Canada demands widow of Iran professor be allowed to return home

By Jon Gambrell, The Associated Press

The widow of an Iranian-Canadian university professor who died under disputed circumstances in a Tehran prison has been stopped from travelling abroad, Canada’s foreign affairs minister said Thursday.

The death of Kavous Seyed-Emami in February sparked new anger in Iran over the treatment of detainees, especially after nearly 5,000 people were arrested in the wake of nationwide protests at the start of the year.

Seyed-Emami’s family say they warned against speaking out over the professor’s death, but his son Ramin, a popular singer known by the stage name King Raam, did anyway.

On Wednesday night, Ramin, his brother Mehran and mother Maryam Mombeini tried to fly out of Iran on a Lufthansa flight, with their ultimate destination being Vancouver. In an email circulated by supporters, Ramin said their mother was barred from leaving Iran.

In a tweet early Thursday morning, Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland confirmed Seyed-Emami’s widow was barred from leaving the country.

“We demand that, as a Canadian, she be given the freedom to return home,” Freeland wrote.

Canadian diplomats declined to elaborate. It wasn’t immediately clear where Maryam Mombeini was.

Freeland confirmed Ramin and Mehran arrived at Vancouver International Airport on Thursday.

Saying goodbye to their mother was emotional, said Ramin.

“They’re trying to prevent us from rebuilding our lives,” he told reporters at the airport.

“She said I just want you guys to be safe and away from this horrible place. Don’t ever come back.”

He said his mother’s Iranian passport has been confiscated to intimidate them from telling their story. She is with friends, he said, and has spoke directly with Freeland, who assured them she will make it to Canada.

Omar Alghabra, parliamentary secretary for the foreign affairs minister, said the government is “fully committed to reuniting them with their mother and we’ll exercise all diplomatic channels and all actions before us to see their mother reunited with them.”

Iran’s mission to the United Nations did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Iranian state-run media did not report on Maryam Mombeini being barred from leaving the country.

Seyed-Emami was a professor of sociology and the managing director of the Persian Heritage Wildlife Foundation. Iran has alleged, without offering evidence, that the professor gave information on the country’s missile bases to the CIA and Israel’s Mossad.

Iran entered the New Year with nationwide protests sweeping across 75 cities and towns. The demonstrations initially focused on Iran’s poor economy, but quickly spiraled into chants directly challenging Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the country’s theocratic government.

Authorities arrested nearly 5,000 people in the crackdown that followed, according to Alireza Rahimi, an Iranian lawmaker. At least 25 people were killed in clashes surrounding the demonstrations.

Activists say they have concerns about Iran’s prisons and jails being overcrowded and dangerous, pointing to allegations of torture, abuse and deaths that followed the mass arrests during Iran’s 2009 Green Movement protests. Since the most recent protests, activists have expressed concern over reported suicides within Iran’s prison system.

Analysts and family members of dual nationals and others detained in Iran have suggested that hard-liners in the Islamic Republic’s security agencies use the prisoners as bargaining chips for money or influence. A U.N. panel in September described “an emerging pattern involving the arbitrary deprivation of liberty of dual nationals” in Iran, which Tehran denies.

Iran does not recognize dual nationalities, so those detainees cannot receive consular assistance.

Meanwhile, Friday marks the 11th anniversary of the disappearance of former FBI agent Robert Levinson. He vanished on Iran’s Kish Island in 2007 while on an unauthorized CIA mission.

His family issued a statement Thursday asking both the U.S. and Iran for answers.

“Bob is still not home despite years of promises by the government of Iran and by three U.S. Administrations,” the statement read. “What must we do to get these two governments to show any mercy and send Bob home?”

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