Montreal court hears lawsuit against Iran govt by son of photographer beaten to death

Stephan Hachemi has brought up a civil lawsuit against the Iranian government before the Quebec high court claiming damages for the arrest, detention, torture and death of his mother, Zahra Kazemi, a photographer with dual Iranian and Canadian citizenship, in Tehran in 2003. A preliminary three-day hearing was due to begin in Montreal on February 3, but it has been postponed to May, Reporters sans Frontières (RSF).

“Iran has displayed a clear desire to ensure that those responsible for Kazemi’s murder remain unpunished,” Paris-based RSF said. “The authorities of Canada and the European Union should actively support the legitimate requests made by the Kazemi family’s lawyers and show no leniency towards Iran in this appalling affair.”

A Canadian resident, 54-year-old Kazemi was arrested on June 23, 2003 as she was photographing the relatives of detainees outside Evin prison in north Tehran. She was beaten while in custody and died of her injuries on July 20, 2003. The Iranian authorities issued a report 10 days later recognising her death was the result of a blow but failing to explain how it was inflicted.

Under duress, Kazemi’s mother, an Iranian resident, agreed to a hasty burial on July 22, 2003. Ever since then, Kazemi’s son, who lives in Canada, has been asking for the body to be exhumed and repatriated to Canada.

The Kazemi family’s lawyers have repeatedly condemned all the judicial proceedings in Iran as a sham. Their requests for senior judicial officials to appear in court have never been satisfied, depriving them of key witnesses. Above all, Tehran chief prosecutor Said Mortazavi, who ordered Kazemi’s arrest and was present when she was interrogated in Evin prison, has never been questioned in court.

Date Posted: 8 February 2009 Last Modified: 8 February 2009