by Ken Blackwell
Who is Hamid Noury, and why is the regime clearly terrified of his trial in Sweden?
During a rendezvous at the United Nations General Assembly, the Iranian regime's foreign minister lodged a formal complaint with his Swedish counterpart about the trial of Hamid Noury, a former Iranian official, in Stockholm. Hossein Amir-Abdollahian told Sweden's Ann Linde that all the documents provided to the court are "fabricated." A month prior, a spokesman for the regime's Foreign Ministry had warned, "We will naturally use all our diplomatic means to obtain and enforce Hamid Noury's rights."
Who is Hamid Noury, and why is the regime clearly terrified of his trial in Sweden?
Hamid Noury was a low-ranking official in the 1980s, formally serving as the deputy prosecutor of a prison in Iran called Gohardasht. He was arrested during a family visit to Sweden in November 2019. He was charged with crimes against humanity for his involvement in the massacre of thousands of political prisoners in 1988.
The 1988 massacre remains a dark stain on the Iranian regime's past, the blood-drenched legacy of which is still haunting officials who continue to hold key positions, including the recently installed president, Ebrahim Raisi. At the time, Raisi was a member of the "death commissions" that perpetrated the murders.
In 1988, after realizing that its position was badly weakening in the face of growing domestic opposition, the mullahs decided to annihilate committed political opponents, starting with those in prisons. Then–supreme leader Ruhollah Khomeini issued a hand-written religious decree (later publicized by his former designated heir) ordering the immediate execution of the most committed opponents of the fundamentalist theocracy, members and supporters of the Mujahedin-e-Khalq (MEK).
So-called "death committees," made up of security and intelligence officials, were established to act as pseudo-courts that conducted minutes-long trials. Thousands of political prisoners were lined up and questioned about their beliefs. Those who remained steadfast to the MEK's democratic ideals and tolerant interpretation of Islam were declared infidels and sentenced to death. It is estimated that at least 30,000 political prisoners, the majority of them MEK members, were killed in the span of a few short months in 1988.
Amnesty International and top United Nations human rights experts have declared the 1988 massacre a "crime against humanity," and acclaimed legal minds have noted that it can also be regarded as a "genocide" since it targeted the MEK's moderate religious interpretations of Islam that ran counter to the ayatollahs' extremist and fundamentalist reading of the religion.
Against this background, Sweden is now carrying out the trial of Hamid Noury. According to witnesses, in addition to involvement in torture, Noury was responsible for leading people to a location in Gohardasht prison where they were ultimately executed. According to the Swedish prosecutors' indictment, "Hamid Noury also himself on some occasions attended and participated in the executions."
Why was Noury so freely roaming Europe? The answer lies in the fact that the regime's criminal officials are emboldened as they see Europe's conciliatory attitude toward the ruling mullahs. They think they have a free pass to zigzag the world without facing any consequences for their past and present crimes against humanity. It is also suspected that he was sold out by a rival faction within the regime's security and intelligence apparatus.
Whatever the reason for his ultimate arrest in Sweden, the regime has been working hard to sabotage legal proceedings by launching a campaign of misinformation spearheaded by its well known lackeys in Europe. So far, however, the MEK's strong involvement in the case has kept Tehran's subterfuge at bay.
Ken Blackwell is the former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Human Rights Commission.
Source: https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2021/11/trial_of_a_mass_murderer_has_the_men_running_iran_on_edge.html
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