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Iran Condemns Oxford For Honoring Neda Agha-Soltan, Slain Protester

ALI AKBAR DAREINI   11/11/09 04:01 PM ET   AP

Neda

TEHRAN, Iran — Iran has protested to an Oxford University college over a scholarship in memory of the slain Iranian student who became an icon of mass street protests sparked by the disputed June election.

In Tehran, a small group of hard-line women demonstrated Wednesday against the scholarship in front of the British Embassy. The women chanted "Death to Britain," the semi-official Fars news agency reported.

Oxford's Queen's College established the Neda Agha Soltan Graduate Scholarship in Philosophy earlier this year, named for the 27-year-old student fatally shot on June 20 on the sidelines of a Tehran demonstration. Her dying moments were caught on a video viewed by millions on the Internet, and she became a potent symbol of the opposition's struggle.

"It seems that the University of Oxford has stepped up involvement in a politically motivated campaign which is not only in sharp contrast with academic objectives" but also linked to British interference in Iran's post-election turmoil, Iran's Embassy in London said in a letter to the provost of the British university's college. Queen's College confirmed it had received the letter dated Tuesday.

Iran has in the past accused Britain of playing a role in the protests following the June 12 presidential election and meddling in its internal affairs. The opposition said President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad won the election by fraud. But hard-liners have described the massive protests as a plot by Iran's enemies to overthrow the system of clerical rule through a 'velvet revolution.'

The Iranian letter said Soltan's "suspicious death" is still a criminal case being investigated by the police at home. It said she had been shot on an isolated street far from the protesters and her "murderers" had filmed her and her companions for 20 minutes before the killing.

The letter also mentioned Arash Hejazi, an Iranian doctor who was with Soltan at the time she was shot and said he tried to save her life. Hejazi is studying at Oxford and was visiting Iran at the time.

"Surprising, an Oxford fellow, Mr. Arash Hejazi, who had arrived in Iran two days before Neda's killing, was present on the scene when she was bleeding to death and immediately left for London the day after her horrible death," the letter said. "There is further supporting evidence indicating a pre-made scenario and other complications yet to be investigated.

In July, a couple weeks after Soltan's death, Iran's police chief said intelligence officials were seeking Hejazi. That came after Hejazi returned to London and told the BBC that Soltan apparently was shot by a member of the volunteer Basij militia, which is linked to Iran's powerful and elite Revolutionary Guard corps. Hejazi said protesters spotted an armed member of the militia on a motorcycle, and stopped and disarmed him.

Iranian police claimed this was a fabrication and the incident had nothing to do with the street riots. Police did not say why officials want Hejazi, but the regime repeatedly has implicated protesters and foreign agents in Soltan's death.

The protesters in Tehran Wednesday accused Hejazi of being behind Soltan's killing and demanded his extradition, even though he is not facing any charges in Iran.

"We want you to extradite Neda Agha Soltan Murderer" read a placard carried by the women. They also chanted "U.K. and U.S. perpetrators."

The provost of Queen's College, Paul Madden, said the names of scholarships were decided, "within reason," by donors. The college did not disclose the donors behind the Soltan scholarship, but said the key individual was a British citizen who is well known to the college.

The scholarship is open to all philosophy students, with preference given to Iranians and those of Iranian descent. The first holder is Arianne Shahvisi, studying for a master's degree in the philosophy of physics.

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TEHRAN, Iran — Iran has protested to an Oxford University college over a scholarship in memory of the slain Iranian student who became an icon of mass street protests sparked by the disputed Jun...
TEHRAN, Iran — Iran has protested to an Oxford University college over a scholarship in memory of the slain Iranian student who became an icon of mass street protests sparked by the disputed Jun...
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01:55 PM on 11/12/2009
Iranian security forces have confessed to the outragous crime of killing 37 protesters, so far, but not Neda. Can anyone provide a believable explanation as to why Neda was being stalked by a camera before she was murdered mercilessly. Here is the video clip from CNN.

http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x9o4zw_neda-neda-soltani-iran-basij

Was she the most prominent green-clad protester holding the biggest placard saying "where is my vote?" , shouting the loudest "death to the dictator"? Or, was she an unremarkable pedestrian quietly, slowly crossing the street? What was so interesting about a scarfed woman dressed in black that explains a camera following her every move?

