USA TODAY US Edition

Iran’s late president had a bloody past

Raisi was a driving force in 1980s prison massacres

- Dan Morrison

First the guards canceled family visits. Then they confiscate­d the prisoners’ radios. Then came the tribunals.

Within weeks, 10,000 Iranian dissidents were dead.

Sitting in judgment at some of these hastily called “death commission­s” was a deputy prosecutor named Ebrahim Raisi, a hard-line cleric who in 2021 was elected president of Iran. Raisi, 63, was killed Sunday when his helicopter crashed into a snowy mountainsi­de near the Azerbaijan border.

While the Iranian presidency is considered a relatively weak post when compared to the powers invested in the country’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, there was a time in the late 1980s when Raisi had direct power over life and death.

He didn’t flinch.

“He definitely has blood on his hands,” said Mohamad Bazzi, director of the Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies at New York University.

As Iran comes to grips with the deaths of Raisi and Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdoll­ahian, the president’s demise highlights the pervasive control of hard-line clerical rulers – and the lingering wounds of Iran’s Islamic revolution.

New election, same old clerics

Now that Raisi is confirmed dead, the Iranian Constituti­on calls for new elections within 50 days. But the outcome won’t matter in a theocratic democracy

where candidates for office have to be cleared by the religious establishm­ent, said Afshon Ostovar, an associate professor of national security studies at the Naval Postgradua­te School in Monterey, California.

“Somebody else who the people don’t like, who the regime does like, will be elected,” Ostovar said.

Experts say the airtight dominance of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and his Revolution­ary Guards guarantees that Raisi’s passing won’t bring Iranians any closer to justice for the decades of human rights abuses they’ve endured – including the 1988 prison massacres.

Revolution, war and mass graves

That summer, Iran was nearing the end of a ruinous eight-year war launched by its neighbor Iraq.

The prisons were packed with young leftists who’d been convicted for having links to an Iraq-based rebel group, the People’s Mujahedeen Organizati­on of Iran, or Mujahedeen-e-Khalq. In July 1988, after the group launched an attack on Iran from its base in Iraq, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the Islamic Republic’s founding cleric, called for all PMOI prisoners to face special tribunals.

In a secret fatwa, Khomeni ordered officials to “annihilate the enemies of Islam immediatel­y.”

“Suddenly there was word of fly-bynight, hastily conducted panels that lasted seconds, minutes, condemning these people to death,” said Elise Auerbach, an Iran expert at Amnesty Internatio­nal. Analysts believe around 10,000 people were executed in a matter of weeks in prisons across the country, their bodies hidden in unmarked mass graves.

Raisi: A ‘proud’ achievemen­t

Raisi, working in Tehran, “was certainly one of the people responsibl­e for ordering those executions,” Auerbach said.

The killings were so extreme that Khomeini’s deputy and preferred heir, Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri, objected, saying the victims had already been legally convicted and sentenced. It made a mockery of the law, Montazeri argued, to impose the death sentence on people who were already serving their time and had committed no new crimes.

Raisi called the killings “one of the proud achievemen­ts” of Iran’s government, according to an Amnesty Internatio­nal report. He went on to serve as prosecutor general in Tehran and later as the top prosecutor in the country. More than three decades later, Iran still has not officially acknowledg­ed the massacres, and families of the victims are forbidden to publicly mourn or commemorat­e their deaths.

In 1989, Montazeri released documents and a secret recording proving Khomeini’s role in the long-denied massacres. He was placed under house arrest. When Khomeini died in 1989, a lower-ranking cleric, Ali Khamenei, was named supreme leader.

“Somebody else who the people don’t like, who the regime does like, will be elected.”

Afshon Ostovar

Naval Postgradua­te School in Monterey, California

Remembered for a ‘bloodbath’

Khamenei is now 85, and the question of who might replace him has been complicate­d by Sunday’s crash.

“Raisi headed the list of potential successors,” Bazzi said. “Though it’s a little like papal succession, where the front-runner going in isn’t necessaril­y the front-runner at the end of the process.”

While Raisi’s presidency was marked by the violent suppressio­n of women’s rights demonstrat­ors, economic turmoil, and spiking conflict with the U.S. and Israel, he’ll probably be best remembered for one thing, Ostovar said: “This bloodbath of political prisoners at the end of the Iran-Iraq War.”

 ?? IRAN’S PRESIDENCY/WANA, VIA REUTERS ?? Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi was killed in a helicopter crash in mountainou­s terrain near the Azerbaijan border Sunday.
IRAN’S PRESIDENCY/WANA, VIA REUTERS Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi was killed in a helicopter crash in mountainou­s terrain near the Azerbaijan border Sunday.

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