More Like Murder Than Suicide
Parisa Hatami - 2007.12.03

With nearly a month having passed since the suspicious death of a young doctor, Zahra Bani Yaghoub, in a Hamedan prison, new efforts are under way to discover the real reason behind the doctor’s death.
In the latest developments, the Alumni Association of Majlis Representatives wrote an open letter to Ayatollah Hashemi Shahroudi, head of Iran’s judiciary, asking him to investigate the suspicious death of this doctor in prison. More than 400 former Majlis representatives are members of the Association.
Noting the young doctor’s family background and conditions surrounding her arrest, the authors of the letter pose nine questions regarding the details of this case. The tone and substance of the questions suggest that the letter’s authors believe Bani Yaghoub’s death to be more like a murder than a suicide, a claim that Bani Yaghoub’s relatives have been making since day one.
Bani Yaghoub’s family argues that, in her last telephone conversation with her brother, Zahra did not exhibit any signs of wanting to attempt suicide. On the contrary, she was eagerly awaiting her bail to be posted so that she could be released. Zahra was arrested by Basiji forces more than a month ago while she was spending time with her fiancé at a public park. Forty-eight hours later, it was announced to her family, “Zahra has committed suicide using a piece of advertising banner cloth and has lost her life.”
Zahra Bani Yaghoub’s family and her attorney have submitted a complaint against Hamedan’s Basiji brigade. They argue that Zahra did not commit suicide. According to various reports, Zahra studied in schools for gifted children, received the 26th highest score in the nationwide college entrance exam, and graduated 1.5 years ago from Tehran University’s medical school.
An unofficial report indicated that a number of Revolutionary Guards commanders met last week with Ali Akbar Nateq Nouri, special representative of the Supreme Leader, and asked him to investigate this case.
According to this report, Bani Yaghoub’s father is a clerk at a Revolutionary Guard facility, and this has caused Revolutionary Guards commanders to be upset with the death of one of their colleague’s daughters.
Amir Kabir website reported that a group of Revolutionary Guards families told Nateq Nouri, “When a religious person and her family are treated in this way, such that family members of this person believe that they have no recourse in this judicial system, and they have been treated by officials in such a negative manner, then whatever is told of the inappropriate and insulting behavior of the police and Basijis and judicial officials with the public is true. The relatives of this woman have told Revolutionary Guards commanders and their families that they never imagined they would be treated like this in a regime for which they sacrificed everything that they had.”
