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Iran Election Diary

Abtahi's blog, updated from jail
Abtahi's blog, updated from jail
Iran’s former Vice President Mohammad Ali Abtahi, who was arrested in the postelection crackdown, has updated his blog from prison.

The move seems to be a clumsy attempt by the authorities to demonstrate that prisoners are being very well treated and that the reports by the families and rights groups about Abtahi and other detainees being under pressure to make false confessions are not true.

With a new photo showing him smiling to the camera, Abtahi writes that he was shocked when his interrogator told him that he could start blogging. He says the interrogator gave him permission after he saw his confiscated laptop and he had told him how much he misses his blog.

In the blog entry, Abtahi writes that the interrogator is the one with whom he’s very friendly (he talked about his “friendly relations" before in a televised interview).

Abtahi’s family and rights activists say he’s been under pressure to make confessions at court and during the televised interview aired last month.

Abtahi also writes that he knows that some of his friends are also jailed and he’s heard “here and there" some names. He says he believes prison has been difficult for all but he adds that he can understand why they were arrested.

He says that since the authorities couldn’t arrest the “main leaders” they arrested him and other reformists to calm the crisis that resulted from the “misgivings” about fraud in the June 12 vote.

Many fellow bloggers have dismissed the blog, saying that it was certainly not written by Abtahi and that he was probably forced to do it under pressure.

One blogger has carefully analyzed the blog entry and highlighted a list of differences in the terms and words that Abtahi used in his prison writing and from before.

Another blogger has reacted to Abtahi’s latest writings by creating an imaginary blog entry by another jailed reformist, Saeed Hajarian, where he describes his friendly relations with his interrogator, Haj Ali and says that they swim together and have kebab for dinner.

In the blog, Hajarian says that he asked his interrogator's permission to prove that there is no torture in Iran’s prisons and that the teeth marks on his lower lips during his recent court appearance were the result of him carelessly gorging himself on delicious kebabs.

-- Golnaz Esfandiari
A reformist website “Norooznews” has reported that on July 12 and 15, 44 unidentified people who lost their lives in the postelection violence were buried in unidentified graves at the Behesht Zahra cemetery.

The website, which is close to Iran’s largest pro-reform party Mosharekat, claims that it will release pictures and videos of the secret burial in the coming days and at an “appropriate time.”

A reformist legislator, Majid Nasirpour, has said that the allegations should be investigated.

A conservative legislator, Hamid Reza Katouzian, has said the evidence about the reported secret burial should be submitted to parliament.



Another conservative legislator, Farhad Tajari, had dismissed the Norooznews report as a lie and said that the postelection arrests and clampdown was transparent.

The director of Behesht Zahra organization, Mahmud Rezaian, has told the semi-official Mehr news agency that the reported secret burial is just a rumor and that no unidentified corpses have been buried at the cemetery in recent days.

But Norooznews says that people can go and visit the graves, which are in the newer part of the cemetery located south of Tehran, and pay their respects to “the martyrs.” According to the website the graves are at section 302 of the cemetery.

Iranian officials have said that about 30 people died in the postelection violence but the opposition believes the number of dead is much higher than the official toll. Some sources claim over 350 people were killed in the postelection crackdown. At least two people reportedly lost their lives as a result of torture in prison.

--Golnaz Esfandiari

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