VANCOUVER, British Columbia (Reuters) - Police in the Vancouver suburb of Port Moody, British Columbia, admitted surprise and some dismay on Thursday at finding themselves in the middle of diplomatic storm between Canada and Iran.
Iran accused Canadian police on Thursday of the "criminal" killing of an 18-year-old Iranian immigrant.
Iran and Canada are already at odds over Zahra Kazemi, 54, a Canadian photojournalist of Iranian descent who died in Tehran after suffering a severe blow to the head while in police custody. Canada recalled its envoy to Tehran over the incident and said it would review its ties with Iran.
Port Moody Police Department spokesman Constable Brian Soles said the department is still investigating the July 14 incident in which Iranian immigrant Keyvan Tabesh was shot to death after, according to reports, attacking a police officer while brandishing a machete.
"We're just Port Moody, we're just doing our investigation here. As far as that (Iran's allegations) goes, that's a matter for Ottawa to deal with," Soles said.
Port Moody is a rapidly growing community of about 25,000 people about 10 km (6.5 miles) east of Vancouver. Tabesh lived in Burnaby, British Columbia, another Vancouver suburb.
According to witnesses interviewed by police, the early morning incident began when two women complained that Tabesh had rammed their vehicle with his car, hit the vehicle repeatedly with a machete and then drove off.
Officers spotted Tabesh's car while interviewing the women. A plainclothes officer followed him and and reported he fired several shots after Tabesh got out of his car and ran at him with the machete, police said.
"Everything we have been able to uncover about this kid and his past character and incidents that had concerned him confirm (the original report)," Boles said.
He said witnesses include two youths who were in Tabesh's car, one of whom was wounded in the incident. The incident received widespread coverage in the Vancouver media because police shootings are very rare.
Tabesh's parents, who moved to Canada two years ago, have accused police of illegally shooting their son, who they said carried a weapon because he had been attacked by an unknown individual shortly after arriving in Canada.
Boles said Port Moody is committed to a "transparent and satisfactory" investigation of the shooting, echoing the words used by officials in both Tehran and Ottawa in their diplomatic dispute.
The officer who shot Tabesh, whose name has not been released, is on paid leave pending the completion of the investigation. He is a 25-year veteran of police work and is described as being "traumatized" by what happened.
Now they will know the feeling of Islamic pressure...those basturds
One dead, one wounded after Moody shooting
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Canadians (at least the ones running the government right now) are such wimps. A Canadian journalist was beaten to death for trying to expose violations of human rights. The Iranian regime has the nerve to compare that to the shooting of a machete-wielding creep--and the Canadian gov't doesn't care.