Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Relatives Of Canadian Academic Homa Hoodfar Seek Details On Charges In Iran

The Canadian Press, 11 Jul, 2016 11:06 AM
    MONTREAL — A Montreal-based university professor being held in an Iranian jail is now reportedly facing charges, but her relatives say they haven't received word about the nature of any accusations.
     
    Iran's semi-official ISNA and Tasnim news agencies said Monday that Homa Hoodfar has been indicted on unknown charges.
     
    They quoted Tehran's prosecutor as saying Hoodfar was among three dual nationals and a foreigner who had been charged.
     
    The four, who have ties to Canada, Britain and the United States, are all believed to have been detained by hardliners in Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard.
     
    Amanda Ghahremani, Hoodfar's Montreal-based niece, said in an email relatives have only heard the same news reports as everyone else and that they would not comment until further details are available.
     
    "While the prosecutor makes this announcement through the media, neither Homa's lawyer nor her family have been informed of the actual charges against her and so the family would rather wait until we have specific details before making a comment," Ghahremani wrote Monday.
     
    The family had said in late June the Iranian probe on Hoodfar centred on dabbling in feminism and security matters.
     
    Hoodfar, a 65-year-old professor at Montreal's Concordia University, was born in Iran but has been living in Montreal for 30 years.
     
    She is an anthropologist who has conducted research on Muslim women in various regions of the world.
     
    Her family said she travelled to Iran in February to see family and conduct academic research.
     
    Hoodfar was initially arrested in March, shortly before she was to return home, but was released on bail. She was rearrested June 6 and is being held at Tehran's notorious Evin prison.
     
    Hoodfar's relatives are concerned about her health and safety, while Amnesty International Canada said news of the indictment is cause for concern.
     
    "I think it's very troubling that they are clearly going forward with legal action against Professor Hoodfar," Alex Neve, secretary general of the organization, said from Ottawa.
     
    "We have made it very clear we consider her to be a prisoner of conscience and that she should be released immediately."
     
    Apart from Hoodfar, the three others indicted Monday are:
     
    — Siamak Namazi , an Iranian-American businessman who has advocated for closer ties between the two countries and whose father is also held in Tehran;
     
    — Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe , an Iranian-British woman who works for the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of the news agency; and
     
    — Nizar Zakka, a U.S. permanent resident from Lebanon who has done work for the American government.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Surrey Man's Forty Years Of Flying Experience Brings Happy End To B.C. Plane Crash Saga

    Surrey Man's Forty Years Of Flying Experience Brings Happy End To B.C. Plane Crash Saga
    SURREY, B.C. — A Surrey, B.C., man is telling a remarkable story of flying skills and survival in the rugged mountains north of Vancouver.

    Surrey Man's Forty Years Of Flying Experience Brings Happy End To B.C. Plane Crash Saga

    Watch: Girl With A Prosthetic Leg Moved To Tears By Doll With Prosthetic Leg Like Her!

    Watch: Girl With A Prosthetic Leg Moved To Tears By Doll With Prosthetic Leg Like Her!
      "You gotta be kidding me," Emma said excitedly as she rips the doll out of the package. Emma then burst into tears as she hugs the doll.

    Watch: Girl With A Prosthetic Leg Moved To Tears By Doll With Prosthetic Leg Like Her!

    Watch: This Punjabi Street Singer Will Take your Breath Away

    Watch: This Punjabi Street Singer Will Take your Breath Away
    Sometimes amazing talent simply goes unnoticed.

    Watch: This Punjabi Street Singer Will Take your Breath Away

    Final Arguments Begin In B.C. Terrorism Trial With Focus On 'Spiritual Guidance'

    VANCOUVER — The lawyer for a man found guilty of plotting to bomb the British Columbia legislature says spiritual guidance offered by undercover police officers lies at the heart of the entrapment case.

    Final Arguments Begin In B.C. Terrorism Trial With Focus On 'Spiritual Guidance'

    Parents Of Dead Diabetic Teen Refused To Accept Diagnosis: B.C. Doctor

    Parents Of Dead Diabetic Teen Refused To Accept Diagnosis: B.C. Doctor
    CALGARY — A British Columbia doctor says the parents of a starved teen refused to accept a diabetes diagnosis when the boy was initially admitted to hospital 13 years before his death.

    Parents Of Dead Diabetic Teen Refused To Accept Diagnosis: B.C. Doctor

    B.C. Health Minister Lays Out Assisted Dying Rules In Absence Of Law

    B.C. Health Minister Lays Out Assisted Dying Rules In Absence Of Law
    Health Minister Terry Lake issued a statement saying doctors will be guided by the criteria set out in the high court's ruling, allowing doctors to make sure safeguards are in place to protect vulnerable patients.

    B.C. Health Minister Lays Out Assisted Dying Rules In Absence Of Law