Ahmadreza Djalali, a de facto hostage held in Iran for eight years
Siamak Namazi, an Iranian-American businessman formerly imprisoned in Iran criticized Sweden's recent prisoner swap with Iran, leaving behind Swedish-Iranian physician Ahmadreza Djalali on death row in Tehran.
"I am a former hostage…I endured Evin, Iran's most notorious jail, and can't understand how Sweden can leave its citizen to die there," Namazi wrote in an opinion piece for the Guardian on Friday.
Siamak Namazi returning to the US on 18 September 2023 as part of a prisoner swap with Iran.
As part of the Stockholm-Tehran deal on June 15 two Swedish citizens Johan Floderus and Saeed Azizi were swapped with Hamid Nouri, a former prison official serving a life sentence in Sweden for war crimes for his role in mass executions of political prisoners in Iran in 1988. Sweden said that Iran refused to negotiate the release of Djalali in the deal.
“I am overjoyed to see Floderus and Azizi back home with their loved ones, but Stockholm’s decision to strike that deal and leave behind a Swedish citizen facing execution in Iran was unconscionable,” Namazi wrote.
Namazi argued that Sweden's failure to secure Djalali’s release reflects a troubling hierarchy in valuing citizens' lives and a severe lapse in negotiation.
“I believe it [Sweden] could have secured the release of all its nationals and several other European hostages, too, had it understood the value of the card it was holding,” Namazi added.
With a death sentence looming, Djalali has recently gone on a hunger strike as a last resort. In a message from Evin prison, he criticized the Swedish Prime Minister for leaving him out of the deal.
Tweet unavailable
Namazi further referred to Djalali’s recent hunger strike adding that this isn’t the first time Dajali has been left out of a prisoner swap deal.
“I was still in Evin prison when Ahmadreza was omitted from the Belgium deal. As someone who had experienced the despair of being left behind from hostage deals several times myself, I understood his pain – though I wasn’t on death row,” Namazi wrote.
Namazi wrote that Djalai was “purportedly the main candidate” to be swapped for Assadi but “his fate changed when Sweden arrested and sentenced Nouri, who had close ties to some of the most senior figures in the Islamic Republic.”
In December 2023, Amnesty International issued a statement saying that Djalali “is at grave risk of imminent retaliatory execution” the week that the appeals court in Sweden reaffirmed the life sentence of Hamid Nouri.
Namazi additionally recounted details of the times when he spent time in Evin with Djalali:
“He told me about the times when his captors took him to the brink of execution to bring pressure to bear on his would-be rescuers, and how in one instance he was tossed back in a solitary cell for five months to await his death”
“One morning, his sadistic jailers told him he would be hanged at sunrise the next day, and gave him what they said was a final call to his wife to say goodbye. He wished they had killed him in the first year of his arrest,” wrote Namazi shedding light onto the psychological torture Djalali was subject to.
Djalali a disaster medicine specialist was arrested in 2016 during a visit to Tehran. He was sentenced to death in 2017 on trumped-up charges without legal due process. He remains on hunger strike with his condition deteriorating as warned by human rights groups, activists, and his wife Vida Mehrannia.
Namazi, who was imprisoned in Iran for 8 years was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment on trumped-up charges of “collaborating with a foreign government”. He was released on 18 September 2023 as part of a prisoner swap with Iran brokered by the Biden administration, in which the US released 5 Iranian prisoners and paid $6 billion to the Iranian government.
The US Central Command (CENTCOM) reported on Friday that its forces destroyed seven Iranian-backed Houthi uncrewed aerial vehicles (UAVs) and one ground control station vehicle in Yemeni areas under Houthi control.
“It was determined the UAVs and the ground control station presented an imminent threat to US, coalition forces, and merchant vessels in the region,” CENTCOM statement published on X read.
“This continued malign and reckless behavior by the Iranian-backed Houthis threatens regional stability and endangers the lives of mariners across the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden,” it added.
Since mid-November, the Houthis, acting as an Iranian proxy group, initiated targeting maritime commercial traffic, prompted by Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's call for Muslim nations to blockade Israel. Initially concentrated in the Red Sea, these assaults have expanded to vital waterways such as the Indian Ocean.
Despite repeated US and UK airstrikes on Houthi military installations since January, the Iran-backed faction has intensified its attacks in recent weeks, coinciding with ongoing Israeli operations in Gaza and strikes on Iran-backed Hezbollah positions in Lebanon.
