Background
Neda Hassani was born to Ahmed and Foroogh Hassani, as the eldest child of an Iranian family of three children. Mahmoud Hassani was the younger brother of her father, and had been imprisoned for seven years in Iran, prior to his execution.
Education
Hassani attended Carleton University, studying computer science.
Career
The family left Iran in the early 1980s, taking refuge in Greece before settling in Ottawa, Canada. Her uncle was among a group of an estimated 35,000 dissidents executed at that time. Hassani"s support for the Mujahedin led her to move to Paris, to join the National Council of Resistance of Iran.
The group was suspected of planning attacks against Iranian interests in Europe.
There was a discussion among some of the protesters of protesting via self-immolation. Hassani was quoted as saying "We all think of doing that", despite the fact that co-leader Maryam Rajavi expressed her opposition to suicidal protests.<ref=BBC3 /> On the evening of June 18, at approximately 7:15 p.m., Hassani returned, alone, to the front of the French embassy in London, where she doused herself in gasoline and set herself on fire.
She was found two hours later, and subsequently died in hospital on June 23, in the presence of her mother, having never regained consciousness. Hassani was one of four people who set themselves on fire in front of the French embassy in London, in the days following the arrests of Mujahedin members in France.
Another of the four, Heshmat Zandi, a 38-year-old engineering student, also died.
During the same period, three people set themselves on fire in Paris, one of whom, Sedighieh Mohageri, died, while another person was prevented from setting himself on fire, after dousing himself with gasoline in front of the French embassy in Switzerland. Hassani"s body was returned to Canada for burial. At Hassani"s funeral, on June 30, 2003, Hassani"s mother expressed pride in her daughter"s actions.
She also expressed similar sentiments in England, immediately following her daughter"s death, while discouraging others from following her daughter"s example.
Hassani is buried at Pinecrest Cemetery, Ottawa.
Membership
Hassani later joined a student protest at the French embassy in London, protesting the arrest in France and possible deportation to Iran of Rajavi and other members of the Mujahedin.