Dokument #1343319
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Autor)
A 15 October 1997 report from Iran's
Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) stated that there would be
three two-way Aseman flights from Mashhad, in Iran, to Ashkabad, in
Turkmenistan, on Saturdays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays as of the
following week.
On 26 May 1997, the Tehran newspaper
Jomhuri-ye Eslami reported that officers of Aseman Air
Services Company had been sentenced in connection with the 1995
crash of an Asseman Fokker-28 in Mehr. The company's managing
director, Ali Abedzadeh, was sentenced to one year's imprisonment,
as was the deputy managing director for support and engineering
Iraj Rownaqi; and Mohammed Reza Nuri, the "supervisor of the
technical group," was sentenced to four months' imprisonment. The
convicted officers were also ordered to pay "blood money" to the
families of 63 people who died in the crash. It should be noted
that an IRNA dispatch of 15 November 1995 reported on the
conviction and sentencing of the same people. According to that
dispatch, Ali Abedzadeh and Iraj Runaqi (Rownaqi) were each
sentenced to two years' imprisonment, as was Ezatollah Baba'i
Kashkaki, Aseman Airlines' "deputy managing-director for flight
standard" (ibid.). Mohammed Reza Nuri was not mentioned by name,
but the dispatch stated that "the head of the technical group of
Fokker-28 was sentenced to six months" (ibid.). Seyyed Razi Musavi,
Aseman Airlines' "head of the technical team on duty," was
acquitted (ibid.).
Despite the reported conviction and
sentence of November 1995, the 1 May 1996 issue of Keyhan-e
Hava'i reported that Iranian Transport Minister Akbar Torkan
had renewed Ali Abedzadeh's appointment as "chairman of the board
of directors and general manager of Aseman Air Services Company"
for another three years.
According to a 3 February 1997 IRNA
dispatch, Transportation Minister Akbar Torkan stated that Aseman
airlines had bought four Boeing and four Fokker F-28 aircraft over
the previous two years.
In response to a questionnaire published in
Keyhan on 13 February 1995, Transportation Minister Akbar
Torkan stated that in 1994 "the Iranian National Airlines Company
had increased the number of its seats to 7,274, the [private]
Aseman Company to 1,450 seats and all other Iranian companies by
1,500 seats for domestic and international routes" (square brackets
in the original).
Aseman is referred to as "state-owned" in a
Flight International report of 22 November 1989 and a
Reuters dispatch of 21 February 1986.
Information on any connection between
Aseman and the Sepah Pasdaran or Komiteh could not be found among
the sources consulted by the Research Directorate.
This Response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the Research Directorate within time constraints. This Response is
not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any
particular claim to refugee status or asylum.
References
Flight International. 22
November 1989. "Iran Expansion." (NEXIS)
Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA)
[Tehran, in English]. 15 October 1997. "Iran: Number of Flights
from Northern Iran to Ashkabad to Rise." (FBIS-NES-97-288 15 Oct.
1997/WNC)
_____. 3 February 1997. "Iran:
Transportation Ministry's Post-Revolution Performance."
(FBIS-NES-97-024 3 Feb. 1997/WNC)
_____. 15 November 1995. "Officials
Responsible for Plane Crash Sentenced." (FBIS-NES-95-221 15 Nov.
1995/WNC)
Jomhuri-ye Eslami [Tehran, in
Persian]. 26 May 1997. "Iran: Court Jails Aseman Airlines Officials
Over Crash." (FBIS-NES-97-150 30 May 1997/WNC)
Keyhan [Tehran, in Persian]. 13
February 1995. "Ministers Respond to Keyhan Questionnaire
( Transport Minister Torkan." (FBIS-NES-95-035 13 Feb.
1995/WNC)
Keyhan-e Hava'i [Tehran, in
Persian]. 1 May 1996. "Iran: New Appointments Announced."
(FBIS-NES-96-110 1 May 1996/WNC)
Reuters. 21 February 1986. PM Cycle.
"Tehran Radio Names 37 Killed in Downed Iranian Plane." (NEXIS)