The Houthi campaign has severely disrupted global shipping, compelling companies to redirect through longer and costlier routes around southern Africa. Moreover, it has sparked concerns about the potential spread of the Gaza conflict.
Iran has called the possibility of the Gaza war extending to Lebanon “Zionist regime’s propaganda” but cautioned that "the full involvement of all Resistance Fronts is on the table" if such an escalation occurs.
“Albeit Iran deems as psychological warfare the Zionist regime’s propaganda about intending to attack Lebanon, should it embark on full-scale military aggression, an obliterating war will ensue,” the statement published on the official X account of Iran's Permanent Mission to the UN stated. “All options, including the full involvement of all Resistance Fronts, are on the table.”
The "Resistance Front" refers to an alliance of armed militant groups backed by Iran, including Hezbollah, Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Houthis in Yemen, and Iraqi Shiite militias. Founded in 1982 by Iran's Revolutionary Guard (IRGC), Hezbollah is a key player in the Tehran-supported alliance hostile to Israel and the United States.
Iran’s statement comes amid rising concerns of an escalation in the Israel-Hezbollah conflict. Alongside the ongoing Gaza clashes, the heavily armed, Iran-backed Hezbollah group has been exchanging fire with Israel for over eight months.
On Thursday, the Secretary General of Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah, underscored the group's reliance on Iran, stating that the fate of the "Resistance Front" is linked to its main supporter, the Islamic Republic of Iran. "The future of the region hinges on the developments of the Islamic Republic of Iran," Hassan Nasrallah said.
Iran has installed half of the advanced uranium-enriching machines it recently announced for its underground Fordow site, according to a UN nuclear watchdog report seen by Reuters.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) noted that the four new cascades have not yet begun enriching uranium.
Two weeks ago, Tehran informed the IAEA of its plans to expand enrichment capacity at Fordow by adding eight IR-6 centrifuge cascades within three to four weeks.
Within two days, the IAEA verified the installation of two cascades. In a confidential report on Friday, seen by Reuters, the agency said after a verification was carried out that this number had doubled.
IR-6 cascades are advanced centrifuge clusters used by Iran for uranium enrichment. They are more efficient than earlier models, enabling faster and higher enrichment levels, which can be used for energy or potentially nuclear weapons.
Iran has been enriching uranium faster and at higher levels since 2021, as the United States and its European allies began talks with Tehran to revive the 2015 JCPOA nuclear deal, which former President Donald Trump had abandoned.
Experts believe Iran has amassed enough fissile material for at least three nuclear bombs so far.
According to the IAEA, Iran has not specified when it will start using the newly installed cascades at Fordow with uranium hexafluoride gas (UF6), nor has it disclosed the intended enrichment level.
Diplomats say Iran added the IR-6 machines in response to a June 5 resolution by the IAEA's 35-nation Board of Governors, which called on Tehran to increase cooperation and allow inspectors access again.
The US announced new sanctions targeting Iran’s oil trade on Thursday, saying it was acting in response to “steps (by Iran) to further expand its nuclear program in ways that have no credible peaceful purpose.”
The Fordow plant, near the city of Qom in central Iran, is an underground uranium enrichment facility, built deep inside a mountain to protect it from potential attacks.
Leading expert on nuclear weapons programs, American physicist David Albright has previously said that the Fordow plant started its operations as part of Tehran’s secret weapons program in the early 2000s.
Earlier this month, Albright’s technical analysis projected that Iran will massively increase its ability to produce weapons-grade uranium (WGU) at the heavily fortified Fordow enrichment plant.
The report came in response to Iran's announcement that it would rapidly deploy 1400 advanced centrifuges at the Fordow plant.
At the Fordow plant, he told Iran International previously, the centrifuges, called the IR-6s, is the most advanced centrifuge Iran operates.
The 1,400 advanced machines would increase Fordow’s capacity by 360%, according to Albright.
The plant, he said, is a deeply buried facility that is very hard to destroy.
Iran is enriching uranium to up to 60% purity, close to the roughly 90% of weapons grade, at two sites: Fordow and an above-ground pilot plant at Natanz.
Iran has retained its place on the Financial Action Task Force’s(FATF) blacklist, for not respecting international banking and related rules after a meeting in Singapore concluded Friday.
