World Watch
June 23, 2009 12:09 PM

Neda: More Than An Icon

(AP Photo)
Daniel Farber is editor-in-chief of CBSNews.com.

As details surface about Neda Agha-Soltan, the 26-year-old killed during the Iranian demonstrations, she becomes more than just an icon for the protest movement. She was a vibrant young woman who worked part-time in her family's travel agency and enjoyed Persian pop music, singing and playing piano.

Hamid Panahi, Neda's music teacher said, "She was a person full of joy. She was a beam of light. I'm so sorry. I was so hopeful for this woman," the Los Angeles Times reported based on interviews with her friends. "Travel was her passion, and with her friends she saved up enough money for package tours to Dubai, Turkey and Thailand. Two months ago, on a trip to Turkey, she relaxed along the beaches of Antalya, on the Mediterranean coast."

The LA Times story reported that Ms. Agha-Soltan was not an activist, and " began attending the mass protests only because she was outraged by the election results."

And now, the Iranian government is apparently claiming that rioters were responsible for Ms. Agha-Soltan’s death. The government-run Islamic Republic of Iran News Network (IRINN) reported that a “reliable source” confirmed after examining the bullet and the way Ms. Agha-Soltan was shot that rioters were responsible for her death, and that a number of people had been arrested in connection with her death.

According to an Al Jazeera interview with Caspian Makan, Ms. Agha-Soltan's fiance, she was in an area near the main protests with her music teacher, in a car mired in traffic. She was feeling hot and got out of the car for a spell and was shot in the chest, dying in a few minutes as people around her filmed and photographed her death.




Makan further described in a BBC Persian TV interview what he heard happened when she was shot and the days after:

"Eyewitnesses and video footage of the shooting clearly show that probably Basij paramilitaries in civilian clothing deliberately targeted her. Eyewitnesses said they clearly targeted her and she was shot in the chest."

"She passed away within a few minutes. People tried to take her to the nearest hospital, the Shariati hospital. But it was too late."

"We worked so hard to get the authorities to release her body. She was taken to a morgue outside Tehran. The officials from the morgue asked if they could use parts of her corpse for body transplants for medical patients."

"They didn't specify what exactly they intended to do. Her family agreed because they wanted to bury her as soon as possible."

"We buried her in the Behesht-e-Zahra cemetery in southern Tehran. They asked us to bury her in this section where it seemed the authorities had set aside spaces for graves for those killed during the violent clashes in Tehran last week."

"On Monday afternoon, we had planned to hold a memorial service at the mosque."

"But the authorities there and the paramilitary group, the Basij, wouldn't allow it because they were worried it would attract unwanted attention and they didn't want anymore trouble."

"The authorities are aware that everybody in Iran and throughout the whole world knows about her story. So that's why they didn't want a memorial service. They were afraid that lots people could turn up at the event."

"So as things stand now, we are not allowed to hold any gatherings to remember Neda."

See also:

Iran's 'Neda', An Internet Icon


Watch CBS Videos Online



Tags:
neda ,
iran ,
mousavi ,
ahmadinejad
Topics:
Iran
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Add a Comment See all 15 Comments
by Paul-Solomon June 30, 2009 10:36 PM EDT
By her tragic death, Neda Agha-Soltan became a powerful, larger-than-life symbol of protest. The Iranian government can't control the powerful image of her dying as we watch on YouTube or on the evening news, or as protesters carry pictures of her bloodied face. Ahmadinejad can try to divert the public's attention, but it won't work. The videotaped killing has become the defining image of her country's corruption, and Agha-Soltan has become a symbol of that corruption. Fueled by Internet sites, blog posts, Twitter messages, and the traditional media, the gruesome death of a young woman in a nation in turmoil has given birth to an icon.
http://www.paulsolomon.blogspot.com
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by scallywag12 June 23, 2009 9:50 PM EDT
I know what kind of man shot her. A COWARD!!!
Reply to this comment
by DanRathersJr June 23, 2009 9:03 PM EDT
we Neda break from this story cbs
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by DanRathersJr June 23, 2009 9:02 PM EDT
we Neda break from this story cbs
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by mike18881 June 23, 2009 8:42 PM EDT
Hitor, I totally agree North Korea more concerns me more than iran, though a possibe jobe would me nice. Wht in the world sould we worry about iran, when we should worry about those that worked our whole lives and are on the verge of loseing everything.
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by mike18881 June 23, 2009 8:45 PM EDT
excuse my spelling, one handed does'nt work very well for me.
by government_control June 23, 2009 7:48 PM EDT
Obama just changes the channel and looks away. Obama doesnt care about the democratic process unless it is for his own personal self interest. Obama wishes photos of Neda would just disappear, be erased from history.
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by zonkzilla June 23, 2009 4:42 PM EDT
Only the worst coward in the world would shoot a beautiful young woman with a rifle while hiding on a roof top.
I have no idea why any Iranian would be afraid of those coward murderers.
I am inspired by the courage of the Iranians demanding real democracy and dying for the cause.
I like the people of Iran and hope they can get out from under the Ayatollah Adolf Hitler and his gestapo.
Like I have said before, Persian women are probably the most beautiful in the world and Neda is truly beautiful.
If I could find the coward thing that killed Neda I would stangle it with my bare hands.
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by dragyn30 June 23, 2009 4:34 PM EDT
Yesterday she was 16 today she is 27??

This is news to us why?? Ahmadinejad was not going to give up his throne - his pompous a.s.s attitude and the fact that he think the US is a joke as well as the United Nations did you expect anything different?

I think we should just pull out of all these countries let them blow each other to h.e.l.l. secure our borders and not let anyone fro these countries in, they could care less about our laws anyway.

They made their bed let them lie in it.

America has it own problems, time to take care of Number 1!
Reply to this comment
by Henri_Rochard June 23, 2009 4:27 PM EDT
Nothing will come of the protests in Iran.

The military will crush the protestors, just like the Chi-Coms did during Tianemen Square.

Sad to say.
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by mjlewis6 June 23, 2009 3:12 PM EDT
It is very likely Neda is dead because she was an innocent bystander, a woman, in a male dominated society that does not value women in the political arena and would stuff ballot boxes to stifle any moderation of the cleric view of women and any Basij militia would target women as a way of intimidating them since the militia is also responsible for moral enforcement of dress and conduct in public.

The ordinary Iranian does not possess a firearm.....and the use of firearms to disperse a crowd is a government tactic...not as a part of a peaceful demonstration against the election result
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by valabe June 23, 2009 3:00 PM EDT
So sad ... Neda is now a emblem for this and future figths for the human rigths. ..RIP Neda..... You are now free.
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by gunownerdan June 23, 2009 1:35 PM EDT
Too bad she couldn't shoot back.
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by TryTakingMyMoney June 23, 2009 1:21 PM EDT
Well...now that cries for freedom and democracy fell on deaf ears (no more "tear down this wall" events from America), I guess our liberal leader can now continue his diplomacy efforts with the Mullahs, Supreme Leaders, and "Axis of evil" around the world. Hopefully he has not offended any of these guys by what he said so far and can still cozy up to them. His experience with Bill Ayers and Rev. Wright should help in this case. WAKE UP AMERICA!
Reply to this comment
by apple2pie June 23, 2009 6:22 PM EDT
Trytakingmymoney ...your comments are absurb..as if Obama has any more contacts now than GWB had. I think a better name for you would be Iwantmybrainback
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