Family of Late Conservationist Kavous Seyed-Emami Petitions Iran to Respond to State TV Smears
FEBRUARY 8,
2019
Widow Remains Barred From
Leaving Country Despite Expired Travel Ban
One
year after his father’s suspicious death in Tehran’s Evin Prison, Ramin Seyed-Emami has filed a petition to respond to the
unsubstantiated reports about his father broadcast by Iran’s main state-run
broadcasting organization.
He
is also calling on the judiciary to release his mother, who remains barred from
leaving the Islamic Republic despite the expiration of the travel ban that was
imposed on her in December 2018.
“We
only want to exercise our constitutional right to defend ourselves against
accusations made against our father,” Ramin said in a phone interview with the
Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI) on February 7, 2019.
“We
are not a political family. We just want clarification on why our father was
arrested and why he died,” added Seyed-Emami, an Iranian Canadian dual national
who relocated from his home in Tehran in March 2018 to Vancouver, BC, after
being repeatedly threatened by security agents.
“The
Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting has to be accountable for slandering
him,” he added.
The
managing director of the Persian Heritage
Wildlife Foundation (PHWF),
Iranian Canadian sociologist Kavous Seyed-Emami (Ramin’s father) was among nine conservationists arrested by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’
(IRGC’s) Intelligence Organization in Iran in late January 2018 under
trumped-up espionage charges.
His death, which occurred while he was being held virtually
incommunicado for interrogations in Evin Prison, was reported to his wife as a
“suicide” on February 9, 2018, after security agents interrogated her.
No
final autopsy report was made public but a preliminary State
Medical Examiner’s report did show
evidence of an injection on his skin as well as “bruises on different parts of
the body,” according to one of the Tehran-based lawyers representing the family.
Iran’s
State Prisons Organization and the judiciary to which it responds, as well as
prison officials, are responsible for the health and wellbeing of detainees.
But one year after Seyed-Emami’s death, no one has been charged, prosecuted or
held accountable.
Iran
has also ignored international calls for an independent and impartial investigation into
Seyed-Emami’s death, for his wife to be allowed to leave
Iran, and for his
colleagues to be given a fair trial.
Instead,
for the past 12 months Tehran Prosecutor Abbas Jafari-Dolatabadi has been
working on a case against Seyed-Emami’s detained PWHF colleagues based in part
on false “confessions” despite three major state
agencies contesting
accusations that they committed espionage.
Iran Bars Grieving Widow From Leaving, Runs Smear Campaign on State TV
Ramin
Seyed-Emami and his brother, Mehran, were able to leave Tehran on March 8, 2018, but their mother, Maryam Mombeini
was blocked from boarding the plane with them at the last minute.
Security
agents confiscated her passport and barred her from leaving the country. They
also interrogated the grieving widow and raided her home after her two
sons were gone.
“We
want the travel ban on our mother to be lifted so that she can come to
live with us,” said Ramin Seyed-Emami, adding, “We want to live in peace when
we go back to Iran when all of this is over.”
He
told CHRI he had submitted a letter via his lawyer in Tehran to Branch 9 of
Iran’s Culture and Media Court requesting that the IRIB be ordered to allow him
to respond to the “20:30” state-run news program that aired the unsubstantiated
accusations on February 13, 2018.
Iran’s
government-run Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB) has a long history of
parading Iran’s critics and their family members on national TV, where they are forced to make so-called “confessions” or
public statements meant to discredit them and their causes.
Human
rights groups have documented several instances in which dissidents, activists,
and journalists were featured in pseudo-documentary
videos intended to
“prove” their “guilt,” though they apparently did not appear willingly.
“In
the letter, we asked for the enforcement of Article 22 of the Constitution and Article 30 of the IRIB’s Governing Regulations,” he said. “By
law, the IRIB must allow us to appear on air for free to give a response and
respond to the accusations against our father,” Seyed-Emami added.
“To
this day, we have no idea what happened to our father,” he said. “We have not
been presented with any evidence or document to show he and the others broke
the law.”
“The
PHWF was a known legal institution whose activities were under the supervision
of the government and the Department of the Environment,” he added. “We really
don’t know the reason why it was shut down and the staffs were arrested.”
Seyed-Emami
continued: “If there was any evidence to show they were guilty, surely the
Supreme National Security Council and the DOE would have taken action but
both have declared that they
were not spies. Instead of
clarifying the issues, some of [Iran’s state] news outlets have been deceiving
the public during the past year.”
“Those
who incarcerated my father are the ones responsible for his death. They held
him without evidence,” Seyed-Emami said. “They were negligent in safeguarding
his life.”
Iranian
judicial officials have not publicly explained why they barred Seyed-Emami’s
widow from leaving the country or why the ban remains in place despite having
officially expired. Family members of detainees held under politically
motivated charges in Iran are routinely
threatened and pressured by state
agencies not to speak publicly about the cases.
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