Iran militia members exposed by blogger
http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/europe/08/05/pleitgen.iran.germany.blogger/index.html
Farshad Ebrahimi says he knows many of those pictured beating Iranian protesters
Now living in Berlin, he used he used to be a member of a religious militia in Iran
He publishes names and phone numbers of those responsible on the Web
His story gives an insight into the make-up and ideology of the hard-line groups
updated 5:55 a.m. EDT, Wed August 5, 2009
CNN
Ebrahimi names and shames those he recognizes on the Web.
The pictures show plain-clothed men beating up demonstrators in Iranian cities after the disputed presidential elections. Every once in a while he circles a head, a baton or a gun.
"This is one of the guys I used to know," he says. "We were in Ansar-e Hezbollah together. I was very surprised to find him here."
Ebrahimi says he knows many of those who are now beating up demonstrators in
"None of them are police. Most of them are Basij or Ansar-e Hezbollah members. These are a series of paramilitary groups which work under the direct supervision of the leader, forces which work based on their ideology."
Ebrahimi names and shames those he recognizes on the Web. He publishes their names and phone numbers and sometimes even their addresses, "so people in their neighborhood know what they are doing."
He says some of them contact him at home and threaten to kill him, but others simply feel betrayed by their former comrade.
"One of them called me and said: 'what you are doing us unethical. You are ruining our friendship.' I told him he was acting unethically and that he has the blood of the people on his hands, I didn't talk to him any further."
Ebrahimi was a founding member of the Ansar-e Hezbollah group, which like many others has its roots in the Iran-Iraq war in the late 1980s. In 1988, when Ebrahmi was just 13 years old, he says he forged his ID and went to the frontline against Saddam Hussein's army.
He shows us pictures of him as a young man, trying hard to look older by growing a beard, carrying a rifle or manning an anti-aircraft cannon.
"When an Iranian Basij soldier got shot right next to me, that was the first time I saw a dead body next to me. It was then I realized where I actually was and I asked myself what was I doing there anyway?"
After the war, Ebrahimi and others decided they were now the true guardians of the Islamic revolution and would defend it against Western influence.
"For example, we were opposed to the commercial advertisements of western products, we were opposed to the economic conditions, or the political conditions. So anyway we had some demands and believed we are the rightful because we said we served in the war front, we gave our life and health, not to defend a country that is being looted now the way it was. Those demands we had brought us together to start the Ansar-e Hezbollah."
Farshad rose through the ranks of the organization he says was never meant to be political or violent.
But video apparently taken at a recent demonstration and posted on YouTube showed Iranian protesters chanting "Mojtaba Die!"
"Mojtaba" is Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of
Ebrahimi says he and Mojtaba spent a lot of time together. "He was a good kid, we were really good friends, and you could also truly say he also liked violence."
Over time, Ansar-e Hezbollah grew and Ebrahimi became the managing editor of the group's own newspaper. He says he quit the organization in 1999 when Ansar-e Hezbollah used violence against students during the uprising which was brutally cut down by security forces that year. "We went to a dorm and they started beating up people. That was when I took the microphone and said: 'No, Ansar-e Hezbollah is wrong, you the students are right."
Since then, Ebrahimi has become a fugitive. He was jailed in
He uses his computer, his blog and twitter to spread the information about those he says are beating up the protesters.
"When I last looked somewhere between seven to eight thousand people had visited my site and read the information, so this site has in a way turned into a reference source."
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"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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