Iran holds, questions opposition leaders’ children

 

 

 

 

 

Iranian authorities held and questioned two daughters of detained opposition leader Mirhossein Mousavi and the son of fellow opposition figure Mehdi Karoubi for several hours on Monday, opposition websites reported.

Mousavi and Karoubi stood as reformist candidates in presidential elections in 2009 and became figureheads of the huge “Green movement” street protests that followed over allegations of vote-rigging.

The two leading opposition figures, who were placed under house arrest along with Mousavi’s wife Zahra Rahnavard almost exactly two years ago, are effectively barred from any role in a new election due this June.

Security officials went to the residences of their grown-up children on Monday, confiscated property, took them in for questioning and later released them, said opposition websites.

The state-linked Iranian Students’ News Agency (ISNA) said the two daughters Zahra and Narges Mousavi were summoned for questioning, not arrested, and were asked to give “explanations” to prosecutors.

It did not say what they were questioned about but it may be connected to a statement the women issued last month complaining they had been denied access to their parents.

Mousavi’s other daughter, Kokab, told opposition website Kaleme security officials searched her sisters’ homes for several hours and “took anything they thought might be of use to them along with my sisters”.

Karoubi’s website Sahamnews said security forces raided his son Hossein’s house on Monday morning and confiscated personal belongings including his laptop and mobile phone. Hossein was also taken away, questioned and released after several hours, the website added.

Mousavi and Karoubi were placed under house arrest in 2011 after they called their supporters onto the streets for a rally in support of uprisings across the Arab world.

Hardliners have asked the judiciary to execute both men, but authorities have so far chosen to isolate rather than officially arrest them.

Both men were defeated in the 2009 election by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. His win brought vast crowds onto the streets in demonstrations that were crushed by the state that said the unrest had been fomented by Iran’s foreign enemies.

With the reformists silenced, June’s election is likely to be a contest between rival hardline factions in the Islamic Republic.

Mousavi, 70, Iran’s prime minister in the 1980s, was treated for a heart problem in hospital in August.

Karoubi was hospitalized briefly in November after showing symptoms including weight loss, dizziness and nausea.

Independent U.N. human rights investigators called on Iran to release the opposition figures and said they were concerned about the reported detention of Zahra and Narges Mousavi close to the second anniversary of their father’s house arrest.

Source: Reuters