Hanged under the cover of war: letters and videos tell stories of Iran’s death row victims

The Guardian World ·

Hanged under the cover of war: letters and videos tell stories of Iran’s death row victims

Writing from his cell in the Rajai Shahr prison in the northern Iranian city of Karaj, Babak Alipour wanted to tell his friends about those who had already gone to their execution. …

Writing from his cell in the Rajai Shahr prison in the northern Iranian city of Karaj, Babak Alipour wanted to tell his friends about those who had already gone to their execution. There was Behrouz Ehsani, 69, the elder statesman of the group, who was “never angry” about their predicament. Then there was Mehdi Hassani, a 48-year-old father of three who he saw a couple of times in the prison hospital and who would ask him to pass on to the children the message that he was “fine”. Despite the killings, Alipour, a 34-year-old law graduate with a passion for mountaineering who had been on death row for three years, recorded in his neat, tight, handwriting that he was not intimidated. Babak Alipour in his cell. The writing on the paper he is holding celebrates the 60th anniversary of the founding of the opposition group People’s Mujahedin of Iran. Photograph: Screengrab On 12 March he made a short video on a phone smuggled into his jail. “Dictators have come, been overthrown, died, and been killed, and now it is the turn of Khamenei-the-son’s dictatorship,” Alipour said of the accession of Mojtaba Khamenei to supreme leader after the death of Ali Khamenei in airstrikes by the US and Israel. By this time, Alipour’s brother Roozbeh, his sister Maryam, and mother Ommolbanin Dehghan had been arrested as they returned home from a vigil outside the prison in which he was being held. Pouya Ghobadi, 32, was hanged on 31 March. …

Original source: The Guardian World

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Revolutionary Guards · Benjamin Netanyahu · Donald Trump · Mojtaba Khamenei