Establishment media is certain as to who shot Neda. While I dutifully bleat, may I ask who shot the video, and why? Cui bono?
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MGarin
11:44 AM on 11/12/2009
Wow, Iran didn't blame Israel. Yet.
02:04 PM on 11/12/2009
They probably have. Its just that the media is busy repreating every accusation, verbal attack, false attribution, castigation, call for censure, charge, chiding, complaint, criticism, denunciation, depreciation, diatribe, disapprobation, disapproval, disfavor, disparagement, expostulation, exprobation, imputation, incrimination, inculpation, indictment, invective, objurgation, obloquy, opposition, rebuke, recrimination, remonstrance, reprehension, reprimand, reproach, reprobation, reproof, repudiation, slur, and tirade that Isarel levels at Iran.
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Jimboy17
10:12 AM on 11/12/2009
If I have to choose between the rulers of Iran and Oxford, I am afraid I will have to choose Oxford every time. The junta that controls Iran has zero credibility.
11:49 AM on 11/12/2009
Yep. And that regime's got plenty more to worry about right now than what's happening in Oxford.
02:39 PM on 11/12/2009
Right. Their approval rating has slipped down to 81%

http://www.worldpublicopinion.org/pipa/articles/brmiddleeastnafricara/639.php?nid=&id=&pnt=639&lb=
09:50 AM on 11/12/2009
Regime change is nasty business. Political assassinations, staged for effect or otherwise, and various bits of intrigue are par for the course. Criminal allegations, and even convictions, have very little if anything to do with the truth.

What can be said truthfully is that an innocent girl has been deprived of living out her days. Her parents will go to their graves with heavy hearts. This is the problem.

The sacrificial lamb suffers no more. However, those who thought it best to make the sacrifice can never remove the blood from their hands. It is there for all eternity.
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joebaggadonuts
Civilization: Evolutionary pathway of choice.
09:25 AM on 11/12/2009
While I understand their hatred of the British and the Americans who after all were the root cause of their theocracy's rise from the ashes of the revolution against their own Shah, for a theocracy to condemn a university for honoring one innocent life slain by their own hand seems to me to be a violation of one of their most cherished beliefs. Do not true Muslims believe that shedding innocent blood is the worst form of behavior and condemn that? Why then condemn a university who honors a slain innocent? They are acting out of fear and denial, IMHO.
08:19 AM on 11/12/2009
This regime is so pathetic and transparent. They will crumble within two years.
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04:21 AM on 11/12/2009
Which was it, was she shot on a street far away from the protest or on the side lines of the protest? and who exactly is investigating Hejazi, it says the Iranians hold no charges against him...
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cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
04:50 AM on 11/12/2009
Truth is a mighty construction of nails and sails and breaches in the hull. It arrives on the evening tide and harbors with the raucous and the harlot. Know that if you spill your rum there may not come a wench to fill it again. Sleep asound and pray you do not remember the revelry of your passions for the wind catches the jib in the morning the same as for the disheartened and the spry for on the high seas ropes and ladders are of no avail -- you will not be tied down.
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cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
04:16 AM on 11/12/2009
They chanted "Death to Britain"? Don't they know that in Great Britain, "The love you get is equal to the love you give"? I was sitting in an English garden when that suddenly dawned on me.
04:35 AM on 11/12/2009
what say ye to they that chant,"death to universal health care"? Are they not of the same family?
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cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
04:41 AM on 11/12/2009
Aye, and sailin' right into the red storms of mornin' they are.
10:50 PM on 11/11/2009
I hope that Mr. Ahmadinejad meets a violent and very painful end. The same goes for their "Ayatollah ya once, Ayatollah ya" twice grand lmam.
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cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
04:18 AM on 11/12/2009
Oouch! Here's my red cape. Come to the cape, Bully, Bully. That's right, charge right through to your karma.
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harrymudd
10:38 PM on 11/11/2009
Please do not say "Iran Condemns" the leaders of Iran; the religious zealots are not Iran. Nor do they represent Iran. They are holding Iran hostage just as they held the Americans hostage 30 years ago.
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Khirad
11:00 PM on 11/11/2009
Verily. I make a point (and am not always consistent, admittedly, given the context) of making the distinction of hardliners, whom, if this story is any indication, are keepin' it classy as usual. My question, did they protest before or after the queue developed for students trying to obtain student visas?

