The Herald (South Africa)

Professor’s jail ‘suicide’ raises outcry

- Eric Randolph

LEADING academics and rights activists demanded action from Iran’s government yesterday following the “suicide” of an environmen­talist in prison.

The family of Kavous Seyed Emami, 63, a renowned professor at Imam Sadegh University and founder of the Persian Wildlife Heritage Foundation, was told on Friday that he had killed himself in prison two weeks after his arrest.

A judiciary official claimed on Sunday that he had confessed to crimes related to an espionage investigat­ion, which has seen seven other members of his wildlife NGO placed in detention.

The incident prompted Iranian rights activist Emadeddin Baghi – previously jailed several times – to express regret at his failure to speak up about prison abuses.

“When I heard this news I felt guilty because, to prevent it being exploited by Iran’s enemies . . . I refused to reveal the bad treatment I had experience­d during my detention,” Baghi wrote on the internet service Telegram.

“If we had all spoken out, it would be known why such catastroph­es happen in prisons,” he wrote.

A group of four academic societies, representi­ng some of Iran’s top universiti­es, wrote an open letter to President Hassan Rouhani, demanding “immediate and effective action to seriously investigat­e the case . . . and make the institutio­ns involved in this painful loss accountabl­e”.

“In addition to being a well-known professor, a distinguis­hed scientist and war veteran, he was a noble and ethical human being,” they wrote in the letter.

“The news and rumours related to his arrest and death are not believable.”

One of Rouhani’s closest advisers, Hesameddin Ashena, tweeted later that the judiciary, which is dominated by conservati­ves and has clashed with his moderate government in the past, should be more closely supervised.

“Judges, prosecutor­s, officers, interrogat­ors are neither infallible, nor faultless, or free from prejudice,” Ashena wrote.

He was [also] a noble and ethical human being

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