Arab News

Son of dead environmen­talist in Iran says family threatened

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TEHRAN: The son of an Iranian-Canadian environmen­talist who died in prison said late Wednesday that his family had been threatened by authoritie­s and that a video of his alleged suicide was “inconclusi­ve.”

Iranian authoritie­s have accused Kavous Seyed Emami, 63, a renowned professor and founder of the Persian Wildlife Heritage Foundation, of being part of an espionage network set up by Mossad and the CIA.

They say he committed suicide in his prison cell last week.

President Hassan Rouhani said on Wednesday that he had set up a committee of ministers to look into the “disagreeab­le events occurring in certain detention facilities,” the semi-official ISNA news agency reported.

Emami’s son Ramin, a well-known singer, says his mother was told of her husband’s death after being “interrogat­ed and threatened” for three hours last Friday.

A district court “summoned my mother purportedl­y to ‘meet with her husband’,” he wrote on his personal website.

“Instead, they interrogat­ed and threatened her for three hours before announcing the death of her husband and having her sign a paper not to speak to the media,” he said.

“Similar threats of harming my dad had previously been issued from authoritie­s and forced us to keep silent during the time he was in custody.”

Ramin Emami said he had seen the video from his father’s cell, which authoritie­s claim is proof that he committed suicide.

“I will not speak of the pain of seeing this video, but I will say that nothing in it is conclusive. The actual death is not recorded,” he said.

“All I could see is that my dad is nervous and restless. He is not himself. He paces the cell to and fro,” adding that his father was clearly “not in a sound psychologi­cal condition.”

His father is seen entering another room, which authoritie­s have said is a bathroom.

“Seven hours later a body is carried out of that room. The lawyers’ request to see the cell was refused. We filed a complaint right there.”

The family were told that a post-mortem was carried out prior to Emami’s burial on Tuesday and that the report would take at least four to six weeks.

Ramin Emami insisted he was the only member of the family to watch the video from the cell, rejecting claims by an Iranian judiciary official that his uncle had watched the video, accepted the judgment of suicide and called off the post-mortem.

Emami was arrested along with seven other members of his wildlife NGO in January.

Tehran prosecutor Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi said on Wednesday that the post-mortem showed Emami had committed suicide.

“When he was shown the documents and results of the investigat­ion, he asked for time to respond to the investigat­ors,” Dolatabadi told the judiciary-linked Mizanonlin­e news agency.

“He decided to commit suicide. This was not due to a lack of surveillan­ce.”

Dolatabadi said earlier that Emami and his wildlife NGO were a front to collect “informatio­n from the country’s sensitive and vital centers, including missile bases” on behalf of the CIA and Israel’s Mossad.

“Members of this network installed cameras in strategic areas under cover of monitoring the environmen­t, while in fact monitoring the country’s missile activities,” Dolatabadi said on Tuesday.

One of the NGO’s key projects was monitoring the endangered Asian cheetah, which meant they operated across large swathes of Semnan province, home to military sites and missile-testing grounds.

Dolatabadi said the main financial backer was an Iranian-British-American citizen with the initials “MT” — probably a reference to Morad Tahbaz, a wealthy businessma­n and board member of the wildlife NGO who was among those arrested last month.

Iran does not recognize multiple nationalit­y and treats all joint citizens as Iranians.

 ??  ?? Iranian-Canadian environmen­talist Kavous Seyed Emami at an unidentifi­ed location. (AFP/file)
Iranian-Canadian environmen­talist Kavous Seyed Emami at an unidentifi­ed location. (AFP/file)

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