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Iranian ex-official denies role in killing of political dissidents in 1988

  • Hamid Noury’s lawyer refuted the charges including ‘murder’ and ‘war crimes’ in 1988
  • Swedish court officials believe Tuesday’s case is the first of its kind against someone accused over the killings

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Protesters gather outside court as the trial of Hamid Noury starts in Stockholm. Photo: EPA-EFE
Lawyers for a former Iranian prison official on Tuesday denied his involvement in the 1988 execution of thousands of political dissidents on the first day of a landmark case in Sweden likely to stoke tensions in the Islamic republic.
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Hamid Noury, 60, appeared relaxed and smiling in Stockholm District Court while his defence counsel Daniel Marcus refuted the charges including “murder” and “war crimes” dating from between July 30 and August 16, 1988, when Noury was assistant to the deputy prosecutor of Gohardasht prison in Karaj, near Tehran.

Earlier Kristina Lindhoff Carleson, for the prosecution, read out the indictment which accused Noury of “intentionally taking the life of a very large number of prisoners sympathetic to or belonging to the People’s Mujahedin (MEK)”.

MEK supporters were among several hundred protesters who gathered outside the court carrying photos of the dead and called for justice for the estimated 5,000 prisoners killed across Iran, allegedly under the orders of supreme leader Ayatollah Khomeini in reprisal for attacks carried out by the MEK at the end of the Iran-Iraq war of 1980 to 88.
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The demonstrators urged Swedish and international justice to condemn Iran’s newly inaugurated president Ebrahim Raisi, also accused by rights groups of involvement in the extrajudicial killings.

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