AFP/Tehran
Iran yesterday accused arch-foes the US and Israel of masterminding the assassination of a scientist in Tehran, Dariush Rezaei-Nejad, who was reportedly associated with the defence ministry.

A man mourns over the flag-covered coffin of Dariush Rezaei-Nejad, the Iranian scientist who was shot dead on Saturday, during his funeral in Tehran yesterday
“The American-Zionist terrorist act yesterday against one of the country’s scientists is yet another sign of the Americans’ degree of animosity,” speaker Ali Larijani told parliament.
“America must think carefully about the consequences of such actions,” he said, urging security forces in the Islamic Republic to give a “stronger response to such evil moves.”
But Intelligence Minister Heydar Moslehi was quoted as saying by the official Irna news agency that no signs had been found so far to suggest that foreign intelligence services were behind the murder.
“What is certain is that Dariush Rezaie-Nejad was not involved in the nuclear issue. His assassination is ambiguous and we are examining it,” Moslehi said.
“Operations by foreign intelligence services generally leave signs, but we have not found any signs in this terrorist act and we have not reached any conclusion on whether foreign intelligence services are behind it,” he added.
Assailants riding a motorcycle shot dead Rezaei-Nejad, 35, in Tehran on Saturday evening, according to Iranian media which originally reported he was a nuclear scientist working for the Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran.
But yesterday, the media stopped referring to him as a nuclear expert, without giving an explanation, and presented him as an “electronics master’s student” at Tehran’s Khajeh Nassir University.
The Fars news agency suggested that the media had made a mistake in reporting Rezaei-Nejad’s speciality, and insisted that he had links with the defence ministry, without giving details.
But higher education deputy minister Mohamed Mehdinejad Nouri told Mehr news agency that the victim “was not a member of the defence ministry” and suggested he may have collaborated on a project the ministry contracted out to Khajeh Nassir University.
Tehran governor Morteza Tamaddon said at Rezaei-Nejad’s funeral that the assassination “was without a doubt part of a project to discourage the Iranian nation from the path (of progress) it was pursuing,” Mehr reported.
A statement signed by 200 deputies condemned what they called “the cowardly actions of America and the Zionist regime against the Islamic Republic,” particularly the “murder of an Iranian scientist.”
Several Iranian nuclear scientists have disappeared in recent years or been targeted in attacks the Islamic Republic has blamed on the US and Israel.