The Prague Post - Swedish court jails ex-Iran official for life over 1988 executions

EUR -
AED 4.273133
AFN 76.211909
ALL 96.661826
AMD 447.109164
ANG 2.082731
AOA 1066.973758
ARS 1666.776288
AUD 1.774976
AWG 2.097296
AZN 1.982306
BAM 1.955403
BBD 2.345103
BDT 142.401069
BGN 1.955809
BHD 0.438584
BIF 3448.758083
BMD 1.163549
BND 1.509061
BOB 8.063362
BRL 6.249888
BSD 1.164328
BTN 102.675258
BWP 15.539576
BYN 3.96826
BYR 22805.552775
BZD 2.341804
CAD 1.628864
CDF 2594.71347
CHF 0.926215
CLF 0.027892
CLP 1094.203016
CNY 8.273354
CNH 8.271051
COP 4475.880619
CRC 583.57141
CUC 1.163549
CUP 30.834038
CVE 110.766285
CZK 24.336259
DJF 206.785715
DKK 7.469726
DOP 74.524981
DZD 151.275323
EGP 55.211896
ERN 17.453229
ETB 176.039657
FJD 2.667727
FKP 0.87106
GBP 0.872632
GEL 3.164902
GGP 0.87106
GHS 12.633433
GIP 0.87106
GMD 84.939432
GNF 10099.021114
GTQ 8.919188
GYD 243.60051
HKD 9.037852
HNL 30.682476
HRK 7.533166
HTG 152.495742
HUF 388.464601
IDR 19329.334945
ILS 3.789381
IMP 0.87106
INR 102.656811
IQD 1524.24868
IRR 48941.764191
ISK 142.976763
JEP 0.87106
JMD 186.598883
JOD 0.824981
JPY 178.089255
KES 150.435159
KGS 101.75217
KHR 4683.283168
KMF 492.180536
KPW 1047.193932
KRW 1667.505174
KWD 0.356791
KYD 0.970249
KZT 625.8079
LAK 25249.004941
LBP 104195.77775
LKR 354.038295
LRD 213.453021
LSL 20.060074
LTL 3.435657
LVL 0.70382
LYD 6.335491
MAD 10.734936
MDL 19.845859
MGA 5259.240425
MKD 61.612808
MMK 2442.923976
MNT 4179.139434
MOP 9.314787
MRU 46.617588
MUR 52.929948
MVR 17.813778
MWK 2020.495668
MXN 21.396402
MYR 4.897141
MZN 74.362357
NAD 20.060091
NGN 1697.047312
NIO 42.760067
NOK 11.62381
NPR 164.278801
NZD 2.018368
OMR 0.447378
PAB 1.164363
PEN 3.94098
PGK 4.880214
PHP 68.516694
PKR 326.957365
PLN 4.233976
PYG 8243.254437
QAR 4.236772
RON 5.083306
RSD 117.248482
RUB 92.213982
RWF 1687.145486
SAR 4.36342
SBD 9.576694
SCR 16.582553
SDG 699.876733
SEK 10.922405
SGD 1.508983
SHP 0.872963
SLE 26.998039
SLL 24399.03205
SOS 664.253631
SRD 46.422679
STD 24083.107052
STN 24.89994
SVC 10.187361
SYP 12865.038858
SZL 20.058966
THB 38.025162
TJS 10.76991
TMT 4.084056
TND 3.388247
TOP 2.725152
TRY 48.77402
TTD 7.902953
TWD 35.658689
TZS 2874.772512
UAH 49.0146
UGX 4048.177564
USD 1.163549
UYU 46.430567
UZS 14035.316535
VES 248.011521
VND 30607.146212
VUV 142.345259
WST 3.259228
XAF 655.812491
XAG 0.024765
XAU 0.00029
XCD 3.144548
XCG 2.098356
XDR 0.81562
XOF 655.077532
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.680979
ZAR 20.051224
ZMK 10473.333626
ZMW 25.586582
ZWL 374.662178
  • RYCEF

