The Scotsman

‘Iran’s sham election ‘winner’ should be indicted on mass murder count’ says Struan Stevenson

The boycott of the election proves that Iranians are demanding change, says Struan Stevenson

- Struan Stevenson, a former member of the European Parliament, is coordinato­r of the Campaign for Iran Change, an internatio­nal lecturer on the Middle East and president of the European Iraqi Freedom Associatio­n

The election of Ebrahim Raisi as president of Iran should surely send a long overdue wakeup call to those in the West who have sought to appease the theocratic dictatorsh­ip for decades.

Raisi is on the EU and US sanctions lists for serial human rights violations. He is a murderer and perpetrato­r of genocide, who has openly boasted of his role as a member of the ‘death commission’ which oversaw the massacre of more than 30,000 political prisoners in the summer of 1988.

Most of those executed, including many teenagers and even pregnant women, were supporters of the main opposition Mojahedin-e Khalq (MEK). Raisi was, until his elevation to the presidency, chief of Iran’s judiciary, where he was able to indulge his expertise as a mass executione­r.

He has directed the hanging of 251 people in 2019, 267 people in 2020, and scores of executions so far in 2021. According to eyewitness survivors, Raisi often supervised the torture of men and women and then personally attended their execution.

Agnès Callamard, the secretary general of Amnesty Internatio­nal, responded to the announceme­nt of Raisi’s election by saying: “That Ebrahim Raisi has risen to the presidency instead of being investigat­ed for the crimes against humanity of murder, enforced disappeara­nce and torture is a grim reminder that impunity reigns supreme in Iran. We continue to call for Ebrahim Raisi to be investigat­ed for his involvemen­t in past and ongoing crimes under internatio­nal law, including by states that exercise universal jurisdicti­on.”

Amnesty’s secretary general was highly critical of the sham election, stating: “Ebrahim Raisi’s rise to the presidency follows an electoral process that was conducted in a highly repressive environmen­t and barred women, members of religious minorities and candidates with opposing views from running for office.”

It is now clear that the regime’s claims of a 48.8 per cent electoral turnout are entirely bogus. Widespread monitoring of polling stations was undertaken by courageous members of MEK resistance units in more than 400 towns and cities.

Despite the massive deployment of the Islamic Revolution­ary Guards Corps (IRGC), the regime’s Gestapo, to arrest anyone attempting to film or monitor the polls, more than 3,500 video clips were secretly filmed by the MEK, often from passing vehicles, showing empty polling stations.

The National Council of Resistance of Iran, the main democratic opposition movement, has estimated that the true turnout was less than 10 per cent, following a nationwide boycott.

In Iran, so far more than 315,000 have died of Covid-19, although the theocratic regime claims the true figure is 82,000.

The Iranian economy is in freefall – 75 per cent of the population now struggle to survive on incomes that have crashed below the internatio­nal poverty line.

It is clear the Iranian people are sick of the mullahs, sick of their years of maladminis­tration and brutal oppression. Their national boycott of the presidenti­al election has proved beyond doubt that the Iranian people demand regime change. They have watched the mullahs turn Iran into an internatio­nal pariah state and now they have witnessed the sham election of a pariah president.

The fake polls in Iran should be an abject lesson for western appeasers, who for decades have pinned their hopes on illusory moderates or so-called ‘reformers’ within the medieval clerical dictatorsh­ip Assured of silence and inaction by the internatio­nal community, even when they sent registered diplomats on bombing missions to Europe, the mullahs are confident that they can literally get away with murder.

Further attempts at appeasemen­t or revising the failed Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA) nuclear deal will only encourage more repression internally and more aggression externally. The mullahs have openly boasted of their own repeated breaches of the JCPOA deal. They claim to have enriched uranium to 60 per cent fissile purity, a fraction short of weapons-grade, in blatant contravent­ion of the agreement.

They have denied site access to inspectors from the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency.

Despite clear evidence that the mullahs are continuing secretly to construct a nuclear device and ballistic missiles capable of carrying a primed nuclear warhead, the US and EU remain ludicrousl­y committed to reinstatin­g the JCPOA without demanding an end to the clerical regime’s destabilis­ing activities in Syria, Yemen, Lebanon, Gaza and Iraq and insisting on an end to repression, torture and executions in Iran.

It is clear that for Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader, the ability to hold the world to ransom with a nuclear weapon is a fundamenta­l survival strategy for his theocratic regime. But even this futile show of force will not provide a way out of the deadly impasse Khamenei is facing. Iran is now a powder keg ready to explode, with a mass of predominan­tly young, hungry and enraged people eager to light the touch-paper.

Repression, restrictio­ns on social media, arrests, torture and executions have all failed to prevent the nationwide spread of an organised opposition in the form of MEK resistance units. Khamenei is battling for his survival.

The time has come for the West to end its policy of appeasemen­t and adopt a firm approach, condemning the sham election and its blood-soaked pariah president and standing beside the Iranian people in their demand for regime change and for the indictment in the internatio­nal courts of Khamenei, Raisi and the other leaders of the theocratic dictatorsh­ip for murder, human rights abuse and crimes against humanity.

 ??  ?? A young boy wearing military fatigues at a rally by supporters of Iran’s newly elected president Ebrahim Rais
A young boy wearing military fatigues at a rally by supporters of Iran’s newly elected president Ebrahim Rais
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