Canada presses Iran for details on death of Iranian-Canadian in Tehran jail

This handout photograph released on February 11, 2018 by the family of Iranian-Canadian environmentalist Kavous Seyed Emami shows him at an unidentified location. (AFP)
Updated 14 February 2018
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Canada presses Iran for details on death of Iranian-Canadian in Tehran jail

OTTAWA: The Canadian government said on Tuesday it was “seriously concerned” with the circumstances surrounding the death of an Iranian-Canadian dual citizen in a Tehran prison, and that it was pressing Iran to provide details on what happened.
Kavous Seyed-Emami, an environmental activist and sociology professor, was arrested on Jan. 24 and died in prison, his son wrote on Twitter last week. Iran’s judiciary said on Sunday that Seyed-Emami, 63, had committed suicide.

“We are seriously concerned by the situation surrounding the detention and death of Mr. Seyed-Emami,” Canada’s foreign minister, Chrystia Freeland, said in a statement.
“We expect the Government of Iran to provide information and answers into the circumstances surrounding this tragedy. We will continue to use every means at Canada’s disposal to seek further information.”
Seyed-Emami was the managing director of the Persian Wildlife Heritage Foundation, an organization aimed at protecting Iran’s rare animals, and a US-trained scholar in sociology.
He was arrested the same day as at least nine other staff members at his organization, according to the Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI), a non-profit group based in New York.
Iran’s judiciary said Seyed-Emami was a defendant in a spying case and had committed suicide because of the weight of evidence against him, an Iranian news agency reported on Sunday.
He died in Tehran’s Evin prison, his son said.
Canada does not have an embassy in Iran. Diplomatic relations between the two countries have been tense since an Iranian-Canadian photographer, Zahra Kazemi, was beaten to death in prison in 2003 after she was detained while taking pictures.
Dozens of dual nationals are in jail in Iran, mostly on spying charges.


Qatar says attacks on region’s energy facilities have global repercussions

Updated 6 sec ago
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Qatar says attacks on region’s energy facilities have global repercussions

  • Qatar foreign ministry spokesperson said attacks on energy facilities are a dangerous precedent that will cause economic loss in the region and as well as global repercussion

DOHA: Qatar warned on Tuesday that attacks on regional energy infrastructure during the Middle East war would be felt economically throughout the world.

“The attacks on energy facilities that have happened, also on both sides, are a dangerous precedent... it will cause repercussions throughout the world,” foreign ministry spokesman Majed al-Ansari said.  

Iran has pressed its attacks against Qatar's infrastructure, he said. 

“The targeting of civilian infrastructure continues... and we rebuke any justification that the Iranians are offering for these attacks,” al-Ansari said. 

On Iran, the foreign ministry spokesperson said the Iranian president's statement of apology has not been translated into action, after cities in Bahrain and the UAE were hit by Iranian missiles.