The rush to a nuclear deal with Iran has left human rights
issues sidelined. Few people in the West seem to care. They just want to ensure
that Tehran does not develop a nuclear capability. This aim is understandable
but it leaves Iran’s political prisoners, torture victims and persecuted ethnic
minorities with little hope of any respite.
Tehran denies abusing human rights and seeks to deflect
criticism by pointing the finger at abuses by Western countries. Iran’s supreme
leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has accused the US of oppressing the black
community. Other leaders have boasted that, unlike the West, Iran has no racial
discrimination. I know different; having been a victim of the regime’s
anti-Arab racism.
I belong to the Arab ethnic minority in Iran, known as
Ahwazis. Our homeland, Al-Ahwaz, is now part of south-west Iran. Oil-rich and
agriculturally-abundant, it was annexed by Tehran in 1925 and renamed
Khuzestan.
In the years after the 2005 Ahwazi Arab uprising against the
Iranian occupation of Al-Ahwaz, the Tehran regime made indiscriminate mass
arrests of an estimated 25,000 Ahwazi human rights, cultural and political
activists.
In October 2008, the police came for me. I was a 22-year-old
newly-wed student living in my home city of Khalafiya in Al-Ahwaz and studying
English translation at Abadan Azad university.
The university authorities reported me to the security
services after I formed a student group to raise awareness of the officially
suppressed Ahwazi Arab culture. This was seen as a threat to the regime.
They accused me of endangering national security,
anti-government propaganda, activism against the regime and inciting
secessionist sentiments.
I was incarcerated in solitary confinement, without trial,
in section six of the infamous Sepidar prison, where I endured two months of
relentless abuse and torture. Only the solidarity and brotherhood of fellow
activists and cellmates gave me the inner strength to not give up.
My cell was dank and narrow, measuring 2.5 metres by 1.5
metres. The walls were painted a violent red, possibly as camouflage for blood.
The "window" was a narrow slit through which sunlight would appear,
but only in the morning.
"On one occasion, a guard brought a recorder into my
cell and played a recording of women screaming in agony, saying to me: “That’s
your sister; we’re 'pleasuring’ her because she’s a bitch like you, you Arab
moron.” "
Day and night I could hear the screaming and weeping of
fellow prisoners – men, women and children – who were incarcerated and tortured
there. It was the norm for guards to inflict casual cruelty, such as forbidding
prisoners access to a toilet so that they were forced to urinate in the cell,
which stank to a nausea-inducing extent in the heat.
Among other forms of physical torture, I was tied to a metal
bed frame by the wrists and ankles and savagely whipped. If I resisted or
cursed the guards, they would prolong and intensify the torture. They raped me
violently and repeatedly with the large whip handle; so brutally that the rape
did permanent injury to my rectum, for which I still need medical treatment.
During the torture sessions, my interrogators attempted to
extract forced confessions from me; bullying me to state that I was involved
with Ahwazi political parties abroad – a charge that I consistently denied,
since it was untrue.
The physical torture, and constant anti-Arab racist abuse,
were accompanied by many forms of psychological torture intended to demean,
humiliate and break me.
On one occasion, a guard brought a recorder into my cell and
played a recording of women screaming in agony, saying to me: “That’s your
sister; we’re 'pleasuring’ her because she’s a bitch like you, you Arab moron.”
When I cursed him in response, he left the cell and returned with other guards,
who beat and kicked me almost unconscious before stripping me naked and using
lighted cigarette butts to burn my genitals and feet. Another time, the guards
handcuffed my hands behind my back and hanged me from a ceiling fan. I was also
beaten black and blue with a large heavy belt.
In my cell, I would distract myself from the fear, hunger,
torture and verbal abuse by reading the graffiti scratched on the wall by
previous prisoners. One said: “Don’t panic, your suffering is not greater than
Almighty Allah,” while another read: “I am innocent and will be hanged soon.” A
despairing father wrote simply and heartbreakingly: “My dear son, when you grow
up you will come here like your father – this is the fate of all Ahwazis.”
"Despite the operations, which required the removal of
part of my large intestine, I am still in near-constant pain and suffer severe
digestive and vomiting problems."
Sleep deprivation is a common form of psychological torture
that is used against political prisoners, which I was also subjected to; along
with being prevented from washing myself.
The heat, unhygienic conditions and lack of any ventilation
mean that lice, scabies and infestations were widespread among prisoners. After
just four days in a cell, I began scratching myself red raw to relieve the
incessant itching all over my body, finding lice even in my groin area.
Unlike many other Ahwazi detainees, I was eventually
released on bail of 400 million Rial (about US$13,000); largely as a result of
the serious deterioration of my health. Two days after my release from prison,
I collapsed and was rushed to Arvand hospital in Ahwaz city. I required
emergency surgery for ruptures to my rectum caused by the multiple rapes.
