The National - News

Family of Iranian environmen­talist who died in prison demands post-mortem

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The family of an environmen­talist who died in an Iranian prison have called for a post-mortem, rejecting claims by officials that they had accepted the death as a suicide.

“The family has put in a request for a post- mortem,” Arash Keikhosrav­i, lawyer for the family of Iranian-Canadian Kavous Seyed Emami, told the reformist Shargh newspaper.

He said the coroner’s office had also submitted a routine request for a post-mortem.

Emami’s family were told on Friday that the professor and founder of the Persian Wildlife Heritage Foundation had died in custody just over two weeks after being arrested on espionage charges.

On Monday, Allaedin Borujerdi, head of parliament’s national security and foreign policy committee, said the family had watched a film from his cell and accepted the official explanatio­n that the 63-yearold had committed suicide.

“In the film you see that Kavous Seyed Emami is taking off his shirt and getting prepared for suicide,” Mr Borujerdi told the parliament news agency.

“His family too have accepted this incident and so have not asked for an autopsy,” he said.

But the family’s lawyer told Shargh: “I do not confirm Mr Borujerdi’s remarks that the family did not request a post-mortem.”

Emami’s son Ramin, a singer, said on Instagram that the family had launched a legal complaint in connection with the death.

“It is absolutely essential that you rely on my Instagram, Telegram and Twitter posts for official news relating to future findings. There are no other reliable sources,” he said.

He said the family had expected to receive the body yesterday and that a funeral would take place in the village of Ammameh, 40 kilometres north of Tehran.

Asked about the family’s reaction to the film, their lawyer said: “There are scenes showing Mr Seyed Emami in his solitary cell. Apparently it has been thought that he committed suicide there, but there is not enough evidence.”

Seven other members of the wildlife NGO are behind bars.

The environmen­tal community has also been rocked by the apparent detention of Kaveh Madani, deputy head of the Environmen­tal Protection Organisati­on, at the weekend.He was back at work on Monday and released a message on social media saying: “I am safe”.

A water conservati­on activist trained in the US, in September Mr Madani was plucked from his job at Imperial College London to join the government and heralded as a symbol of President Hassan Rouhani’s drive to encourage the return of Iranians from abroad.

Emami is the second Canadian citizen to die in Iran’s prisons after the murder in 2003 of 54-year-old Zahra Kazemi, who was arrested for taking photos outside Evin prison.

The vice- president at the time, Mohammad Ali Abtahi, said she died from “a brain haemorrhag­e caused by a beating”.

 ?? AFP ?? Kavous Seyed Emami died in custody two weeks after being charged with espionage
AFP Kavous Seyed Emami died in custody two weeks after being charged with espionage

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