    0.1800

    14.95

    +1.2%

  • RBGPF

    -3.0900

    76

    -4.07%

  • CMSC

    0.0350

    24.315

    +0.14%

  • VOD

    0.1050

    11.835

    +0.89%

  • BCC

    -0.0800

    73.01

    -0.11%

  • RELX

    0.0750

    46.645

    +0.16%

  • SCS

    -0.0700

    16.71

    -0.42%

  • NGG

    0.0090

    76.959

    +0.01%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    24.65

    0%

  • BCE

    -0.2250

    23.585

    -0.95%

  • GSK

    0.5800

    43.82

    +1.32%

  • AZN

    0.5950

    83.885

    +0.71%

  • RIO

    0.3250

    70.865

    +0.46%

  • BP

    0.0950

    34.635

    +0.27%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    14.1

    +0.21%

  • BTI

    0.1350

    52.205

    +0.26%

Swedish court jails ex-Iran official for life over 1988 executions
Swedish court jails ex-Iran official for life over 1988 executions / Photo: Duygu GETIREN - TT NEWS AGENCY/AFP/File

Swedish court jails ex-Iran official for life over 1988 executions

A Swedish court on Thursday handed a life sentence to former Iranian prison official Hamid Noury for crimes committed during a 1988 purge of dissidents, in the first trial related to the mass executions.

Text size:

Noury, 61, was convicted of a "serious crime against international law" and "murder", the Stockholm district court said in a statement.

"The sentence is life imprisonment."

According to the court, Noury was an assistant prosecutor in a prison near Tehran at the time of the events.

"The investigation has shown that the accused, jointly and in collusion with others, participated in the commission of the criminal acts," the court said.

"He has, under an alias and in the role of assistant to the deputy prosecutor, retrieved prisoners, brought them to the committee and escorted them to the execution site."

The proceedings, which have been running since August 2021, have strained relations between Sweden and Iran, raising concerns about reprisals against Western prisoners held by the Islamic regime. Two Swedish-Iranian citizens are on death row.

The case related to the killing of at least 5,000 prisoners across Iran, allegedly ordered by supreme leader Ayatollah Khomeini.

The killings were to avenge attacks carried out by exiled opposition group the People's Mujahedin of Iran (MEK) at the end of the Iran-Iraq war of 1980-88.

Noury was sentenced both for his role in the killings targeting the MEK and for participating in a second wave directed at "left-wing sympathisers who were deemed to have renounced their Islamic faith," the court said.

The charge of "a serious crime against international law" related to the first wave and the "murder" charge related to the second.

- 'We won this time' -

Throughout the nine months of hearings, Noury, often theatrical and smiling, rejected the testimony of former detainees.

He argued that he was on leave during the period in question, and said he worked in another prison. Noury denounced the accusations as a plot by the MEK to discredit the Islamic Republic.

Noury's lawyer Thomas Soderqvist told AFP they were "disappointed", and that they would now review the verdict.

"The sentence will be appealed," Soderqvist added.

Noury was arrested at a Stockholm airport in November 2019 after Iranian dissidents in Sweden filed police complaints against him.

During the trial, which briefly relocated to Albania to hear testimony at the end of 2021, MEK supporters protested loudly outside the Stockholm courthouse, and a few hundred had gathered ahead of the verdict.

"We won this time," protesters chanted as they cheered and waved flags after the verdict.

"This is a great day for me, a great day for all the victims' families," Mehri Emrani, a 61-year-old MEK supporter who served in prison herself and whose husband was a plaintiff, told AFP.

"This is not only against Hamid Noury, this decision is against the whole regime in Iran," Kenneth Lewis, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, told reporters on the steps of the courthouse.

The trial has rendered Stockholm's already chilly relations with Tehran even frostier.

This is partly because rights activists accuse senior Iranian officials now in power -- including current President Ebrahim Raisi -- of having been members of the committees that handed down the death sentences.

The so-called "death committees" are thought to have sent at least 5,000 to be executed. The MEK puts the figure as high as 30,000 victims.

Raisi himself has denied ever having been part of these committees.

- 'Hostage' -

Tehran has repeatedly called on the Swedish government for Hamid Noury's release.

Swedish Foreign Minister Ann Linde reaffirmed to her Iranian counterpart in early July that the government was unable to do anything as the Nordic country's courts are "completely independent".

Concerned about a recent spate of arrests of Europeans in the country "for no apparent reason", Sweden has been advising citizens against travel to Iran since late June.

The main concern is the Iranian-Swedish academic Ahmadreza Djalali. Sentenced to death in Iran in 2017 on espionage charges, and currently awaiting the sentence to be carried out.

Amnesty International has accused Tehran of holding him "hostage" in an attempt to force an exchange with Noury and a former Iranian diplomat sentenced to 20 years in prison in Belgium, Assadollah Assadi.

A controversial treaty is being considered by the Belgian parliament that would allow the exchange of prisoners with Iran.

C.Novotny--TPP