a desk. His wife, Parvaneh, also stabbed to death, was
dressed as if she was just about to go out or had just come home”.
“There
was no sign of burglary. It seemed like a professional
killing. Both husband and wife had been sprayed with some unknown
substance, knocking them out so they couldn’t scream for help.
The slayings were chilling in their familiarity: Nine political
activists whose actions angered Iran’s clerical rulers have been killed
over the past decade, at least half stabbed to death like the
Forouhars”.
“They include a Tehran University professor,
a magazine editor, a publisher, three Christian priests and two Sunni
Muslim preachers who spoke out against Iran’s Shiite Muslim leaders”.
The
next to die was Mohammad Mokhtari, a poet and one of the group of six
writers questioned in connection with the writers’ association
“Kanoun”. His body was found in a morgue on December 9, after he had
been missing for six days. Marks on his head and neck suggested
he might have been strangled. Mokhtari had contributed to many liberal
newspapers, and was well known as a critic of the regime. He had
been arrested several times by the security forces. In 1994, he
was one of the 134 intellectuals who signed a manifesto demanding
freedom of speech .
The fourth victim was Mohammad
Pouyandeh, an essayist and translator of French literature, found dead
on December 11, 1998. He had disappeared after leaving his office
at about 14.00 on December 9 for a meeting of publishers in downtown
Tehran. His body was found underneath a railway bridge in a
suburb of Tehran and according to his family, he had apparently been
strangled, though no autopsy was carried out. His family were not
informed of the death until December 13. Pouyandeh was also one
of six writers questioned in October when they formed the writers’
association “Kanoun ”.
The forgotten victims
These
four victims were the only ones whose killings were later acknowledged
as having been perpetrated by a gang headed by Saeed Emami or Eslami,
the Deputy Minister of Intelligence. There were many other
mysterious killings, however, which may possibly have been the work of
this death squad, or of other assassins in the Ministry. Dozens
of intellectuals, writers and journalists opposed to the régime had
disappeared or died suddenly or by violent means in the years leading
up to the chain murders. In January, 1999, the Iranian Human Rights
Working Group (IHRWG) in the British Parliament wrote to the UN calling
their attention to the “chilling resemblance, in terms of their targets
and methods, to an earlier string of disappearances and mysterious
deaths that occurred in 1996 and 1997”.
The lawyer for
Mohammad Pouyandeh’s family claimed to have gathered the details of 80
murders which according to him had been political. Commenting on
his allegation, the pro-Khamenei daily, Ressalat, wrote: “He has made
this information available to foreign media but did not explain his
reasons for collecting [it] or why he has not provided it to the
relevant security and intelligence agencies.” The paper added: “It must
be said that he has recently made comments that required the security
agencies to take the appropriate action regarding the correctness or
falsity of these remarks”.
Majid Sharif went missing
after he left home in apparently perfect health on November 20,
1998. A translator and journalist, he had contributed to the
publication Iran-e-Farda (Tomorrow’s Iran). He was a follower of
the late Dr Ali Shariati, referred to by some as the Father of the
Islamic Revolution, a scholar who advocated the modernisation of Islam.
(He was murdered by SAVAK agents in Britain three weeks after he had
fled the Shah’s Iran, on June 19, 1977 . Sharif’s family
identified his body in a Tehran morgue on November 24, 1998. The
body did not appear to be injured, and press reports suggested heart
failure as the cause of death. The literary community, however,
called for a full investigation into his death and previous
disappearance, and it was suspected that he had paid the penalty for
writing about a more modern interpretation of Islam.
Pirouz
Davani, General Secretary of the Organisation of Union for Democracy In
Iran (OUDI), left his house in Tehran on the morning of August 28, 1998
and was immediately abducted by plain clothes agents. “Since
then, we have no information concerning his whereabouts”, his brother
Majid Davani said on November 22, 1998. It was reported, however,
that an anonymous caller rang his mother the day after the murder of
Dariush Forouhar and his wife, to say that Pirouz Davani had been
executed. His mother died of a heart attack hours later.
Davani
had been active in the Left opposition to the Shah, but rapidly fell
out with the mullahs also when they came to power in 1979. He
received a seven-month prison sentence in 1981, and spent four years in
Evin Prison from 1990 to 1994. He was tortured in the first six
months of that imprisonment, and also received 50 lashes. After
his release, he had openly published political bulletins and organised
seminars . None of these activities posed a serious challenge to
the regime.
