|
Interview with the Commander of
Jondollah and his Hostage:
Pass Our Message!
In a telephone
conversation with Rooz Online, Abdol-Malek Rigi, the commander of the
notorious armed group Jondollah which has killed Iranian nationals,
military personnel and even officials or taken them hostage, allowed us to
speak with one of its current hostages Amir Harati. The interview was held
in two sessions on the same day. Here are the excerpts.
Rooz ®: Could you
please introduce yourself?
Abdol-Malek Rigi (AMR): I am Abdol-Malek Rigi, 23 years old and I am in
charge of the Jondollah movement.
R: You started
rather soon.
AMR: [laughing] I had to. When I saw that they
are not letting me grow up, I was forced to take up arms.
R: When did you
take up arms?
AMR: It is four years now.
R: How did you
come to the conclusion that you needed to take up arms? What were you
trying to do that you couldn’t achieve, leading you to resort to arms?
AMR: In the past we resorted to many means to
protect the national and religious rights of the Baluchis and Sunnis in
Baluchistan province. As you know, everybody in Baluchistan is a Sunni and
a Baluch. But since this revolution, some 27 years ago, till today the
Sunnis have remained the most impoverished group in the country with lots
of serious issues. They have suffered and been tortured. The Sunnis in
general, and the ethnic minorities such as the Kurds and Baluchis in
particular have always had major problems. But since the Kurds have been
more active, and have been closer to other countries, have had more
political activities, they have made their demands known to the world. It
has been different for the Baluchis who have never made their voices
heard. Whenever they engaged in religious activities, they were branded as
foreign agents and hanged. Hundreds of Sunni clerics, activists and
combatants have lost their lives. We now notice in Tehran that someone
like Akbar Ganji has launched programs for democracy, which the world
supports. Everybody talks about him, even the whole world, and
journalists. Everybody heard his calls and spread them to the world. But
in Baluchistan we have not had that. If anybody made a sensible criticism
about something or some official, he would be immediately arrested or
completely eliminated, or silenced. Many have been subjected to all kinds
of torture. What I am saying is that before us, there were many who wanted
to engage in political activities but the government denied this to them.
That is when we started our activities with the aim of defending our
rights. And then we realized that there is no other way than to take up
arms and begin an armed struggle. This is our last means.
R: Where did you
study? How did you learn about these things?
AMR: Right here. Through life. We realized that
no one was defending our rights. Whenever a journalist is arrested, the
whole world is mobilized against it. Whereas our problems are never
pursued. There was a case when a man was arrested because he had a
CD, and then his hand was cut off. Today I heard
a man had been arrested because he had a Tasuki CD [Tasuk is a region in
the south of Iran), and then his nails were pulled out of his fingers. How
could we remain indifferent when things like this happen to our people.
You tell me, do we have an option other than armed struggle? They have
committed genocide in our province. They kill people simply because they
are Baluchis or Sunnis. What other posture can we adopt against them? The
have not left any democratic solution for us. They have crushed our
national and religious identity, and then they call us secessionists! We
are not secessionists. Had we been, we would not have accepted talks with
them. Even though these people are not trustworthy. We want to hold talks
with them in the presence of formal international organizations. Talks in
the desert or in a house are useless. We do not trust them because they
have revoked on their earlier promises they made to us.
R: How many
hostages do you hold right now?
AMR: 6 are from the town of Tasuki, and we have
Ahmad Sheiki who is a senior commander in the Baseej para-military force.
R: Who was the
young man you recently killed?
AMR: His name was Hamid Reza Kaveh. He was a
colonel in the police, a commander of Special Forces. You have no idea
what he had done.
R: So you had
planned these hostage events?
AMR: Yes, some of them. Our targets were the
governor and governor general of the province, who escaped. Since then,
they have been saying that we are simply smugglers and vagabonds. I do not
refute that among our tribes smugglers exist as well. But we must look and
understand why they have become smugglers. Why do they instill hatred
against the Baluchis when the Baluchis are like any other Iranian. Nobody
hears their calls.
R: Is it possible
to talk to the hostages?
AMR: [silence] Yes, call back in 6 hours.
6 hours later
AMR:
Come talk to him.
R: Hello. Who are
you?
Amir Harati (AH): I am Amir, Amir Harati.
R: When did they
capture you?
AH: About two months ago. I was in Tasuki on my way from Zabol to Zahedan
when they captured me.
R: What do you do?
AH: I am a police officer.
R: An officer?
AH: Yes. I am serving in Zahedan. I was driving in my personal car. They
thought that I am part of the military and so captured me [his voice
begins to crack].
