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Iran denies responsibility for Georgian PM's death

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  • Iran denies responsibility for Georgian PM's death

    Agence France Presse -- English
    February 6, 2005

    Iran denies responsibility for Georgian PM's death

    TEHRAN


    Iran moved Sunday to deny any role or responsibility in the death of
    Georgian prime minister Zurab Zhvania, killed by carbon monoxide
    fumes from a heater made in the Islamic republic.

    "Many such heaters were exported to Georgia, and many are being used
    in Iran.

    But nobody has ever died," insisted foreign ministry spokesman Hamid
    Reza Asefi. He said reports on the circumstances of the death
    "indicate a faulty installation".

    "Of course we feel sorry over the death of the Georgian prime
    minister, and we have sent a message of condolence," Asefi said. "It
    was a sad accident. We have good relations with Georgia and we were
    truly saddened."

    The 41-year-old prime minister, who was due to be buried later
    Sunday, was found by his bodyguards slumped over a table in an
    apartment on the outskirts of Tbilisi early Thursday -- sending shock
    waves through the former Soviet republic.

    He appeared to have succumbed to carbon monoxide fumes from an
    inadequately ventilated room heater -- manufactured by the Nik-Kala
    heater factory in Karaj, a satellite city of Tehran.

    Also denying any responsibility was Ali Soleimani, Nik-Kala's
    managing director.

    "Not only the Georgians but most residents of the new republics do
    not have the culture of using gas heaters," Soleimani told the Shargh
    newspaper.

    "The Georgian and Russian officials are the ones to blame. We have
    published manuals in Armenian and Russian giving the right
    instructions. We have emphasized that the heaters are to be installed
    by our representatives in those countries."
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