The Province

B.C. mom recounts joy, heartbreak in Iran

Alison Azer shares story of reuniting with four children snatched by former spouse

- MARIE-DANIELLE SMITH NATIONAL POST mdsmith@postmedia.com twitter.com/mariedanie­lles

OTTAWA — For more than a year, she ached, struggling to reach her four children.

But when Alison Azer finally came face to face with the little ones her ex-husband had spirited across the globe, they were full of caution, and mistrust.

Still, during the tightly controlled visits that followed in Iran late last year, Azer finally started to feel like a mom again.

In an interview, the mother whose children are now caught up in the Canada-Iran relationsh­ip shared the story of her fraught November trip for the first time.

It was August, 2015 when Azer’s ex-husband, Saren Azer, left Canada with the kids for a trip to Europe. When they didn’t return, a B.C. court granted full custody to his ex-wife. A warrant went out for his arrest.

They landed in a Kurdistani village in Iraq and eventually surfaced in Iran, from which Azer had fled to Canada in 1994, saying he had been tortured and securing refugee status.

Azer spent three months in Kurdish territory trying to track down her kids, to no avail. Back in Canada, she launched public campaigns urging the Canadian government to help bring them back.

A full 15 months after the abduction, Azer obtained a two-week visa for Iran. She was on a plane within 10 days with a close friend who spoke Persian and also knew her ex-husband.

Based on Iranian court documents, Azer knew the children had been living for several months in Urmia, in the northwest. Iranian foreign officials were aware of Azer’s case and facilitate­d a one-hour visit with her kids in Urmia on Nov. 21.

“My knees buckled and I couldn’t see straight. And they had to bring a chair over so that I could sit down. I couldn’t believe that after all this time, at the end of the day, I would hopefully see my children,” she said.

But there they were: the two older girls, now preteens, Sharvahn and Rojevahn; the two younger boys, Dersim and Meitan. They’d changed. The last time Azer saw Meitan, he was three.

The older children were especially guarded, she said.

“Nothing prepared me for the degree to which they withdrew from me,” she said. “It became clear to me that they had been told not to trust me.”

Sharvahn was “quite distant and quite reluctant,” Azer said. “My oldest daughter, she wouldn’t speak to me. But at one point she said, ‘Well, it sure took you long enough to get here.’”

The 12-year-old accused her mother of being a liar.

Azer found herself trying to “prove” to her children that she’d tried to come after them in Iraq.

An INTERPOL red notice, similar to a warrant, is still out for Saren Azer’s arrest. But last summer, Iranian authoritie­s cleared him of kidnapping charges.

Azer saw her kids several times over the course of a few days, but always under supervisio­n. “Saren let me know that there were listening devices in the house and that we were being followed,” she said.

Saren Azer asked his ex-wife to stay in Iran rather than go back to Canada. But he wasn’t willing to come back to Comox, fearing arrest, and she would not stay, not least because of the way Iranian laws limit women’s rights.

Her only contact with the kids since then was a phone call on Christmas.

Last Wednesday marked the one-year anniversar­y of a meeting between Azer and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, during which he told her the file would stay on his desk.

This month, according to Azer, Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland spoke on the phone with her counterpar­t, Mohammad Javad Zarif, about the case. Canadian officials did not confirm or deny that the phone call took place.

Meanwhile, memories persist for Azer.

“I’m rememberin­g what I wore, and what I ate, and my children, what their hair smelled like, how they felt under my fingers,” Azer said. “I am so grateful I was able to see my children and I’m more grateful that they were able to see me.”

 ?? — POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Alison Azer’s last contact with her four children, now living in Iran, was a phone call on Christmas morning.
— POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Alison Azer’s last contact with her four children, now living in Iran, was a phone call on Christmas morning.

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