Shortly after Neda Agha-Soltan was shot dead during a June election protest in Tehran, the Iranian government began trying to minimize the impact of her death, which was captured on a cell phone video and viewed worldwide with in days. They
banned public mourning of her, even forcing her family to remove black banners from their home, and began insisting the video did not show what it seemed to, making various claims about what really happened. Arash Hejazi, the doctor seen tending to Neda in the video, told
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, "Their first reaction was that she was alive. Then they said the footage was fake. One day they said a BBC reporter killed her. Then they said it was the CIA. Then they said the (Mujahedin) Khalq Organization (MKO) was behind it." Now, Iran state television has produced a documentary that "presents 'another side' of Neda's death, and challenges claims made by 'Western media," by suggesting that Neda was an agent of the U.S. and Britain who faked her own death -- i.e., not "another side" of the story so much as another story entirely. Reports RFE/RL, "The state-television documentary suggests the video of Neda's dying moments merely depicted her pouring blood on her own face from a special bottle she was carrying."
They're no longer claiming that Neda is alive, at least -- just that she was killed
later, in the car that took her away from the scene, as part of "a plot orchestrated by foreigners and opposition supporters," including Hejazi and Neda's music teacher. The documentary narrator explains, "While Neda is
she is injured and is lying on the back seat of the car on their lap, they bring out a handgun from their pockets. A handgun that they obtained from their Western and Iranian friends to water the tree of reforms and kill people and create divisions within society. Neda, for a moment, realizes their wicked plan and struggles to escape, but they quickly shoot her from behind." Iranian officials have also claimed that these same British and American groups that supposedly infiltrated the opposition were behind the death of Ali Mousavi, nephew of opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi, in December.
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http://www.salon.com/news/iran/index.html?story=/mwt/broadsheet/feature/2010/01/08/neda_fake