Another dissident, Rostami Hamedani, went
missing in mid-December 1998 , though it had been reported even earlier
that he had been murdered in his eponymic town of Hamedan. His
politics were close to Pirouz Davani’s and he had been actively writing
critical articles against the government.
There were
three other murders, and four other disappearances in January 1999,
which may have been politically motivated. Fatemeh Eslami, the
wife of a translator, was found strangled to death at her home on
January 13. Jurist Javad Emami and his wife were killed in their
home in northern Tehran January 17. On January 20, the Iranian
daily Arya reported that relatives of Mahmoud Meydani Amur Ghafouri,
Morteza Olian Najafabadi, and Sara Eftekhari appealed to President
Mohammad Khatami and expressed their fear that the disappeared had been
killed .
“In a letter published in Payam magazine,
Mansoureh Ghafouri revealed that six (former) political prisoners had
disappeared in Mashad in 1996-97. All had been kidnapped between
September 1996 and April 1997, Mrs Ghafouri’s husband and brother among
them. One of the missing persons is Morteza Olian Najafabadi
”. Morteza, according to his sister, left his home on January 19,
1997 to go to work and never returned. She added, “During Mr
Khatami’s tenure, we have received letters saying that they have asked
the Intelligence Ministry, who told them that he (her brother) is not
with them (the ministry)”. She insisted, however, that her brother left
home in his car, and that they had reliable information that his car is
in the Intelligence Ministry warehouse.
Yet another
writer, Akbar Ganji, editor of the weekly Rah-e No (New Way) was
approached by two men as he was leaving his office in Tehran at 18.10
on December 13, 1998. They asked where they could find Akbar
Ganji and he, without identifying himself, asked them who they
were. After a short exchange they ran away, leaving Mr Ganji in
no doubt that his life was in danger. He is in a different
category from the other targets of the serial killers, however, in that
he was never among the political opponents of the regime.
The
Iranian Human Rights Working Group drew particular attention to the
similarity between the latest wave of killings and disappearances, and
a previous series of killings in 1996-97. On October 24, 1995,
the body of writer and translator Ahmad Mir Ala’ee was found in an
alleyway near his bookshop in Isfahan “under suspicious circumstances”.
The official post-mortem gave heart attack as the cause of death, but
private doctors who examined the body said that there were marks
appearing to be those of injections on it. Mir Ala’ee had recently
started a publication, Zayandehrood, and had been summoned to the
security forces’ office in Isfahan. His family had been ordered not to
say anything about the call . The following month another writer,
Ghaffar Hosseini was found dead. In February 1997, Professor Ahmad
Tafazzoli was found dead next to his parked car, and in March, the body
of Ebrahim Zalzadeh was discovered, stabbed to death, a month after he
had been reported missing. Ms Ghazaleh Alizadeh, a novelist, was found
strangled in a wood near her home in northern Iran on May 11,
1996. The official cause of her death was suicide, but colleagues
believed that she was murdered by the state. She was a militant
writer who opposed despotism, and in the past had been detained and
tortured. The evening before her death she had traveled out from
the city of Mashad in good shape . Hosseini, Mir Ala’ee and Ms
Alizadeh, like recent victims Mokhtari and Pouyandeh, were among the
134 writers and intellectuals who signed the October 1994 Tehran
Declaration on freedom of expression.
Ms Fatemeh
Ghaem-Maghami, a senior air hostess, was killed on December 25, 1997,
with a single bullet. Just before her death she had been talking to
Saeed Emami, the alleged ringleader of the death squad, for an
hour. It is said that she had an illicit relation with Ali
Fallahian, the Minister of Intelligence, and had obtained some
information, which would be devastating to Fallahian and Sa’eed
Emami. She was married to Bijan Jaffarzadeh and had three
children.
Houshang Golshiri, Kazem Kardavani and Ali
Ashraf Darvishiyan, the surviving three members of the six who were
questioned in October 1998 about their plan to form an independent
writers’ group, were among those who feared they might be the next to
“disappear”, and concern for their safety was expressed by Amnesty
International.
Who is to blame?
In
the face of public and international pressure, on December 14, 1998,
President Mohammad Khatami announced the establishment of a special
committee to investigate the killings, but before the inquiry even
began, apparently the régime’s leaders already knew the answers.
President Khatami said: “These murders are ominous schemes of the
enemies of independence and freedom of the Islamic state.
Hojatoleslam
Qorbanali Dorri Najafabadi, then Intelligence Minister, said: “These
kinds of crimes are rooted abroad” and “the enemies” want to create
“turmoil” and “unrest” in the country and portray it as
“crisis-riddled”.