R: What is your
condition now?
AH: I am in good spirits. They treat us well and we have no problems in
this regard.
R: What are you
concerned about?
AH: We want to return to our families [he says with a cracked voice]. If
they meet the requests of these brothers, then I will be returned to my
wife and children.
R: If officials
could hear you now, what would you tell them?
AH: [he begins to plea] I urgently request that they solve the Jondollah
issues. They too have prisoners. Their prisoners have been in limbo for
years now. Free them so they too can return to their families. Then we too
shall be able to return to ours. I have personally talked to Mr. Shahriari
who is a Majlis (Iran's Parliament) MP. I asked
him what he had done for us. He said we pray for you. What kind of an
answer is this. We can do that ourselves here, day in, day out.
R: Are you Shiite?
AH: Yes.
R: What is your
request and message?
AH: I request in the name of the same God that you and we believe in, to
do what these brethren want so I can return to my life. I am innocent. Why
do they call and say “kill them, make them martyrs”? Is this the God’s
way?
R: Do you mean
some officials tell Jondollah to kill you?
AH: Yes. They tell them to kill us. They way we have plenty of martyrs. Is
this a human thing to say?
R: Where are you
being kept? In which country?
AH: It is not clear to me. I think we are in the mountains of Baluchistan.
Our eyes were blindfolded when we were brought here.
R: Do you believe
that if the wishes of these people are not fulfilled, they will kill you?
AH: Yes. Absolutely.
R: How do they
kill?
AH: [silence] I do not know. I know that if their requests are not met,
they will definitely kill us. Please convey our message to the
authorities. We have not committed any crime. Please do something so that
our request and those of the Jondollah are met.
The phone goes dead, as if
Mr. Amir Harati was taken away.
R: Are you there,
Mr. Rigi?
AMR: [heavy voice] Yes
R: Difficult
situation, isn’t it?
AMR: Yes
R: Both sides are
in a difficult situation.
AMR: Yes. We too are suffering because these
people are here. Just as we suffer about the conditions of our people who
are under torture and pain over there. I was told today that they had
attacked people and their houses. They took away innocent people. We even
told the government to leave innocent people aside and deal with us. We
are soldiers, as are you. We can tolerate each other. But these Shiites
and Farsis on one side and Sunnis and Baluchis on the other are innocent
people and unarmed. But since they cannot fight us, they attack the
innocent and the unarmed. They view us not only as not Islamic, but also
sub-human. Honestly I think the problems that we have in our region are
non existent any where else in the world. The government itself wants
this. It wants to crush the Sunnis and eliminate them.
R: These problems
are very fundamental. You wish to resolve them with 4 hostages?
AMR: No. We have done it so the government comes
forward to fundamentally solve the problems. They however respond with
force. They have sent 22,000 forces to the region to fight us, crush us.
And no one in the world hears us. Where are these human rights
organizations? Why is it that they can’t hear our voices and calls?
R: Are you sure
they can’t reach you?
AMR: Yes
R: How?
AMR: We have experienced their fights. They make
big claims. The reality is different. In one battle with us, they brought
in some 200 vehicles and 1,700 soldiers. They attacked us from the air and
the ground. They attacked at 7am and then they requested a cease fire at
4:30pm to pick up their dead. We know them and their strength very well.
They can’t reach us, so they attack the innocent.
R: So you are in
Iran now?
AMR: I am on Iranian soil.
R: What is your
relationship with Iran? Are you after separation?
AMR: If they do not listen to our requests and
continue their evil plans in the region, things between us shall be the
same. The Shiite can freely practice their views here now, but if a Sunni
says something different, he will end up in prison. You have seen our
livelihood. We cannot continue living like this. We have come to the
conclusion that death is better than this life.
R: I asked about
your relationship with Iran. Do you see yourself as an Iranian?
AMR: Yes. We are Iranians. Iran is my
motherland. This land and its waters belong to all Iranians. We do not
want to destroy the national unity and the territorial integrity of the
country. I openly and without fear talk to all government officials and
tell them our views. I have told them that I do not wish to destroy the
regional situation, especially under the current conditions that Iran is
under. But if they continue, we will have to opt for a policy that brings
us closer to victory. If you respond to us with force, then there is no
difference between you and a foreigner. I have made this very clear to
officials, who unfortunately think that just we are talking with them, we
are in a weak position.
R: Do you think
they will release your prisoners? Doesn’t look like it.
AMR: Our deadline has passed. We shall wait a
few more days. If nothing happens, then we shall act and capture even more
important people. We will then capture their most senior people. Then they
will come forward to make a deal with us.
RoozOnline
|