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Neda becomes resistence symbol

Posted by Patrick on Jun 24th, 2009 and filed under Middle East, Photo Gallery, Worldnews. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

Neda has been shot

A YOUNG Iranian woman whose death during protests in Iran has made her a symbol for the opposition was an innocent bystander who was targeted by the militia, her fiance said.

Video of the final moments of Neda Agha-Soltan, with blood pouring from her nose after she was reportedly shot in the chest in Tehran on Saturday, has been flashed around the world on the Internet.

Her fiance, Caspian Makan, told London-based BBC Persian television on Monday that she had stumbled into the running battles between opposition supporters and Iranian security forces.

He said: ‘She was near the area, a few streets away, from where the main protests were taking place, near the Amir-Abad area. She was with her music teacher, sitting in a car and stuck in traffic. She was feeling very tired and very hot. She got out of the car for just a few minutes.

‘That’s when she was shot dead. Eyewitnesses and video footage of the shooting clearly show that probably Basij paramilitaries in civilian clothing deliberately targeted her. Eyewitnesses said they clearly targeted her and she was shot in the chest. She passed away within a few minutes. People tried to take her to the nearest hospital, the Shariati hospital. But it was too late.’

Mr Makan said Neda’s family struggled to persuade the Iranian authorities to release her body.

‘She was taken to a morgue outside Teheran. The officials from the morgue asked if they could use parts of her corpse for body transplants for medical patients,’ he said.

‘They didn’t specify what exactly they intended to do. Her family agreed because they wanted to bury her as soon as possible. We buried her in the Behesht-e-Zahra cemetery in southern Teheran. They asked us to bury her in this section where it seemed the authorities had set aside spaces for graves for those killed during the violent clashes in Teheran last week.’

The fiance told the Farsi-language broadcaster that Iranian authorities banned Neda’s family from holding a memorial service for her at a mosque because they were afraid it could become the focus of opposition protests.

‘The authorities there and the paramilitary group, the Basij, wouldn’t allow it because they were worried it would attract unwanted attention and they didn’t want any more trouble,’ he said. ‘The authorities are aware that everybody in Iran and throughout the whole world knows about her story. So that’s why they didn’t want a memorial service. They were afraid that lots of people could turn up at the event.’ — AFP

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