Friday, May 25, 2012


Persian Letters

Iran's Intelligence Ministry To Prove Neda’s Murder ‘Staged’

An opposition demonstrator holds a picture of Neda Agha Soltan, whose death has made her an icon of the antigovernment protests.
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Iranian news websites, including khabaronline, are reporting that Iran’s Intelligence Ministry is due to release a documentary in the next few days “to complete the removal of ambiguities surrounding the murder of Neda Agha Soltan” and provide “new evidence” about the West’s version of events.

Neda, a young Iranian who was shot dead during the June postelection protests in Tehran, has become a symbol of Iran’s opposition movement. The amateur video of her last moments was posted on YouTube and watched by millions of people.

The report says the fact that Agha-Soltan's death was filmed from two different angles, among other points, is used to indicate that her murder was “staged.”

It is not clear whether the documentary is the same as the one produced by Iranian State television earlier this year, which suggested that Neda was an agent of the United States and Britain who staged her own death and poured blood on her face from a bottle.

Neda’s death has become a very sensitive issue for Iranian officials who have tried to discredit her and the opposition movement.

The release of the documentary some three weeks before the anniversary of last year’s disputed presidential vote appears to be another attempt to neutralize the impact of her death and again place blame on foreign countries.

Witnesses have said that Agha-Soltan was shot by a member of the Basij force.

-- Golnaz Esfandiari
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Comments
     
by: Julia from: Germany
May 26, 2010 20:06
Excuse me for complaining again, but I noticed that the woman on the picture is holding a photo of the "wrong" Neda, not Neda Agha Soltan. That poor woman had a lot of problems because of this mixing up of photos. It would maybe be worth a short comment in the caption of the posted pic.

Thank you for your great work, RFE/RL has become one of my favourite news sources on Iran.

Best wishes, Julia

by: Julia from: Germany
May 26, 2010 20:12
please ignore my previous comment on the picture of Neda - I am the one who got it all wrong. I am sorry!

by: Peter from: Canada
May 27, 2010 08:55
Her murder is definitely suspicious but the suspicion is on those who instigated Operation Ajax-2 and definitely not on Iran. It is a known fact that western intelligence agencies are active in Iran and specially CIA which is working towards toppling Iranian government. Much like their recent unsuccessful attempt in Venezuela in which CIA hired sniper thugs were shooting people from long ranges and the CIA synchronized western media blaming them on the local government. Such tactics by United States are not new. In fact in Iran itself in 1953, when CIA was conducting the operation Aajax-1, which resulted in toppling Iran's democratically elected governments such thugs had been hired by CIA to agitate the local people. At the time they would call for a demonstration and when a few hundred gather, the thugs start breaking property and setting fires in chaos and when police shows up to confront the mob, the thugs behind the crowd would start cutting people with razers and beating with sticks and terrorizing the crowd and the crowd runs towards the police which causes terror in police line and subsequently the crowd gets sandwiched. The name of the head thug at the time was Bi-Mokh.

by: Ari Torres from: Canada
June 13, 2010 13:53
Peter,you are an idiot.
I can not beleive that some one from my country thinks like you.
perhaps you've been hired by the Iranian Goverment.

About This Blog

Persian Letters is a blog that offers a window into Iranian politics and society. Written primarily by Golnaz Esfandiari, Persian Letters brings you under-reported stories, insight and analysis, as well as guest Iranian bloggers -- from clerics, anarchists, feminists, Basij members, to bus drivers.

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Seen anything in the Iranian blogosphere that you think Persian Letters should cover? If so, contact Golnaz Esfandiari at esfandiarig@rferl.org