Suicide probe opened after Iranian found dead in French river
Lyon, France (AFP):
French authorities have been investigating as suicide the drowning of an Iranian man in the southeastern city of Lyon. The man had said on social media he was going to kill himself to draw attention to the crackdown against protests in Iran.
Mohammad Moradi, 38, was found in the Rhone river that flows through the centre of Lyon on Monday, a police source, who asked not to be named, disclosed.
Emergency services intervened but were unable to resuscitate him on the riverbank.
Moradi had posted a video on Instagram saying he was about to drown himself to highlight the crackdown on protesters in Iran since the death in custody of Mahsa Amini after her arrest in Tehran for an alleged breach of the country’s dress code requirements for women.
“When you see this video, I will be dead,” Moradi said.
“The police are attacking people, we have lost a lot of sons and daughters, we have to do something,” Moradi said in the video.
“I decided to commit suicide in the Rhone river. It is a challenge, to show that we, Iranian people, are very tired of this situation,” he added.
Lyon prosecutors said they had launched a probe to “verify the theory of suicide, in view in particular of the messages posted by the person concerned on social networks announcing his intention” to take his life.
The incident shocked the city, with a small rally to remember Moradi taking place on the banks of the Rhone on Tuesday.
“Mohammad Moradi killed himself to make the voice of revolution heard in Iran. Our voice is not being carried by the Western media,” said Timothee Amini of the local Iranian community.
According to several members of the Iranian community, Moradi was a history undergraduate and worked in a restaurant.
He lived in Lyon with his wife.
“His heart was beating for Iran, he could no longer bear the regime,” said Amini, deploring that while the Ukraine conflict was covered “every morning” one heard “very little about Iran” in the news.
Lili Mohadjer said Moradi hoped that “his death would be another element for Western media and governments to back the revolution underway in Iran”.
She said his death was “not suicide” but “sacrifice to gain freedom”.