April 1, 2022
Contact: Satar Rahmani
Email: satarahmani@hotmail.com
Mobile: +44 7757 593255
IEC: Press@FreeIransPoliticalPrisonersNow.org
Twitter @IranPrisonEmerg
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Statement by Satar Rahmani, Spokesperson for Mehran Raoof
The British Government Must Secure Freedom for All Imprisoned UK-Iranian Dual Nationals
The following statement was issued by Satar Rahmani, the official representative and spokesperson for imprisoned Iranian-British dual national citizen Mehran Raoof, with support from the International Emergency Campaign to Free Iran’s Political Prisoners Now
Satar Rahmani:
It is a wonderful and extremely important development that UK-Iranian dual nationals Anoosheh Ashoori and Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe have been released from prison in Iran and are now free.
However, it is a travesty and outrage that three British citizens – Mehran Raoof, Morad Tahbaz, and Shahram Shirkhani – remain imprisoned in Iran, conspicuously left out, so far, of the agreement struck between the British and Iranian governments that led to Nazanin’s and Anoosheh’s release.
The British government initially claimed that Morad, who has cancer, would be freed as part of the deal. Yet he was rearrested and imprisoned, and went on hunger strike (now ended) in protest.
In Mehran’s case, Britain’s Minister for the Middle East and North Africa, James Cleverly, claimed to a member of Parliament that Mehran Raoof had not requested consular assistance. In response to questioning about Mehran’s case, Foreign Minister Liz Truss implied he had requested that his case not been made public: “I must respect the individual’s request of whether their case should be raised in public. That is why we mention publicly only those individuals who have asked to be named.” (See Guardian and IranWire coverage.)
As Mehran’s official representative, I can state unequivocally that neither of these statements is accurate.
Mehran’s family and friends properly informed the Foreign Office that it should raise Mehran’s case with the Iranian authorities in order to secure his release. They did not state that his case should not be made public. And they named me as their representative. Since then, I (as well as Amnesty International) have been in contact with the Foreign Office pressing them to do everything possible to secure Mehran’s release.
(I would also ask FM Truss why she says Mehran did not want his case made public? Mehran was held in solitary confinement for months following his October 2020 arrest and denied independent legal counsel. Did any British official visit Mehran to ascertain his wishes?)
Amnesty International has stated there has not been any action by the UK government on Mehran’s behalf in Iran – despite the Foreign Office’s claim after his arrest that: “We continue to do all we can to support Mehran and his family, and continue to raise his case at the most senior levels.”
The cases of these five UK-Iranian nationals may not have been identical, but all were illegitimately arrested and imprisoned without due process, and none was given anything resembling a fair and open trial. All have been subjected to brutal, inhuman treatment, including instances of the torture of solitary confinement. One only need to read the Guardian’s harrowing accounts of the imprisonment of Anoosheh Ashoori and British-Australian academic Kylie Moore-Gilbert to get a vivid sense of the intolerable injustices now being carried out against imprisoned dual nationals and political prisoners in Iran.
The treatment of 65-year-old Mehran Raoof has been particularly egregious. Amnesty International has designated him a prisoner of conscience, arbitrarily detained in Tehran’s Evin prison since 16 October 2020, solely for peacefully exercising his right to freedom of expression and association, including to support workers’ rights. Amnesty demanded he be immediately and unconditionally released.
The organization’s 5 November 2021 Urgent Action bulletin found, among other abuses, that Mehran was:
▪ held in prolonged solitary confinement;
▪ subjected to torture and other ill-treatment including threatening to harm him if he did not cooperate and holding him in a room with the lights on 24 hours a day, which caused him mental distress;
▪ sentenced after a grossly unfair trial, where he and his co-defendants were denied their right to an adequate defense and to communicate with their lawyer prior to the first trial session on 28 April. He was barred from meeting his lawyer throughout the trial and only met him during hearings.
▪ | held in prolonged solitary confinement; |
▪ | subjected to torture and other ill-treatment including threatening to harm him if he did not cooperate and holding him in a room with the lights on 24 hours a day, which caused him mental distress; |
▪ | sentenced after a grossly unfair trial, where he and his co-defendants were denied their right to an adequate defense and to communicate with their lawyer prior to the first trial session on 28 April. He was barred from meeting his lawyer throughout the trial and only met him during hearings. |
Mehran’s situation, including his ability to communicate with the outside world, has been made even more difficult by the fact that he has no immediate family in Iran, that his Iranian lawyer was arrested and imprisoned (he’s since been released), and that the Islamic Republic has imposed a climate of terror throughout society threatening anyone who dares to convey the voices of Iran’s prisoners and the truth about their conditions to the outside world.
I ask the British government and the foreign ministry: why wouldn’t you do everything in your power to free a citizen you’re responsible for from such unconscionable, illegal and barbaric treatment, especially now that the financial dispute between Britain and Iran has been resolved?