Iran hangs ‘nuclear scientist’ killer

Mansoureh Karami, wife of the late Iranian scientist Ali-Mohammadi speaks during trial of Jamil Fashi accused of murdering Ali-Mohammadi in Tehran.

Mansoureh Karami, wife of the late Iranian scientist Ali-Mohammadi speaks during trial of Jamil Fashi accused of murdering Ali-Mohammadi in Tehran.

Published May 15, 2012

Share

Iran on Tuesday hanged a man convicted of playing a key role in the 2010 murder of a top nuclear scientist and of spying for Israel, the official IRNA news agency reported quoting Tehran prosecution office.

“Majid Jamali Fashi, the Mossad spy and the person who assassinated Masoud Ali Mohammadi, our nation's nuclear scientist was hanged on Tuesday morning,” IRNA said.

Local media on August 28 reported that Jamali Fashi was sentenced to death after being “convicted of Moharebeh (waging war against God) for placing a bomb-laden bike and blowing it up in front of martyr Ali Mohammadi's home, collaboration with the Zionist regime and Mossad.”

Jamali Fashi stood trial as the main suspect in the killing of Ali Mohammadi, a particle physics professor at Tehran University who was killed in a bomb attack outside his home in January 2010.

Jamali Fashi also faced charges of cooperating with Israel's spy agency and of having received $120 000 for passing on intelligence to Mossad, the website report added.

The Islamic republic has blamed the Jewish state and the United States for the killing of four of its scientists and nuclear experts since 2010.

Western powers and Israel suspect Iran is seeking an atomic weapons capability under the guise of its civilian nuclear and space programmes, a charge Tehran vehemently denies. - Sapa-AFP

Related Topics: