Site icon Iran Human Rights Documentation Center

Iranian ambassador says Zahra Kazemi buried in Iran

          
          8/6/2010 Reporters Sans Frontières
          REPORTERS
          WITHOUT BORDERS
          FOR PRESS FREEDOM
          Middle East & North Africa Iran
          Published on 16 July 2003
          Close the window
          Iranian ambassador says Zahra Kazemi buried in
          Iran
          Reporters Without Borders today demanded that the body of Canad ian-Iranian photo-journalist Zahra Kazemi be exhumed to find out exactly how
          she died after being arrested last month for photographing Teheran's Evin prison. She died in police hands on 11 July.
          The Iranian ambassador to France, Seyed Sadegh Kharazi, told a delegation from the press freedom organisation today that she had been buried in
          Iran on either the 13 or 14 July but he could not say where. Yesterday however, the Iranian embassy in Canada said a government commission of
          enquiry set up by President Mohammad Khatami had ordered her not to be buried until the investigation was complete.
          “The Iranian vice-president has announced that she was beaten to death, so the authorities were lying when they said she had had a stroke,” said
          Reporters Without Border secretary-general Robert Ménard. “We are appalled to learn from the ambassador in France that she has been buried.
          How can the official enquiry and legal officials proceed with the case if the body cannot be examined? How can we trust the official autopsy when the
          authorities at first tried to conceal the cause of her death?”
          Robert Ménard said that if the burial was confirmed, the body must be exhumed and returned to Canada or Canadian investigators and pathologists
          allowed to go to Iran. Such steps were essential in all such cases where a person had been criminally beaten, he noted. Reporters Without Borders
          has asked the embassy in France to grant visas for its representatives to go to Iran and meet Kazemi's mother and the families of other imprisoned
          journalists.
          The ambassador in France told the press freedom organisation's delegation that Iranian doctors had autopsied the body before burial and that the
          results had been sent to President Khatami, to the judge in charge of the case and to the government commission of enquiry, made up of the
          ministers and deputy ministers of justice, the interior, intelligence and Islamic guidance.
          Kazemi is thought to have been arrested on 23 June after taking a photo of Evin prison. Four days later she was presented to intelligence ministry
          officials in a serious state. The authorities then told her family she was in a coma at Teheran's Baghiatollah hospital as a result of a stroke.
          After her arrest, police searched her family's home and seized cameras and large sums of money. Canadian officials managed to visit her but were
          not allowed to see her med ical file. Her hospital room was under constant police guard.
          Fifteen journalists are believed to be currently held by the Guardians of the Revolution militia at the same place where Kazemi had been interrogated
          and Reporters Without Borders and their families are worried about their fate. Their relatives have written to President Khatami detailed the physical
          and psychological torture the prisoners have been subjected to. Their letter appeared today in the reformist Iran press.
          With 26 jailed, Iran is currently the world's second biggest prison for journalists.
          Reporters Without Borders defends imprisoned journalists and press freedom throughout the rId. It has nine national sections (Austria, Belgium, canada, France,
          Germany, Italy, Spain, S den and SWtzerland). It has representatives in Bangkok, NewYork, Tokyo and Washington. And it has more than 120 correspondents
          wrld ide.
          © Reporters Without Borders - 47, rue Vivienne, 75002 Paris - France
          http://en . rsf.org/spip.php?page= impre... 1/1
        

Download Attachments:

Exit mobile version