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Efat Ghazi

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Efat Ghazi (Persian: عفت قاضی, born 2 November 1935 – died 6 September 1990) was a Kurdish refugee from Iran who was killed by a letter bomb in Västerås, Sweden, in 1990.

Efat Ghazi was born in a Kurdish family in Iranian Kurdistan. Her father, Qazi Muhammad, was president of the short-lived Republic of Mahabad, which was proclaimed in Iranian Kurdistan in 1946. After studying law in Iran, Ghazi worked as a teacher, a profession she continued in Sweden where she later arrived as a refugee.[1] She gained habitual residence in 1985 but never had Swedish citizenship.[1] In Sweden, she reunited with her husband, Emir Ghazi, with whom she had two daughters.[1][2] Emir Ghazi was a former member of the politburo of the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (PDK-I) and later leader of the Independence Party of Kurdistan.[1] Efat Ghazi was not politically active.[1]

On 6 September 1990, at about 12:45 p.m., Ghazi was seriously wounded after opening a letter bomb outside her family's house in Västerås.[1] She was taken to a hospital where she died from her wounds three hours later.[1] From the letter remainders which the police collected from the crime scene, it was confirmed that the letter bomb was addressed to her husband.[2] The Iranian government was quickly suspected by many of having ordered the assassination, which had many similarities to other assassinations and assassination attempts of Iranian political exiles around the world at this time.[3] However, a few years after the assassination, the Swedish police closed the investigation citing lack of evidence.[3]

Thousands of people showed up at the funeral in Västerås, many of them from abroad. Among the speakers at the funeral was C.-H. Hermansson, former leader of the Swedish Left Party.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Fälth, Gun (7 September 1990). "Kvinna sprängd till döds". Dagens Nyheter (in Swedish).
  2. ^ a b Westmar, Bo (7 September 1990). "Bomben var avsedd för maken". Dagens Nyheter (in Swedish).
  3. ^ a b c Rahimi, Babak (19 November 2002). "Offer för Irans dödspatruller" (in Swedish). Mana. Retrieved 2007-12-30.[dead link]