Arab News

Iran’s ex-intelligen­ce minister slams handling of prison death

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TEHRAN: An ex-intelligen­ce minister in Iran on Sunday criticized the handling of an environmen­talist’s death in prison, saying the public would not believe he was a spy unless the case was handled by a “competent agency.”

Ali Younessi, who was intelligen­ce minister under President Mohammad Khatami between 2000 and 2005, shone a rare light on the turf war between Iran’s multiple security agencies in his interview with the daily Iran newspaper.

He referred to the case of Kavous Seyed Emami, 63, the IranianCan­adian citizen who founded the Persian Heritage Wildlife Foundation. He died in prison this month after being arrested along with seven members of his NGO on espionage charges.

“Unfortunat­ely the Intelligen­ce Ministry has no jurisdicti­on over this case,” said Younessi, who now serves as an adviser to President Hassan Rouhani on minority religious affairs.

“I believe the case should be given to the Intelligen­ce Ministry ... Given the events that have occurred, if a competent and legal agency does not intervene and doesn’t give its opinion on the dead individual or those under arrest, public opinion will not believe they are spies even if they are convicted.”

The authoritie­s say Emami committed suicide, but the family have questioned the verdict and say they were threatened by security forces.

Younessi did not name the agency running the case, but the Revolution­ary Guards run a powerful intelligen­ce service that is separate from the Intelligen­ce Ministry.

Younessi also gave details of the infamous case of Zahra Kazemi, an Iranian-Canadian photograph­er who died from head injuries after being arrested for taking photos outside Evin prison in 2003.

“The prosecutor at the time insisted she was a spy,” he said, referring to the notorious Tehran prosecutor Said Mortazavi, who was last year jailed for his part in another custodial death during protests in 2009.

“We sent two counter-espionage experts from the ministry to investigat­e this woman in a hotel. After the interview, the two experts concluded that from a technical and scientific standpoint, Zahra Kazemi was not a spy,” said Younessi.

But Mortazavi refused to listen to their verdict, he said, and handed the case back to the police.

In Younessi’s version of events, Kazemi, who was 54, died from a brain hemorrhage caused at the moment of her arrest.

She “was beaten because she refused to hand over her items and her head hit a concrete road divider, which caused a hemorrhage,” he said.

That goes against statement from the government at the time, which said Kazemi was violently beaten in prison. The judiciary initially claimed she died of a stroke and only later that she was injured in a fall.

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