The National - News

Their father died in an Iranian jail. Now their mother is stuck there too

Sons appeal after Maryam Mombeini was stopped at airport and prevented from leaving country

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The sons of an Iranian-Canadian university professor who died in a Tehran prison last month have urged Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to speak out publicly and pressure the Iranian government to free their mother.

They also want Canada to investigat­e their father’s arrest and death.

Ramin and Mehran SeyedEmami said in a joint interview that they were speaking out despite intimidati­on and threats. They said they believe it is their only hope for getting their mother back to Vancouver after she was stopped at the airport on March 7 and barred from leaving Iran.

Their father, Kavous SeyedEmami, a 63-year-old professor of sociology at Imam Sadeq University in Tehran and the managing director of the Persian Heritage Wildlife Foundation, died last month. His death sparked anger in Iran over the treatment of detainees, especially after nearly 5,000 people were arrested in the wake of nationwide protests at the start of the year.

Iranian authoritie­s told the family that Seyed-Emami killed himself while in custody.

But Ramin, a musician who performs under the stage name King Raam, said he and his brother “feel that the guards in the prison are responsibl­e directly for his death”.

He said he was shown video of his father in a cell, pacing around, taking off his shirt, and going into the bathroom. Then “eight hours later they come in and they bring the body out of that room, so there is no footage or film of the death or how it happened”, Ramin said.

“The fact that he was unmonitore­d for eight hours is such a suspicious thing.”

He complained that the family was “not being allowed to pursue a proper investigat­ion into his death, or why he was arrested in the first place, or how he was treated the whole time”.

Tehran prosecutor Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi alleged the professor was part of an espionage ring that collected informatio­n on “strategic areas”.

The brothers vehemently defended their father’s innocence. “There is no shred of evidence against him, nothing,” Mehran said.

His father’s legacy, Mehran said, “was one of building bridges, of uniting people”.

“He was a lover of not just Iran but its wildlife, its people,” he said.

Mehran said his father encouraged his sons to vote for the moderate President Hassan Rouhani in Iran’s election, “to vote for change, to vote for hope”.

“We cannot believe the lack of support we’ve seen from the Iranian government,” he said. “It’s so unfortunat­e that they would do this to one of their sons.”

Ramin and Mehran met Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland in New York on Wednesday to call for pressure to be stepped up on Iran.

“She reassured us they’re doing their best to get my mother home as soon as possible,” Mehran said. “We are grateful for their effort but ... we need them to speak up publicly, not just privately.

“We asked for the prime minister, Mr Trudeau, to make an official statement on behalf of the government, to pressure the Iranian government to release my mother, and to have a serious investigat­ion into the case of my father,” he said.

The brothers said leaving Iran without their mother, Maryam Mombeini, had been very difficult. Ramin said she implored them to board the plane and go without her.

Their house in Iran was raided twice, and the Iranian Revolution­ary Guard packed documents, computers, hard drives, photo albums of their childhood and other items into eight suitcases in the first raid, Ramin said.

Iranian authoritie­s, he said, started a campaign of intimidati­on after their father’s arrest. He said it included constant surveillan­ce, death threats and “a very disgusting smear campaign against our family using footage that they had stolen from our home when they raided the place”.

“They put this all up on national television,” he said, “slowing down the film and putting some scary music on it and attacking my father’s character.”

He said that he and Mehran started to speak out anyway.

“We really believe speaking out actually ensured more safety and security for us,” Ramin said. “They wanted us to stay silent and be afraid.” Ramin said his mother was now relying on family and friends for financial support because Iranian authoritie­s seized the deeds to the family home and other assets they had.

“We just want to have her home as soon as possible,” Mehran said.

“Our father lives inside of us and I am sure he is proud of us for being outspoken, for standing up for what’s right, for the truth.”

 ?? AP ?? Mehran, left, and Ramin Seyed-Emami, were forced to leave Iran without their mother, who was held at the airport when the three tried to leave for Canada
AP Mehran, left, and Ramin Seyed-Emami, were forced to leave Iran without their mother, who was held at the airport when the three tried to leave for Canada
 ?? Family of Kavous Seyed-Emami via AP ?? Prof Kavous Seyed-Emami, right, and his wife, Maryam Mombeini
Family of Kavous Seyed-Emami via AP Prof Kavous Seyed-Emami, right, and his wife, Maryam Mombeini

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