Iran Human RightsJudiciary continues to stall in Kazemi case, two years...

Judiciary continues to stall in Kazemi case, two years after her death

-

Reporters Without Borders: “For two years now, Zahra Kazemi’s family has been waiting for her body to be exhumed and repatriated to Canada, and press freedom activists throughout the world have waiting for justice to be done, but the Iranian authorities have decided otherwise,” the organisation said. “The international community must support Canada’s initiatives and force Iran to give a full account of the circumstances of Kazemi’s death,” Reporters Without Borders added. Reporters Without Borders

“For two years now, Zahra Kazemi’s family has been waiting for her body to be exhumed and repatriated to Canada, and press freedom activists throughout the world have waiting for justice to be done, but the Iranian authorities have decided otherwise,” the organisation said.

“The international community must support Canada’s initiatives and force Iran to give a full account of the circumstances of Kazemi’s death,” Reporters Without Borders added.

The Canadian government has become very involved. After a sham trial cleared the leading suspect in July 2004, Canada announced in May this year that it would restricts its diplomatic relations with Iran until the Kazemi case is cleared up.

“Instead of justice, the Iranian authorities organise so-called explanation sessions,” the Kazemi family’s lawyer, Nobel peace laureate Shirin Ebadi, told Reporters Without Borders. “We, the lawyers and the family, want a real court to try and convict those responsible for this murder. The hearing scheduled for 27 July will be another explanation session, like the one on 16 May. I think those who are guilty are playing for time.”

The Canadian government has proposed that three forensic experts, a Canadian, an Iranian and a third person appointed jointly by the two governments, should conduct an autopsy on Kazemi’s body. The Iranian authorities have still not agreed.

There are many other unanswered questions. The identity of some of those who interrogated Kazemi while she was in custody has still not been revealed. The records of the interrogations sessions have been tampered with and the statements of some witnesses have been ignored.

Aged 54, Kazemi was arrested on 23 June 2003 as she was photographing the relatives of detainees outside Evin prison in northern Tehran. Beaten while in custody, she died of her injuries on 10 July 2003.

After trying to cover up what happened, the Iranian authorities issued a report on 20 July 2003 recognising that Kazemi’s death was the result of violence. But the report failed to explain how the blow that caused her death was inflicted. Only an autopsy could now clear this up.

Against the wishes of her son, Stephan Hachemi, who has French and Canadian nationality and lives in Canada, Kazemi’s body was hastily buried on 22 July 2003 in Shiraz, in southern Iran. Her mother publicly acknowledged that pressure was put on her to authorize the burial. Since then, Canada’s requests for the body to be exhumed and repatriated to Canada have been ignored.

Following an Iranian parliamentary enquiry and strong pressure from Canada and elsewhere in the international community, the judicial authorities named an intelligence official who had been one of Kazemi’s interrogators. He was charged with her death but was then acquitted in a sham trial on 24 July 2004.

When the case came before the Tehran appeal court on 16 May of this year, the court rushed through the first hearing in one hour. The Kazemi family lawyers said they were not allowed to speak and the defendant was not present. Journalists were expelled from the courtroom. The next hearing in the appeal is set for 27 July.

Latest news

City Council Member in Zanjan Runs Over Protesting Worker With Car

The state-run Rouydad24 news website wrote on May 19 regarding the protests by Zanjan municipality workers: "Disregard for workers'...

PMOI Confirms Deaths of Resistance Unit Members During 2025–2026 Iran Uprising

As further details emerge from the nationwide uprising that swept across Iran from late 2025 into early 2026, the...

Urban Poverty in Iran: The Collapse of the Economy of Life in Major Cities

Urban poverty in Iran has now reached a stage where it can no longer be explained merely through income...

Gasoline Price Hikes in Iran Trigger a New Battle Over People’s Livelihoods

As Iran’s economic crisis, inflation, and declining purchasing power continue, recent remarks by Hamid Rasai, a member of the...

Paris to Host Major Rally Supporting a Free Iran on June 20

More than 100,000 people are expected to gather in Paris on June 20, 2026, to voice their support for...

Amnesty International: 2,159 People Executed in Iran in 2025

In a new report, Amnesty International stated that the Iranian regime carried out at least 2,159 executions in 2025,...

Must read

US official on trip to push Iran, Syria sanctions

AFP: The United States sent its top sanctions official...

Iran sets 2020 target for nuclear fusion reactor

AP: Iran says it has set a 2020 target...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you