Tag: Siamak Namazi

  • Iran places US Dual Nationals under house arrest

    Iran places US Dual Nationals under house arrest

    US officials have reported that Iran has released five dual nationals of US and Iranian citizenship into house arrest.

    Among the released individuals are Siamak Namazi, Emad Shargi, and Morad Tahbaz, the latter also holding a British passport. An additional unidentified man was also released, as confirmed by a lawyer representing one of the detainees.

    A fifth American dual national had already been freed, according to a statement from a US national security official.

    The process of securing their release involved negotiations between Iran and the United States.

    Adrienne Watson, a spokesperson for the National Security Council, commented, “While this is a positive step, these US citizens should have never been subjected to detention in the first place.” She reiterated the commitment to bringing all the detainees back to the United States.

    These releases are connected to discussions regarding Iranian assets worth $6 billion (£4.7 billion), which had been frozen in South Korea, as reported by US media.

    Visual confirmation has been made that four of the dual nationals have left Tehran’s notorious Evin prison, according to Jared Genser, an attorney representing one of the detainees.

    Babak Namazi, the brother of Siamak Namazi, expressed cautious optimism: “We appreciate this positive development, but our ultimate goal remains the safe return of Siamak and the others to their families.”

    Siamak Namazi, aged 51, was initially arrested in 2015 and subsequently sentenced to a decade in prison on charges related to national security.

    The sister of Emad Shargi, aged 58, voiced trust in the efforts of President Biden and government officials to secure his release, following his detention in April 2018.

    Morad Tahbaz, aged 67, a businessman and advocate for wildlife conservation, was apprehended during a crackdown on environmental activists in January 2018.

    Recent years have seen Iran detain and imprison multiple dual nationals on charges typically related to national security.

    Matthew Miller, a spokesperson for the US State Department, revealed that two of the five released individuals have chosen to remain anonymous.

    He added that efforts are being made to ensure the health and well-being of these individuals and to maintain contact with their families.

    Negotiations spanning several years have aimed to secure the release of these detainees as part of a potential exchange involving Iranians imprisoned in Western countries, alongside the potential easing of US sanctions on Iran.

    While sources close to the talks suggest that the released US citizens might leave Iran in the coming weeks, no details of the potential deal have been confirmed by the White House.

  • Siamak Namazi was permitted to spend a week outside the Iranian prison

    An Iranian-American citizen convicted of spying was freed from custody amid rumours that Iran and the US were discussing prisoner releases.

    According to his lawyer, he has been imprisoned in Iran for over seven years on espionage-related charges and has been given a one-week holiday from the Evin prison in Tehran.

    Siamak Namazi’s temporary release on Saturday came as his father, former United Nations official Baquer Namazi, who was also convicted on spying charges, was permitted to leave Iran for medical treatment.

    It was not clear if the moves might be a step towards Siamak’s full release, nor whether it signals the possible furlough or release of other United States citizens detained in Iran.

    Iranian Americans, whose US citizenship is not recognized by Tehran, are often pawns between the two nations, now at odds over whether to revive a fraying 2015 pact under which Iran limited its nuclear program in return for sanctions relief.

    Soon after news of Siamak’s furlough broke, Iran’s Nournews said an unnamed regional nation had mediated between Tehran and Washington for the “simultaneous release of prisoners”. The semi-official news agency also reported that “billions of dollars of Iran’s frozen assets because of the US sanctions will be released soon”.

    There was no official comment from the Iranian government.

    Jared Genser, an international human rights lawyer handling the Namazi cases, said on Twitter that he was “delighted to confirm for the first time in seven years that Siamak #Namazi is spending a night at home with his parents in Tehran”.

    “Baquer Namazi’s travel ban has been lifted. We won’t rest until they return to the US & their long nightmare has ended,” he added.

    Baquer Namazi, a former UNICEF representative, was detained in 2016 when he travelled to Tehran to see his son, a businessman arrested in Iran months earlier. Both Namazis were sentenced to 10 years in prison in Iran on what the US and UN say were trumped-up spying charges.

    Baquer Namazi was granted medical furlough in 2018 and his sentence was subsequently commuted to time served, but Iranian authorities had not permitted him to leave the country. Last October, he underwent surgery in Iran to clear a blockage in an artery to the brain that his family and supporters described as life-threatening.