Funny thing about the embassy. It is on a side street, which the Iranian government named in honor of Bobby Sands, only, in the re-transliteration back into English became 'Babi Sandez' - which is not hard to do if you're familiar with the Perso-Arabic script. But, this just says volumes in itself, it really does.

I don't know if this has been corrected by now. Lord knows that the defiance with which they treat the English language even in official buildings is a statement all of its own. Especially considering that there are plenty of native Iranians perfectly fluent in English.

But, I've digressed. Keep it classy and keep blaming BBC (just like the shah did), even though you yourselves fund Press TV.
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harrymudd
10:33 PM on 11/13/2009
I am not getting your point ! You have to make your point a bit more clearly; I have definitely missed it.
What does Bobby Sands have to do with anything.
What does it mean to treat English with defiance. Why should an official building matter.
Who is funding "Press TV"; what is "Press TV" anyway?
I have a headache trying to figure out what you mean.
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cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
04:21 AM on 11/12/2009
Congratulations, you just won two tickets on the 3-minute metro to Tehran. Redeem your tickets here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=17ZIoM3jqxc
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hardrain77
Ron Paul not Romney
08:22 PM on 11/11/2009
They have a point. Turns out the "twitter revolution" wasn't even real. It was all brought in to destabilize.

http://gawker.com/5400268/the-revolution-will-not-be-tweeted-because-only-0027-of-iranians-are-on-twitter
10:24 PM on 11/11/2009
The point that IRI has is the point of bayonets against their own people. Thankfully the Iranian people aren't standing for it despite the violence meted out by the state as Neda's life attests.
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harrymudd
10:36 PM on 11/11/2009
No they don't. Plus IRI is not Iran. It is a bunch of thug who are holding the Iranian people hostage at the point of a gun. Only ones who supported them are Islamic fanatics and the hard left in the west.
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TexasAnne
12:05 AM on 11/12/2009
Hard left?
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MontanaSouth
Montanan in Tucson
01:31 PM on 11/12/2009
It is interesting to me that one gets that idea. Most I know who can be characterized as " the hard left" are atheists and do not support theocracies at all. They support the iranian peoples right to determine their destiny without any meddling in by any foreign country. So they were against the US involvement that put the Shaw in power and they would be against US involvement trying to overthrow the current Theocracy. Not because they support the Theocracy, but because they feel it is the iranian peoples fight. And, I think if you were to ask those in Iran who appose the current gov, they would say the same, it is their country. They want recognition of their cause and moral support, but not active on the ground meddling.
07:14 PM on 11/11/2009
Oxford condemns iraq for the death of Neda as does the free world
07:49 PM on 11/11/2009
Yes, of course it was the Iraquis behind the unfortunate incident with Ms. Neda. The wise leaders of Qom are grateful that with your words the truth will out.
09:21 PM on 11/11/2009
i meant iran that oxford condemns. my mistake
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Dr Scott
All I ask is that you make sense
06:01 PM on 11/11/2009
Keep up the good work, Oxford. Tell Iran to take their ridiculous protests and stick them where the sun don't shine.
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Khirad
10:48 PM on 11/11/2009
Wow, you didn't even read the headline, or that was ill-conceived satire.
02:50 AM on 11/12/2009
I believe the previous poster refers to the "death to Britain" protesters by UK embassy , not the greens.