The Hamid Nouri Islamic مقاله واشنگتن پست در باره دستگيري و صدور حكم زندان حميد نوري شكنجه گر وقاتل زندانيان گوهردشت كرج در دهه شصت، در فرودگاه استكهلم و كشور سويد! اين پيروزي بزرگ ملي و حقوقي در سطح جهان با همكاري زندانيان سياسي، آن دوران از جمله ايرج مصداقي، و با مديريت كاوه موسوي حقوقدان جهاني، قاضي دادگاه جهاني لاهه، و دبير امور حقوقي شوراي مديريت گذار به دست آمد، اين پرونده مي تواند پرونده جنايتكار عليه بشريت را براي خامنهي و جمهوري اسلامي باز كند!
government lawyer official thought the world had forgotten a massacre 31 years ago. He was wrong.
Some 800 portraits of victims of the massacre of political prisoners in Iran in 1988 on the Esplanade des Invalides in Paris on October 29, 2019. (Eric Feferberg/Afp Via Getty Images)
By
Christian Caryl
Op-ed Editor/International
November 20, 2019 at 5:15 p.m. EST
Correction: An earlier version of this article incorrectly characterized the defense counsel for Hamid Nouri. Nouri is represented by a Swedish lawyer. This version has been updated.
On Nov. 9, a 58-year-old Iranian lawyer by the name of Hamid Nouri arrived at Stockholm’s international airport. His papers were in order; he was traveling on a visa issued by Italy, good for the entire Schengen Area of the European Union. So he must have been startled when Swedish officials took him into a room and began to interrogate him about his past.
Nouri is still in detention today, awaiting a decision by Swedish prosecutors on whether he should face trial for allegedly participating in crimes against humanity. He stands accused of abetting the execution of thousands of political prisoners in Iran in 1988 — a crime for which no senior official in that country has ever faced official accountability.
Iranian operatives have been convicted in the past of crimes they’ve committed in France or Germany. But this is the first time that a high-ranking Iranian will face charges under the concept of universal jurisdiction — the same principle underlying the prosecution of ex-Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet in Spain starting in 1998. “In this case, we’re talking about the Swedish court asserting jurisdiction over crimes that took place in Iran 31 years ago,” says Iranian-born British lawyer Kaveh Moussavi. “If you commit crimes that are basically an outrage against the conscience of humankind, then expect humankind anywhere on the planet to assert jurisdiction.”
محكوميت حميدنوري به محكوميت جمهوري اسلامي منجر خواهد شد!
پرونده جنايت عليه بشريت ملا پاسدارها و نوكرانشان روي ميز آمده است!
#ديكتاتوربه_پايان_سلام_كن!
#internet4Iran
#جنبش_ستمديدگان_دادخواه_ايران
http://t.me/khabargar
government lawyer official thought the world had forgotten a massacre 31 years ago. He was wrong.
Some 800 portraits of victims of the massacre of political prisoners in Iran in 1988 on the Esplanade des Invalides in Paris on October 29, 2019. (Eric Feferberg/Afp Via Getty Images)
By
Christian Caryl
Op-ed Editor/International
November 20, 2019 at 5:15 p.m. EST
Correction: An earlier version of this article incorrectly characterized the defense counsel for Hamid Nouri. Nouri is represented by a Swedish lawyer. This version has been updated.
On Nov. 9, a 58-year-old Iranian lawyer by the name of Hamid Nouri arrived at Stockholm’s international airport. His papers were in order; he was traveling on a visa issued by Italy, good for the entire Schengen Area of the European Union. So he must have been startled when Swedish officials took him into a room and began to interrogate him about his past.
Nouri is still in detention today, awaiting a decision by Swedish prosecutors on whether he should face trial for allegedly participating in crimes against humanity. He stands accused of abetting the execution of thousands of political prisoners in Iran in 1988 — a crime for which no senior official in that country has ever faced official accountability.
Iranian operatives have been convicted in the past of crimes they’ve committed in France or Germany. But this is the first time that a high-ranking Iranian will face charges under the concept of universal jurisdiction — the same principle underlying the prosecution of ex-Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet in Spain starting in 1998. “In this case, we’re talking about the Swedish court asserting jurisdiction over crimes that took place in Iran 31 years ago,” says Iranian-born British lawyer Kaveh Moussavi. “If you commit crimes that are basically an outrage against the conscience of humankind, then expect humankind anywhere on the planet to assert jurisdiction.”
محكوميت حميدنوري به محكوميت جمهوري اسلامي منجر خواهد شد!
پرونده جنايت عليه بشريت ملا پاسدارها و نوكرانشان روي ميز آمده است!
#ديكتاتوربه_پايان_سلام_كن!
#internet4Iran
#جنبش_ستمديدگان_دادخواه_ايران
http://t.me/khabargar