Kazem Sami

Kazem Sami Kermani (1935 – 23 November 1988)[1] was Iran's minister of health[2] in the transitional government of Mehdi Bazargan and leader of The Liberation Movement of People of Iran (JAMA).

Kazem Sami
Minister of Health
In office
4 February 1979  2 November 1979
Prime MinisterMehdi Bazargan
Preceded byManouchehr Razmara
Succeeded byMousa Zargar
Member of Parliament of Iran
In office
28 May 1980  28 May 1984
ConstituencyTehran, Rey and Shemiranat
Majority819,186 (50.1%)
Personal details
Born1935
Mashhad, Iran
Died23 November 1988(1988-11-23) (aged 52–53)
Tehran, Iran
Political partyJAMA
Children2 daughters

Political career

Kazem Sami was one of the leaders and organizers of the Iranian revolution. He served as the minister of health in the Iran's interim government, making him Iran's first minister of health after the Iranian Revolution of 1979. He ran in the first Iranian presidential elections, but lost to Abolhassan Banisadr, coming sixth out of the seven presidential candidates. He served as a deputy in the first post-revolutionary Iranian Parliament. After distancing himself from the revolutionary government, Dr Sami remained one of the few active opposition leaders in Iran, openly criticizing the Islamic Republic government. He also wrote a famous open letter to Ayatollah Khomeini, criticizing him for the continuation of the Iran-Iraq war after Iran had recovered her occupied territories, notably the liberation of Khorramshahr.

Murder

Dr. Sami was murdered in his private medical clinic in 1988,[3] under suspicious circumstances.[4] He is believed to be one of the first victims of the "Chain murders",[5] a series of murders and disappearances of Iranian dissident intellectuals in the 1990s.

gollark: The more demand/less space thing is for land, though.
gollark: Weird. Why is that? If it's just labour and materials, which drives the most of the increase?
gollark: Also, less pollution.
gollark: I live in some random place in the middle of nowhere, and while that's generally annoying it means housing is cheap, if little else.
gollark: In a sane system, there would be more houses built to compensate for demand. Unfortunately in a lot of places there seem to be weird obstacles to this, like zoning stuff and people living there saying "no development, we must have high housing prices".

See also

References

Non-profit organization positions
Preceded by
Shams Pahlavi
President of the Iranian Red Lion and Sun Society
1979–1980
Succeeded by
Ali Behzadnia
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