Iran TerrorismTomb of the unknown assassin reveals mission to kill...

Tomb of the unknown assassin reveals mission to kill Rushdie

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The Times: A simple grey slab in Tehran’s Behesht Zahra cemetery, resting place to thousands of Iranian soldiers killed in the war with Iraq, holds the clue to a conundrum. The symbolic empty shrine bears the words: “Mustafa Mahmoud Mazeh, born Conakry, Guinea. Martyred in London, August 3, 1989. The first martyr to die on a mission to kill Salman Rushdie.”

The Times

From Anthony Loyd in Tehran

A SIMPLE grey slab in Tehran’s Behesht Zahra cemetery, resting place to thousands of Iranian soldiers killed in the war with Iraq, holds the clue to a conundrum.

The symbolic empty shrine bears the words: “Mustafa Mahmoud Mazeh, born Conakry, Guinea. Martyred in London, August 3, 1989. The first martyr to die on a mission to kill Salman Rushdie.”

Although the name Mazeh, the alias of an unknown 21-year-old Lebanese, will be familiar to students of Islamic terrorism, the inscription appears to confirm an assassination attempt that has never been admitted by the British security services.

His shrine stands in an area dedicated to foreign terrorists or “martyrs”. On one side is a monument to the assassins of President Sadat of Egypt, on the other a young Palestinian mother who killed herself in a suicide bombing is commemorated. Near by, two anonymous bombers who killed 241 American and 58 French troops in Lebanon in 1983 are lauded.

Yet all that is known about Mazeh is that he met his death priming a book bomb in a Paddington hotel room.

At an inquest in January 1990, Scotland Yard’s antiterrorist squad had noted only that there was “a hint” that Mazeh belonged to a terrorist group, saying that his reason for being in London was “not clear”. Although Rushdie was mentioned in an initial claim, police had no evidence of a link. Israel claimed that he was planning an attack on its London embassy.

British security services have never owned up to what they know of Mazeh, or given details of any assassination attempt against Rushdie in Britain.

The Booker Prize winner became a cause célèbre in 1989 after Ayatollah Khomeini, the spiritual founder of Iran’s Islamic Republic, issued a fatwa against him following the publication of The Satanic Verses. Accusing Rushdie of blasphemy, Khomeini exhorted Muslims to kill the author. A $2.5 million bounty was put on his head, forcing Rushdie to go into hiding with round-the-clock protection.

Outrage mounted in Britain and Iran severed diplomatic links. Mazeh was already under surveillance by the DST, the French counter-espionage agency, before Khomeini issued the fatwa.

The radicalised Lebanese citizen, born in the Guinean capital, Conakry, had joined a local Hezbollah (Party of God) cell while in his teens. The Shia group, under pressure in Lebanon, was extending its structure into West Africa, and Mazeh was next traced in the Ivory Coast in 1988.

Pursued by security agencies, he succeeded in getting a French passport in Abidjan from an official later arrested by the DST in Toulouse, southern France. Moving to Lebanon, Mazeh stayed for a time at his parents’ village outside Beirut. British security services retrospectively placed him next in the Netherlands, where he sailed from the Hook of Holland to Harwich, taking a train to London on July 22, 1989. He checked in to Room 303 at the Beverley House Hotel, a five-storey building in Sussex Gardens, Paddington.

On the afternoon of August 3, a large explosion killed him in his room, destroying two floors of the building. Anti-terrorist squad detectives later said that he had died while trying to prime a bomb hidden in a book with RDX explosives. A previously unknown Lebanese group, the Organisation of the Mujahidin of Islam, claimed in a letter to a Beirut newspaper that Mazeh, whom they referred to as Gharib, died preparing an attack “ on the apostate Rushdie”.

Little more was heard of Mazeh or his mission until 1998, when during a period of renewed détente, diplomatic links with Britain were re-established after the Iranian Government stated that it would neither support nor hinder assassination operations on Rushdie.

Just before that move, villagers in Kiapey, an Iranian village on the Caspian Sea, invited Mazeh’s parents to live there. Typical of Iran’s dual-policy approach to foreign relations, a semi-official government organisation, the Islamic World Movement of Martyrs’ Commemoration, laid his tomb in Tehran and paid for a mural in his memory, while the bounty on Rushdie was unofficially raised to $2.8 million.

The real identity and mission of Mustafa Mazeh may never be publicly known. Few mourners in Behesht Zahra pay his tomb any attention, and most express a desire to forget Salman Rushdie and rebuild relations with Britain and America.

A LIFE IN THE SHADOW OF DEATH

The Satanic Verses caused worldwide protests from Muslims when it was published in September 1988, and was banned in 11 countries

In February 1989, Ayatollah Khomeini, Iran’s leader, placed a fatwa on Rushdie and offered $2.5 million to a “zealous Muslim” who would kill him

Rushdie went into hiding and was protected by British security forces until 1998

Rushdie’s Japanese translator was stabbed to death in 1991, and his Italian translator and Norwegian publisher were also attacked

In 1998 Iran committed itself not to carry out the death sentence, but has not officially lifted the fatwa

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