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‘Assassination of Scientist Not to Go Unpunished’

A senior Judiciary official on Tuesday condemned the assassination of Iran’s nuclear scientists as a gross human rights violation, saying the crime, which is believed to be tied to Israel, will not go unpunished.
Kazem Gharibabadi, the Judiciary chief’s deputy for international affairs and secretary of the country’s High Council for Human Rights, posted a tweet on to mark the 10th anniversary of the assassination of senior nuclear scientist Mostafa Ahmadi Roshan.
He praised the scientist for his tireless efforts toward “promoting and localizing peaceful nuclear knowledge.”
“The crime of assassinating scientists will not go unpunished as a gross violation of Human Rights,” Gharibabadi said.
A chemistry expert, Ahmadi Roshan, 32, oversaw a department at the Natanz nuclear facility. He was murdered on January 11, 2012 by a magnetic bomb placed on his car in northern Tehran, in a terrorist attack blamed on the occupying regime of Israel.
Over the past years, Iranian nuclear scientists have been the target of the Western and Israeli spy agencies’ assassination attempts.
Between 2010 and 2012, four Iranian nuclear scientists — namely Masoud Alimuhammadi, Majid Shahriari, Darioush Rezaeinejad and Ahmadi Roshan — were assassinated, while another, Fereydoon Abbasi, was wounded in an attempted murder.
In June 2012, Iran announced that its intelligence forces had identified and arrested all terrorist elements behind the assassination of the country’s nuclear scientists.
In the latest case, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, who headed the Iranian Defense Ministry’s Organization of Defensive Innovation and Research, was assassinated on November 27, 2020.

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