IBT interviews formerIranian political prisoner
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The International Business Times on Tuesday, July 12, published an interview conducted with Farzad Madadzadeh |
Tuesday, 12 July 2016 21:00
The International Business Times on Tuesday,
July 12, published an interview conducted with Farzad Madadzadeh, a former
political prisoner in Iran who escaped Iran and travelled to Europe last year.
Sitting on a concrete bollard outside a Paris
conference hall, Farzad Madadsadeh, an Iranian dissident and former prisoner of
the Iranian regime, is a reserved figure.
The 31-year-old former cab driver from Iran's
East Azerbijan province scratches the already flaking skin on his hands as he
recounts the six-year story of his imprisonment in the jails of the Islamic
Republic's intelligence services, the abuse he was subjected to and the deaths
of his brother and sister in exile in Iraq.
"Each night I didn't know if tomorrow
evening I would still be alive or if I would be dead. It is hard to describe
those conditions because you don't know what's going to become of you," he
says, eyes fixed firmly on the ground.
Farzad was arrested in Tehran by Iranian
security services in 2009 for his links to the country's underground resistance
and in particular for his work with the People's Mohajideen Organisation of
Iran (PMOI).
The PMOI, which first sought to overthrow the
Shah of Iran in the 1970s and now looks to topple the theocracy imposed by
Ayatollah Khomeini following the country's 1979 revolution, is a banned
organisation in the Islamic Republic. Links to the group can result in a death
sentence in the country's politicised courts.
For his work with the underground, passing on
information from Iran to the PMOI's leadership exiled in France, Farzad was
bundled into a van at gunpoint to Ward 209 of Evin Prison. As far as the
Iranian government is concerned the facility, run by the Iranian secret service
agency, does not exist but it is infamous as a political prison where
dissidents are interrogated, tortured, held without charge and made to endure
long periods of solitary confinement.
Two or three times a week throughout his
10-month incarceration in Ward 209 Farzad would be interrogated for in excess
of 12 hours at a time. Six months of his time there was spent in solitary
confinement.
"I was constantly tortured both
psychologically and physically," Farzad says. "There were three
agents that would kick me around like football, each one in turn, one by
one," he adds.
At the time Farzad was told he would be
executed, without charge, if he did not publicly denounce the resistance
movement on state television. He also would see others the intelligence
services sought to break endure even worse torture.
He explains that electrocution with a taser
gun and beatings to the soles of the feet with wooden sticks were common.
"One of my friends, on his back, they had burned him with
cigarettes," he adds. Of the ordeals they endured, however, Farzad says
long periods in solitary confinement were the most feared, as they deprived
detainees of the support of fellow prisoners. "Sometimes you know it is
really better that you get beaten than spend time in solitary
confinement," he says.
Eventually Farzad did face trial, a process he
describes as "a mockery and a show". Over the course of a five-minute
hearing, where he was given no chance to defend himself, he spoke only to
confirm his name. Sentenced to five more years in prison, Farzad felt relief at
not being given the death penalty in a country that the UN reports year in,
year out, carries out more executions per capita than any other state on earth.
"In reality I had prepared myself for the
scenario," he says. "Whatever came, I believe in order to achieve
freedom, you have to pay the price."
Inside the general population of the regime's
prisons, Farzad would continue to witness abuse, beatings and the execution of
prisoners convicted as minors. However, he would be returned to Ward 209 as
another tragedy befell him outside the confines of his prison cell.
As Farzad drifted towards the resistance, his
brother and sister become had also become politicised. The pair had opted to
travel to join other members of the PMOI in exile in Iraq at the group's former
military base at camp Ashraf. Disarmed under a truce with occupying US forces
in 2009, the camp's 3,400 residents were guaranteed protection under the Geneva
Convention.
When the camp was handed over to the Iraqi
government and the pro-Iranian administration of Nouri al-Maliki, Ashraf
increasingly became a target. In April 2011 Farzad's brother and sister became
caught up in what US Secretary of State John Kerry would later refer to as
"a massacre".
Thirty-four people were killed at the camp
when Iraqi troops opened fire on the residents, herding them into position
using armoured personnel vehicles. Farzad later saw footage of the attack.
"They slaughtered them in that camp," he says.
The attack on the camp and a small service
that inmates held in commemoration of the dead at Ashraf landed Farzad back in
the hands of the intelligence services and returned to Ward 209. The beatings
would resume, as would the attempts of a forced confession.
"They had gone and through their agents
and killed my brother and sister," he says with a bitter laugh. "And
even then, they would come and interrogate me and try to pressure me to go on
to television and speak against my own brother and sister who had been
killed," he adds.
Farzad was released in 2014 when his sentenced
ended and after a year of hassle from the security services and refusals for
job permits, he decided to flee Iran though his connection to the PMOI. Farzad
has requested that details of how he was smuggled out of the country and
finally to France not be revealed in case they jeopardised other activists.
Now in France, he remains dedicated to a free
Iran. "My life now is for the overthrowing of the regime in Iran," he
says. "It is not so important for me necessary that I will see that freedom
myself. What is important is that Iran becomes free."
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