IRAN –
A GODLESS CLERICAL REGIME GONE ROGUE
Electrocution,
rape and drug-induced confessions
Farzad
Madadzadeh a former political prisoner reveals the reality of brutal torture
and hangings in Iran's most notorious jail after his escape to Europe
Stes de Necker
The
30-year-old Farzad Madadzadeh, speaking out after escaping from Iran.
Blindfolded
with his hands in cuffs, he would be beaten for up to 16 hours a day in an Iranian
prison.
He
was electrocuted and punched by three guards who threw him around like a
'football', before returning him to a tiny 1.5m by 2m solitary confinement
cell.
Each
night for five years he would fall asleep wondering if death would come for him
in the morning, or whether yet another day of torture and questioning was in
store.
His
only crime?
Speaking
out against Iran's regime.
'You
are subjected to all kinds of torture - psychological and physical. Constant
interrogation, constant beating around the clock.’
'Any
moment you wait for something to happen - a new torture session or a death
sentence.
'You
are totally isolated from the rest of the world. The only voice you hear is the
voice of death.'
He
claims guards would bring drugs including heroin into the prison to encourage
addiction, making it easier for interrogators to 'crack' prisoners suffering
from withdrawal symptoms.
Last
year, the country had the second highest number of executions in the world
after China and also killed the most juvenile offenders, according to Human
Rights Watch.
And
it remains one of the biggest jailers of bloggers, journalists and social media
activists.
Farzad,
born in Jolfa in north-west Iran, became a political activist after watching an
illegal television channel run by the People's Mojahedin Organisation of Iran -
an opposition movement that advocates the overthrowing of the Islamic Republic
of Iran.
He
and others like him created an opposition cell and distributed leaflets, put up
banners, took part in protests and helped mobilise young people. Farzad
would scrawl anti-regime graffiti on walls and collect information for the
resistance - all the while protesting without violence.
He
was arrested in February 2009 and sentenced to five years in prison for
supporting the People's Mojahedin Organisation of Iran - delisted as a
terrorist group by the United States in 2012 and by the EU in 2009.
This
was shortly before the 2009 uprising when a mass demonstration erupted in the
country as a result of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad winning the presidential election -
which many believed was rigged. They were the biggest protests the country had
seen since the Islamic Revolution in 1979.
Farzad
was first taken to Evin Prison - Iran's most notorious jail.
'I
spent 10 months in ward 209, which is controlled by the Ministry of
Intelligence,' he explained. 'It is the most vicious ward in the whole of Iran.
'I
was immediately blindfolded. The interrogations started - from 8am to 11pm or
midnight.
'If
you said things they didn't like to hear or you did not conform, the beating
began. They hit you very hard, as hard as they could.
'You
were transferred to your own solitary confinement at midnight. The next day it
continued.'
It
was of one Farzad's interrogators who informed him his sentence was five years.
To his knowledge there had been no trial.
He
was kept in a 1.5m by 2m solitary confinement cell for six months - but was
allowed a visit from his relatives four months into his jail term.
'When
my mother and my father and sister came to visit me they asked me, 'where is
our son?' They didn't recognise me because I had been so badly beaten. They
would torture with electric shock batons and a lot of people were burnt with
cigarette lighters on their back. Somebody
was beaten so hard on the ear that he went deaf. I have some hearing problems
myself because of all the beating on my ear. No real doctor was allowed to come
in and treat us. 'They tortured the prisoners to death by depriving them of any
medical treatment.'
Two
of his friends, political prisoners who had taken part in the uprising, were
sentenced to execution. The men told him the interrogators pulled out their
fingernails.
One
suffered a broken back during interrogation and did not receive medical
treatment, another was raped by a male guard - prompting him to make false
confessions, he said.
Farzan's
interrogation continued for three or four months, although he cannot be sure of
exactly how much time passed. He was constantly questioned about his opposition
organisation and early on was asked to speak out publicly against it.
'The
worst thing about prison is that they take your best friends and hang them,' he
added. 'You can’t imagine how it feels to lay down at night and in the morning
you wake up and you see your best friend is hanged.
'The
people who were so intimate to you and their only crime was believing in
democracy.’ Many of his friends and family went to Camp Ashraf, the camp in
Iraq that was home to the headquarters of the People's Mojahedin Organisation
of Iran and where Farzan's brother and sister were killed in April 2011.
Iraqi
security forces stormed the camp and it is thought as many as 36 people were
killed - a figure disputed by Iraqi officials.
'They
were totally defenceless and were overrun by tanks and heavy weaponry,' he
said.
At
the time, Farzad was at Gohardasht Prison, near Tehran, where his fellow
inmates included 13 and 14-year-olds who had been involved in 'accidental'
killings and were waiting to be hanged when they turned 18.
It
was here that he witnessed drugs - heroin, crack and crystal meth - being
brought into the prison.
The
Ministry of Intelligence and the guards themselves, they deliberately
distributed drugs in prisons to make the prisoners addicted. When they get
addicted they can be forced to do anything they want. They give up the idea of
resisting.
If
you have 30g of this kind of drugs on the streets you are sentenced to death.
Despite
the threat of beatings, he continued his activist work from behind bars until
his release.
Asked
why, he explains: 'Silence is treason. If I had become silent, it would have
been the most despicable thing I could have done.'
On
the day he was due to be released in February 2014, Farzad's excited family
waited outside the prison for 10 hours in the bitter cold. He said he was kept
for two extra days out of spite.
It is
believed there are still hundreds of political prisoners being kept in the
country's prisons.
According
to a report produced by the Iran Human Rights Documentation Center earlier this
year, evidence shows the prisons suffer from extreme overcrowding, poor hygiene
and water quality, inadequate medical facilities, violence targeting political
prisoners and prisoners of conscience and chronic abuse of inmates by the
authorities.
Farzad
was not allowed to leave Iran, but fled the country secretly and fled to Europe.
Many of his relatives remain in the country and he is reluctant to discuss them
in fear they could face repercussions.
'Sometimes
in the middle of the night I wake up in fear of being arrested,' he said. 'I
know its not real but this feeling comes back
'I
know these memories and these feelings won't go away. That will only go away
when the regime is overthrown.'
Farzad
is one of the many willing to speak out so they can be a voice to the voiceless
- those who have died and others oppressed by the regime.
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