“This network is located abroad”,
Judiciary spokesman Fotovat Savadkouhi chimed in, and was one of the
first to accuse the People’s Mojahedin of Iran of involvement in the
conspiracy, a tactic routinely used by the régime to deflect criticism.
Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei, Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic said the killings
“complement the other conspiracies by the World Arrogance (the
pejorative term normally used for the United States) ”. A few days
later, the Director of the Islamic Propaganda Organisation stated as a
fact: “These murders were carried out by the Zionists with the
cooperation of the Mojahedin group ”.
Less than a month
later, however, the committee appointed by President Khatami disclosed
that 10 Intelligence Ministry employees had been arrested and many more
were under surveillance. The committee said it had concrete information
on the slayings that could not be disclosed without hurting the
investigation.
Leading the Friday prayers on January 8,
the Supreme Leader staked his name and prestige on the allegation that
foreign elements were involved: “With all my long experience at the
helm of the state and all the information in my possession, I cannot
accept that these dirty, disgusting and hateful assassinations that
have harmed the system, the government, the nation and the people, are
written without a foreign scenario”.
Specifically
mentioning the CIA, Britain’s MI5 and MI6 and Israel’s Mossad, he said:
“You will be shocked to learn about the scope of the crimes,
assassinations, bombings and intimidations committed by these
intelligence services”.
“I don’t think the issue is
over. This seems to be a long story,’’ Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
told worshipers during a prayer sermon at Tehran University.
To
accommodate the earlier version of the story, the Ministry of
Intelligence admitted that the murders were committed by some of its
agents, but claimed that these individuals were in league with the
foreign elements mentioned previously. The public relations department
of the Intelligence Ministry declared that, “with utmost deep regret, a
number of our irresponsible and selfish colleagues at the Ministry, who
were no doubt in contact with foreign intelligence services, have
committed these crimes”.
This was the main theme of the
propaganda, even after, as will be seen, the Intelligence Ministry
admitted that its own agents were the killers. It was said that
although the actual perpetrators had been identified, an extensive
investigation was still under way to identify the foreign elements who
were the masterminds behind the scenes. Mohsen Reza’i, former commander
of the Revolutionary Guards Corps and now Secretary of the Council to
Discern State Exigency, blamed Israeli agents and said: “They went up
to an employee of the Intelligence Ministry and said to him that
Daryoush Forouhar may lead a coup against the Islamic Republic”.
In
January 1999, Hojatoleslam Mohammad Niazi, Head of the Judicial
Organisation of the Armed Forces (JOAF), was put in charge of the
investigation. Karim Lahiji, President of the Paris-based Iranian
League for the Defence of Human Rights, believed that the reason for
transferring the case to the jurisdiction of the Armed Forces
Judiciary, an unusual choice for a case involving no members of the
Armed Forces, was to whitewash the issue. He pointed out that
dissident cleric Mohsen Kadivar, and the editors of Hovviyat Khish, who
drew attention to the fact that the murders were committed on the
authority of fatwa issued by high-level religious personalities, had
been detained.
In April, Niazi told Salam daily: “There
are several items of evidence and indications pointing to the fact that
foreign elements had infiltrated and were involved in these murders”.
He was still peddling the same line a month later when he insisted that
“There is evidence to prove that the serial murders could not have
taken place without being guided by foreign elements”. Responding
indirectly to those who saw the chain murders as the work of
“hard-liners only”, he added: “According to new information obtained,
the perpetrators of these murders will be tried and punished. Those
involved in this affair were of different political persuasions and
were not related to any of the factions”.
In June, as
speculation about the killings mounted, he stuck fast to the agreed
line, and again tried to stop the rumours: “We hold proofs and
confessions which point to foreign involvement in these murders…. We
cannot provide any further information, as the investigations still go
on”. He warned the newspapers not to create confusion and called on
them to contain themselves, otherwise they will be warned once and then
legal measures will be taken.
Ataollah Mohajerani,
Minister of Culture and Islamic Guidance and the Khatami government’s
spokesman, parroted the line agreed upon by all the factions: “In
general, these murders could not have taken place without foreign
involvement”.
The banned daily Neshat which supported
Khatami, wrote: “Regarding the identity of the perpetrators of recent
murders, Gholamhossein Bolandian, Deputy Interior Minister, said that
according to the information gathered during interrogations, it was
clear that there were contacts with foreign elements who wanted to take
advantage of the situation. He did not reply to a question asking him
to name the country involved in these murders”.
|