
Ali
Fallahian, Iran’s intelligence minister during the tenure of
Rafsanjani’s presidency back in the early 90s, is a name most
notoriously known for his role in a series of chain murders across the
country that saw the elimination of many dissidents.
Fallahian
has recently been heard making shocking revelations in reference to
mass executions, especially targeting members and supporter of the
Iranian opposition People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK).
A
German court raised charges against Fallahian for his direct
involvement in the September 1992 assassination of Iranian Kurdish
dissidents in Berlin. In 2007, Interpol placed Fallahian on its most
wanted list for his role in the 1994 bombing the AMIA in Buenos Aires
Jewish center that left 85 killed.
The 1988 massacre of
over 30,000 political prisoners, mostly MEK members and supporters, has
in the past year inside Iran become a major issue for the general
public, especially the younger generation who are beginning to demand
answers.
Fallhian’s
remarks, aired in a recent interview, have caused quite a stir in
social media inside Iran and amongst Iranian communities living abroad. In this interview,
Fallahian sheds light on his role in the Iranian regime’s die-hard
enmity against the MEK as the only opposition truly threatening their
rule.
It
is worth noting that the Iranian opposition has for the past year
launched a justice movement shedding light on the 1988 massacre both
inside Iran and across the globe. These efforts went into full gear
weeks prior to Iran’s May 19th presidential election, forcing Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei to sack his plans of engineering election results as he desired.
Conservative cleric Ebrahim Raisi, known to be Khamenei’s preferred candidate to replace the incumbent Hassan Rouhani as
president, suffered a major defeat due to revelations of his role in
the 1988 massacre. Raisi was a member of the notorious four-man “Death
Commission” appointed by Khomeini himself to facilitate and hasten the
execution process.
Q: “Raisi was in the commission. Who were the other members?”
Fallahian, however, refrains from naming other Death Commission members and begins discussing the process which political prisoners were executed and the summer 1988 massacre. He placed all the blame on Khomeini, emphasizing he had issued the execution and massacre ruling long before.”
Fallahian, however, refrains from naming other Death Commission members and begins discussing the process which political prisoners were executed and the summer 1988 massacre. He placed all the blame on Khomeini, emphasizing he had issued the execution and massacre ruling long before.”
Fallhian: “Yes,
the poor guy [referring to Raisi] insisted he hadn’t issued the ruling,
the ruling was issued in advance… but no one would listen, and they
would also think the executed were innocent… if we hadn’t killed them
there would be no country today. These are not my words, they are the
words of [Khomeini]…”
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