The FATF is a global financial watchdog that leads action to tackle money laundering, terrorist and proliferation financing. The watchdog does not have enforcement powers but describes itself as a monitoring system on how criminals and terrorists raise, use and move funds.
The continuation of the blacklist designation means Tehran is subject to increased monitoring and restrictions.
Toby Dershowitz, the Managing Director of the FDD's Action, said being on the blacklist has “reputational” and real consequences like having an impact on investments, thereby deterring other countries from doing business with Iran.
“It sends a message to the whole financial system, that is to banks, to all kinds of financial institutions...that basically says it's not safe to do business with Iran.”
Dershowitz said it means Iran has to constantly find tactics to get around these measures.
But those implications, according Mahdi Ghodsi, an economist with the Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies, may actually benefit Iranian regime insiders who assist in circumventing sanctions, which hurt ordinary citizens.
“So these are the people who we don't know. They are not part of the government. They are hidden financial apparatus that nobody cares about them. They're just people that are providing some service circumventing sanctions. And they're getting enormous amount of financial profits. At the same time, they're benefiting the governments who are in line with them,” he said.
Ghodsi told Iran International that Tehran is selling oil in Malaysia which is being exported to China. US government officials have also said that Iran uses the help of service providers in Malaysia to sell its oil abroad, circumventing US sanctions.
“As long as they're benefiting from this, they don't care about blacklisting,” said Ghodsi.
Ghodsi said the significance to the Iranian government is a message from the FATF that “we are watching you.”
“I don't think that it can have any significant impact on what they're [Iran] is doing,” said Ghodsi.
While Dershowitz agrees that ordinary citizens suffer the most, because of the regime’s money laundering and terror finance, she said the FATF listing can make Iran’s economy risky to its partners like Venezuela, which was, for the first time, placed on the graylist Friday.
"And one of the reasons that it did so is because of the ties that Venezuela has with Iran. So because Iran has some malign activities these are adversely impacting other countries such as Venezuela,” she said.
Friday’s blacklist also a signaling, Ghodsi, said that the US administration may change their tone on Iran to include more pressure and stricter policies.
Myanmar and North Korea are also on the FATF blacklist in addition to Iran.
Iran’s Green Movement leaders Mirhossein Mousavi and Zahra Rahnavard abstained from voting in the presidential elections, while Mehdi Karroubi publicly endorsed Masoud Pezeshkian, the sole reform-leaning candidate.
The daughter of Mousavi and Rahnavard, who have been under house arrest since 2011, announced on Friday that her parents would abstain from participating in the presidential election. Meanwhile, Karroubi was photographed casting his ballot, and his son had previously confirmed his endorsement of Pezeshkian.
The Green Movement sprang up in 2009, when in a dubious presidential election Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was unexpectedly was announced the winner, triggering protests. Mousavi and Karroubi who were running against Ahmadinejad were later put under house arrest after Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei denounced then as "seditionists."
This is while the relatively moderate Pezeshkian's candidacy is seen by many as an attempt to create an illusion of competition and boost historically low voter turnout, as witnessed in the 2023 parliamentary elections, where turnout hit a record low since 1979.
Iran's un-elected election watchdog, the Guardian Council allowed five conservative-hardliners and one reform-minded candidate to run. Two hardliners dropped out and four candidates remained.
Activists also announced that while authorities brought a ballot box to Ward 4 of Tehran's Evin prison, housing numerous political prisoners, the prisoners abstained from voting.
Many, including several students, women's and youth organizations, and civil and political activists, have called for boycotting the presidential election. Over 500 teachers, union activists, and cultural figures publicly declared their abstention. Also, notable figures such as imprisoned Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi criticized the upcoming election, denouncing it as a facade orchestrated by an “oppressive regime.”
Friday's presidential election is the first after the "Woman, Life, Freedom" protests in 2022, which marked a significant demand for secular governance, human rights, women's rights, and rational foreign policies in Iran.
Mirhossein Mousavi and Zahra Rahnavard voting in the 2009 presidential election
Last year, following the "Woman, Life, Freedom" movement that was triggered following the death of Mahsa Jina Amini while in the custody of the so-called morality police, Mousavi called for the end of clerical rule, which over 400 political activists and journalists supported. The state's subsequent killing of at least 550 protesters during its crackdown has been labeled a crime against humanity by a UN fact-finding mission.