as i said only if you stay alive for some time after accident . the question is here , what was her cause of death , her car being crushed by a truck or something else , lets clear it first then we can discuss it further from that point
If someone is killed because the car they're sitting in got crushed (which is what Turkish authorities are claiming in this case), then it's impossible for their body to be devoid of bruises, scratches and other such marks.
there was some of these official in parliament who are questionable on sincerity , recall usa flag burning in parliament where were the offspring of the guys who did it . , what about how head of parliament offsprings work . didn't pious ahmadinejad children were out of country after he become president they come back and their jobs was ready for them .
did we have more conservative than saeed mortazavi , how he used his power to put his wife as the head of a hospital ?
Financial corruption and/or cronyism is one thing, adopting western lifestyles another.
Even as far as personal enrichment is concerned, reformists / moderates will beat the principlists hands down. Ahmadinejad for all his deviations since his second term, has never shown interest in material luxury, seeing how he's continued to reside in the eastern Tehran working class district of Narmak, driving a low end car and so on; in what neighborhood is someone like Rohani staying? And what did he have done to his neighbors' building so that he could enlarge his garage?
The paramount example being of course the Supreme Leader, whose modest lifestyle is perfectly in line with Imam Khomeini's. The most radical oppositionists will generally hesitate to fabricate stories of financial affluence about seyyed Khamenei, because they know how glaringly it will fly in the face of the obvious. A "Green Movement" dissident like Mohajerani is on the record for declaring that his staunch opposition to the Leader notwithstanding, he could not accuse him of accumulating wealth.
It's evident in their respective political gestures too, if they hardly bother to seek face to face contact with ordinary people, it says quite a lot about their elitist aristocratic mindset. Rohani remained glued inside a glitzy high end SUV as he was driven around the premises of a factory - this was his way of visiting the facility. Whilst President Ra'isi ever since his swearing-in has not ceased touring the most deprived towns and villages across Iran's provinces, meeting and listening to ordinary people in person.
I mean, anyone can enter the poshest corners of Shemiranat and ask around, they won't encounter lots of revolutionary-minded residents but anti-IR folk to no end, much more than they would in any working class area. That's because a significant majority of Iran's wealthy are either supporters of the liberal front or in outright opposition to the Islamic Republic (including some remnants and returnees from amongst the upper class of the Pahlavi era). Which is reflected in the geographic distribution of votes during elections.
Also, those who are engaging the most in anti-corruption activism are Hezbollahis and revolutionaries as well, such as Rae'fipur who's been campaigning for the transparency of votes at Majles etc.
its irrational to say its a phenomenon limited to reformist or moderate , its widespread in all political parties
It predominantly affects reformist and moderate elites, especially as far as the cultural incoherence is concerned.