
          
           Former Student Warns of Islamic Republic's Plan 
            
            By: Amil Imani 
            
          
          Ali was a student at the University of Tehran. He was 
            brutally attacked by the Ansar-i Hezbullah, (the militia force of 
            the Islamic Republic,) during its attack on the university's dormitory 
            9 July 1999. 
            It was an attack that sent shock waves around the country prompting 
            six consecutive days of unrest across Iran. 
            
            The notorious Evin prison became Ali's new educator. He was interrogated 
            and charged for being a protester. He was brutally beaten, forced 
            to confess crimes of which he never committed, and he was imprisoned 
            for nearly four years. 
            
            The Islamic Republic practices a similar style to Stalin, using forced 
            confessions to prosecute the open-minded activist in Iran. This is 
            not a 30-minute television drama; and unless you've been deprived 
            of the basic necessities for weeks on end or longer, and physically 
            attacked by guards each night, it may impossible to see yourself admitting 
            to a crime you didn't committed. 
            
            Arrests usually occur in the dead of night. Individuals later find 
            themselves held in detention without any formal charges whatsoever. 
            And after days or weeks of torture it is easy for the mullah to obtain 
            self-incriminating confessions. The Islamic Republic is focusing on 
            destroying the individual's reputation, dignity, and honor one by 
            one. They sow seeds of contention, enmity, friction, and tear to pieces 
            the best of human characteristics. 
            
            The Intelligence Ministry of the Islamic Republic often arrest and 
            persecute people not necessarily for what they did, but for who they 
            are and what the Republic perceives to be a threat. Their targets 
            have been those groups of people who were acclaimed or fluent with 
            foreign languages, educators, members of pen organizations, writers, 
            poets, intellectuals, and of course the journalists. 
            
            I ran into Ali recently and he gave me permission to tell the world 
            his story. Ali is not his real name, but he fears that certain details 
            or any likeness of or about him could still jeopardize the safety 
            of his relatives living in Iran. 
            
            He recalled how he was interrogated. He spent most of his time in 
            solitary confinement and they told him he'd waged a war against Allah, 
            which is a crime punishable by death. According to the words of the 
            merciful and compassionate God of Quran, "The punishment for 
            those who wage war against Allah and His Prophet and make mischief 
            in the land, is to murder them, crucify them, or cut off a hand and 
            foot on opposite sides...their doom is dreadful. They will not escape 
            the fire, suffering constantly." 5:33 
            
            While it is difficult for him to speak of the experience, Ali first 
            describes harassment and intimidation of the Iranian youth by the 
            Islamic Republic lackeys. He concludes the Islamic Republic is set 
            upon world domination through Islamic wars and conquests, and for 
            this they need to brutalize Iranian people to bring them to the will 
            of Allah. 
            
            Terror, brutality and violence are necessary tools to achieve their 
            ultimate goal in regional and world domination. At times, Ali was 
            confined in a very small cell. It was too small to sit or lie down. 
            He was confined in that position for months. Others, he could hear, 
            faced a more terrible fate. They were subjected to inhuman tortures. 
            
            
            They all were subjected to different methods of torture. Some escaped 
            by going insane. He paused for a moment as I caught his eyes filling 
            with tears. He deeply sighed and asked, "Where were the human 
            rights and humanitarian groups during that time?" 
            
            There were four revolutionary guards who took turns beating Ali, usually 
            during the nighttime hours. "They would strip all my clothing, 
            take me into a room and put on my knees with my head down," Ali 
            said softly. "A bearded, heavy man pushed the edge of his knife 
            down against the back of my neck. 
            
            "He told me, he would slit my throat if I didn't confess that 
            I am part of the 'monafeghin' organization, the 'MKO' who actually 
            were the fuel behind the Islamic Revolution." 
            
            Time would stand still with the edge of the knife against Ali's throat. 
            "Suddenly, you hear nothing except silence. 
            
            "One wonders how these people live with themselves. Do they have 
            children of their own? How would they like their kids to be treated 
            like animals?" 
            
            I kept gazing into his eyes with disbelief. He started mumbling as 
            though there were not enough time in his lifetime to express his story. 
            This is the story of so many innocent Iranians who are forced to waste 
            their precious time inside the Islamic Republic prisons for simply 
            wanting a better life not only for themselves, but for their fellow 
            countrymen as well. To the Islamic Republic, this is called waging 
            a war against Allah. 
            
            "Some would sit in solitary confinement, starving and rotting. 
            Many die due to the heavy beating and they remove the bodies quickly 
            in the middle of the night to an unknown area," he said. 
            
            "My cell was very small and impenetrable. The walls were made 
            from heavy cement. No windows. The doors were made of thick metal 
            and very strong. On the ceiling almost 6 meters above, there were 
            two ventilation holes from which you could hear the screams of others, 
            repenting and begging the torturers to stop beating them up." 
            
            
            The methods of torture he described ranged from the use of mechanical 
            instruments for which to inflict tissue damage, to psychological and 
            physiological techniques, such as solitary confinement and sleep deprivation. 
            
            
            Ali had a lot more to say, certainly more than a caring man can bear 
            even second hand. Ali and others like him are prisoners of conscience. 
            They believe in freedom, justice and liberty. These three principles 
            of humanity are forbidden in the Muslim countries. These words equate 
            to waging war against Allah, thus death will be awaiting you. 
            
            Iranians must learn that history does not repeat itself. We repeat 
            history! What is sad is that the world community and, in the case 
            of Ali, Iranian communities outside Iran do not do enough to expose 
            the Islamic Republic's war against all living things. 
            
            Unfortunately, most Iranians in the West are more interested in making 
            money than helping people like Ali. Iranian communities have become 
            extremely nonchalant, thus, they have become pseudo-Iranians, or merely 
            spectators.