Official Cover-up for Wrongdoer
Omid Memarian o.memarian@roozonline.com - 2008.03.31

Commander Zarei, the head of Tehran’s Police force whose heavy handed measures against “social deviants” raised many voices of concern, was arrested last week in a sleaze house amidst six prostitutes. Officials from the judiciary are now scrambling to investigate the issue without fanfare.
This is not the first time that a senior military or civil official has been caught in the act of some wrongdoing. But the cover-up and concealment of such scandals by judiciary officials has a long tradition. However, if a cover-up could be successful 10 years ago, today in a world of such diffused and massive information networks a cover-up is impossible. No issue that authorities try to conceal these days remains hidden and it is published somewhere on news-sites or websites on the Internet.
Furthermore, attempts to conceal and cover-up scandals or issues only cost the state its respect and trust. An accurate and detailed disclosure of the Zarei case can set the state apart from such corrupt officials who in this case played with the public standing of the police. Also, such disclosure will make all others who may be tempted to engage in similar corrupt practices and misuse of power think twice and fearful of public disgrace.
It is noteworthy that just as the news of the police chief’s arrest in the presence of six women in compromising conditions was announced, the governor of the state of New York appeared in front of television cameras and apologized to his family and the residents of New York for his sexual scandal as exposed by the New York Times newspaper, and subsequently resigned from his post. Eliot Spitzer who was a rising star in the Democratic Party and with presidential aspirations, went under intense and immediate scrutiny by the media and the representatives of the public after the sex scandal was exposed. Neither the Republicans nor Democrats appear to have made serious efforts to cover-up the event.
But in Iran things are different and Zaeri and company feel secure under the tradition of official cover-ups by the sate. This is despite the fact that the public would have respect for the state if corruption and wrongdoing by public officials were dealt with by the state in a fair and open manner.
What disgraces the state is the unfair treatment of wrongdoing, violations, and not the expose of the scandal. By not confronting the issue openly and fairly the public views those responsible, i.e. senior judiciary officials, to be accomplices to the scandal.
The arrest of Zarei also demonstrates the kind of commitment that people who in the Islamic Republic of Iran instruct the public on how to dress and then chase people on the streets to enforce such rules actually have! This should be a lesson for officials to look seriously into the social policies that have been vigorously pursued in recent years.
The cover-up efforts by judiciary authorities and the statements by the Office of the Leader to pursue the issue in a quiet manner strengthen the suspicions that there may be other senior authorities involved in the case.
Only the transparent efforts of the senior judiciary officials can reveal the facts. But time is short, and soon the public will make its own judgment.