The author now suffers from permanent ill-health
Since then I’ve had four further operations on my bowels and
sphincter, in Raazi hospital in Ahwaz and the latest in Servergazi hospital in
Turkey. The severe damage to the bowel muscles inflicted by the rape mean that
I still suffer from stress incontinence. Despite the operations, which required
the removal of part of my large intestine, I am still in near-constant pain and
suffer severe digestive and vomiting problems. My weight before I went into
prison was 70 kilos but now is only 54. I am a maimed man and need to go to the
doctor every week.
My trial, which began in early 2009, was postponed as a
result of my poor health. My lawyer, Hosseini Manesh, was successful in
securing the suspension of the proceedings and negotiating for me to finish my
university studies. However, the case against me has never been closed.
"I know that if I ever return to Iran I will face
immediate arrest, imprisonment, torture and probable execution."
My severe health problems meant that I was unable to return
to university for many months. I only completed my degree in 2011. Fearful of
re-arrest, I gave up all activism during that period.
The regime didn’t just maim my body, however, but wrecked my
future career plans. My record as a cultural activist and human rights
campaigner meant that I was blacklisted and unable to secure employment.
In 2011, I felt compelled to resume my peaceful campaigning,
following the arrest of six Ahwazi activists associated with Al-Hiwar, an
organisation which aimed to raise cultural, civil and political awareness among
Ahwazi Arabs by organizing cultural events and free education classes for
deprived Arab youth.
All six activists were widely respected community figures.
Some were former teachers of mine. They were sentenced to death on trumped up
charges of terrorism after an unfair trial. This was later commuted to life
imprisonment for three of them and 20 years for another. But Hadi Rashedi and
my former lecturer in Arabic literature, Hashem Shabani, also a noted poet,
were executed in 2014. The charges against them included Moharebeh (“enmity
against God”), Mufsid-fil-Arz (“corruption on earth”) and spreading
“propaganda” against the political system.
As a result of my support for these men and the wider cause
of Ahwazi human rights, I was constantly monitored by the regime’s intelligence
services. They put me under relentless psychological pressure, always trying to
find any excuse, however petty, to imprison me again. Security agents would
send intimidating, ominous messages using phones with the number withheld.
They’d demand I come to their headquarters in Romhormoz. I’d be interrogated
for up to nine hours and abused with racist anti-Arab insults such as “Arab
lizard-eater...camel’s milk-drinker...bastard Arab parasite.” They also abused
my mother and sisters as “whores.” I was bombarded with fake accusations, like
claiming I had links with Wahhabi Sunni extremists. There was physical abused
too; including being slapped around the face, and having my ears pinched and my
hair pulled.
"The Iranian authorities view me and all Ahwazi Arabs
as sub-humans, subversives and criminals on account of our Arab ethnicity and
desire for freedom. "
Stranded Iranian migrantsat the border between Greece and
Macedonia in November
Although I was terrified, I was determined that the regime
would not silence me or the voice of other Ahwazis. I continued publicising the
cases of the detained members of Al-Hiwar using information received from their
anguished families. This generated global solidarity for the falsely accused
men.
In October 2012, I was called back into the intelligence security
branch for interrogation, with the officers demanding that I spy on fellow
activists. I knew if I refused that I could suffer the same fate as the men on
death row. I secretly fled my beloved Ahwazi homeland to Turkey with my wife,
where I sought refugee status. Recently, at last, I secured resettlement in the
US.
Much as I wish to live in Al-Ahwaz, I know that if I ever
return to Iran I will face immediate arrest, imprisonment, torture and probable
execution on one or more of the common trumped up charges, such as “acting
against Iran’s national security” or “collaborating with foreign agents” and
“fomenting anti-Iranian propaganda.”
Even now, my family still face harassment and persecution as
a result of my past activism. My father and brother were summoned to the
intelligence service's offices in Romhormoz for interrogation. My brother was
dismissed from his job as an agricultural engineer at the regime’s behest.
My story is not unusual. The Iranian authorities view me and
all Ahwazi Arabs as sub-humans, subversives and criminals on account of our
Arab ethnicity and desire for freedom. Ahwazi daily life is tainted by open
racism and bigotry. It is encouraged by the Tehran regime, with Arabs being
commonly being depicted as “uncivilized barbarians” and “barefoot nomadic
peoples.” Any Arab requesting equality, freedom and dignity is regarded and
treated as an enemy of the state. Al-Ahwaz is like a giant prison – an
Orwellian hell.
I am lucky to have escaped. I am alive and free. Many of my
fellow Ahwzai Arabs are in prison or have suffered the hangman’s noose. All of
us who survive have just one hope: We dream to be free.
Source: The Telegraph
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