Innocence, you are no shield.he family, clad in black, stood at the curb of the road sobbing. A middle-aged mother slapped her cheeks, letting out piercing wails. The father, a frail man who worked as a doorman at a clinic in central Tehran, wept quietly with his head bowed.
Minutes before, an ambulance had arrived from Tehran's morgue carrying the body of their only son, 19-year-old Kaveh Alipour.
On Saturday, amid the most violent clashes between security forces and protesters, Mr. Alipour was shot in the head as he stood at an intersection in downtown Tehran. He was returning from acting class and a week shy of becoming a groom, his family said.
The details of his death remain unclear. He had been alone. Neighbors and relatives think that he got trapped in the crossfire. He wasn't politically active and hadn't taken part in the turmoil that has rocked Iran for over a week, they said.
"He was a very polite, shy young man," said Mohamad, a neighbor who has known him since childhood.
When Mr. Alipour didn't return home that night, his parents began to worry. All day, they had heard gunshots ringing in the distance. His father, Yousef, first called his fiancée and friends. No one had heard from him.
At the crack of dawn, his father began searching at police stations, then hospitals and then the morgue.
Upon learning of his son's death, the elder Mr. Alipour was told the family had to pay an equivalent of $3,000 as a "bullet fee"—a fee for the bullet used by security forces—before taking the body back, relatives said.
Mr. Alipour told officials that his entire possessions wouldn't amount to $3,000, arguing they should waive the fee because he is a veteran of the Iran-Iraq war. According to relatives, morgue officials finally agreed, but demanded that the family do no funeral or burial in Tehran. Kaveh Alipour's body was quietly transported to the city of Rasht, where there is family.
Everyone in the neighborhood knows the Alipour family. In addition to their slain son, they have two daughters. Shopkeepers and businesses pasted a photocopied picture of Mr. Alipour on their walls and windows. In the picture, the young man is shown wearing a dark suit with gray stripes. His black hair is combed neatly to a side and he has a half-smile.
"He was so full of life. He had so many dreams," said Arsalan, a taxi driver who has known the family for 10 years. "What did he die for?"
Son's Death Has Iranian Family Asking Why
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#1 Son's Death Has Iranian Family Asking Why
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#2
That's one hell of an expensive bullet.
And is it me or is Iran actively trying to be a Villain country again?
And is it me or is Iran actively trying to be a Villain country again?
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#3
'If you defy us, you will be shot and your family will be billed for the cost of the bullet'. Didn't realize it was literal.
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#4
Oh yes; China and the Soviet Union both did it. China still might; I'm not sure.SirNitram wrote:'If you defy us, you will be shot and your family will be billed for the cost of the bullet'. Didn't realize it was literal.
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#5
China still does. They use it particularly for when they're executing white collar criminals (as they're fond of doing).Rogue 9 wrote:Oh yes; China and the Soviet Union both did it. China still might; I'm not sure.SirNitram wrote:'If you defy us, you will be shot and your family will be billed for the cost of the bullet'. Didn't realize it was literal.
I've never seen it used in a case like this. Savagery
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#6
China bills the family for the cost of the bullet from executions, which occur after the appropriate legal procedures have all been gone through. There's no fee for getting shot in the streets like a rabid dog, and I believe that the Chinese government bills what the bullet actually costs. That would mean that if the morgue's actions are consistent with Iranian government policy, then Iran is engaging in a greater level of douchebaggery. However, the sheer ridiculousness of the price suggests to me that the morgue was likely engaging in extra judicial extortion. That might be why they folded after the young man's father brought up his status as a war veteran, it could be enough for him to get his complaint heard by some higher ups.
Last edited by Hadrianvs on Wed Jun 24, 2009 9:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.