Canadian Press
Stephen Thorne
OTTAWA - Critics are calling on
Prime Minister Paul Martin's government to take a tougher stand with Iran in
the case of a Canadian woman who was tortured and killed in an Iranian prison
two years ago.
The federal Conservatives and the freedom-of-speech group PEN Canada made the appeal Tuesday - a day
after an Iranian court rejected demands for a new investigation into the
case.
"A Canadian woman is falsely arrested, tortured, raped and murdered and
the Iranian regime won't even investigate," said Stockwell
Day, the Tory foreign affairs critic.
"And what do we hear from our Government? Only the sounds of
silence."
Day said Martin has remained woefully silent on the issue and urged the prime
minister to demand that the case be properly investigated.
"Anything less than that shows dereliction of duty in defending the
security of Canadians."
Kazemi, 54, a Montreal-based photojournalist with
Canadian-Iranian citizenship, died in July 2003 - 17 days after she was
jailed for photographing a demonstration outside Tehran's Evin
prison.
Iran's judiciary charged a low-ranking
intelligence official, Reza Ahmadi, with
unintentionally killing her during interrogation. Ahmadi
was cleared of the charge at trial last July, with the court citing a lack of
evidence.
On Monday, an Iranian appeals court rejected demands for a new investigation
into whether Kazemi's death was premeditated
murder. That effectively laid the case to rest in Iran.
Nobel peace laureate Shirin Ebadi,
who leads a team of lawyers representing Kazemi's
mother, said the judiciary hastily buried Kazemi to
cover up signs of torture.
Mohammad Seifzadeh, another lawyer, said there was
no hope of justice from the Iranian judiciary. The lawyers will bring
complaints about those allegedly involved in causing Kazemi's
death to international organizations if demands for a fair trial are not met,
Seifzadeh said.
PEN Canada on Tuesday called on Ottawa to take strong action in the Kazemi case and that of imprisoned Iranian journalist Akbar Ganji.
In a letter, organization president Constance Rooke
called on Martin to urge Iran to end the impunity surrounding Kazemi's murder and to free Ganji.
"Both underwent inhumane mistreatment at the hands of officials in Evin prison," Rooke wrote.
Foreign Affairs Canada has criticized the court ruling
on Kazemi.
"This dismissal illustrates once again that the Iranian justice system
has neither the capacity nor the will to confront the perpetrators of the
brutal murder of Zahra Kazemi," spokeswoman
Marie-Christine Lilkoff said Monday.
She said Canada's policy of "controlled
engagement" toward Iran will continue as Tehran has not taken steps to launch a
credible and independent investigation into Kazemi's
death.
She added that Canadian officials were present at Monday's hearing but no
foreign journalists or diplomats were allowed into the courtroom.
"Only a proper investigation and trial of the guilty party or parties,
as well as the return of Mrs. Kazemi's remains to Canada in accordance with her family's
wishes, can bring any satisfaction in this case."
Meanwhile, Ganji has been on hunger strike and said
Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, would be happy to see him die in prison.
He was jailed in 2000 after reporting on murders of five dissidents by
Intelligence Ministry agents and hospitalized last Monday after a 45-day
hunger strike left him severely weakened.
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