Prisoners in Iran 'disappearing',
British inmate claims
David
Rose
1 May 2020 • 9:12pm
3
©
AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi Iran has
struggled to combat the coronavirus - AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi
Prisoners with
suspected coronavirus in Iran are “disappearing” due to
illness or being given sleeping pills and sent back to crowded cells where the
virus can easily spread, a British-Iranian father who is jailed on
spying charges has claimed.
Retired engineer Anoosheh Ashoori, 66, secretly recorded an
audio diary detailing the chaotic conditions in Evin prison, Tehran,
where he is serving a 10-year sentence for “spying for Israel”, which
he strongly denies.
Several inmates have fallen ill due to suspected
coronavirus, Mr Ashoori claims, adding that once a sick prisoner goes
to the prison’s medical centre, “he does not return… nobody knows any more
about his fate.”
____________________________________________________
Another prisoner complained of Covid-19
symptoms but was not tested, he added. Instead, he was given sleeping pills and
told by a prison doctor to “go back and rest” in a cell shared with 11 other
men.
Iran has
been the epicentre of the coronavirus pandemic in the Middle East and has
recorded more than 95,000 cases and 6,000 related deaths, although the official
figures are heavily disputed.
©
Press Association Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe
As a precaution in March, the
Islamic Republic temporarily released thousands of prisoners from
its over-crowded jails, including British-Iranian mother Nazanin
Zaghari-Ratcliffe who has been allowed to stay with her parents in Tehran while
being monitored by an ankle tag.
But other dual nationals
accused of espionage, including Mr Ashoori and the British-Australian academic
Kylie Moore-Gilbert, have remained behind bars in Evin, while other inmates are
now returning following their temporary release.
“It is just enough for one
contaminated person to arrive and the rest will soon contract the virus,” Mr
Ashoori said in the diary, recorded last month [April] during phone calls to
his wife, Sherry Izadi.
Ms Izadi, from South London,
today [Friday] criticised the Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab for a lack of
action to release her husband, saying he had become “forgotten” since being
arrested in August 2017 while visiting his family in Iran.
“Every time I hear Dominic Raab
talk about returning Britons who have been trapped on holiday by coronavirus, I
wonder why he is not giving the same priority to those, like my husband, who
are held unlawfully in a foreign prison”, she said. “Other countries are
doing deals to free their citizens, but the government that is showing the
least action has to be the British. It’s as if they have forgotten my husband
exists.”
A Foreign Office spokesperson
said: “We strongly urge Iran to reunite British-Iranian dual
national Mr Ashoori with his family. Our Embassy in Tehran continues
to request consular access and we have been supporting his family since being
made aware of his detention. The treatment of all dual nationals detained in Iran is
a priority and both the PM and Foreign Secretary have recently raised this
issue with their Iranian counterparts.”
Stay at home to stop
coronavirus spreading - here is what you can and can't do. If you
think you have the virus, don't go to the GP or hospital, stay indoors
and get advice online. Only call NHS 111 if you cannot cope
with your symptoms at home; your condition gets worse; or your symptoms do not
get better after seven days. In parts of Wales where 111 isn't
available, call NHS Direct on 0845 46 47. In Scotland, anyone with
symptoms is advised to self-isolate for seven days. In Northern Ireland,
call your GP
پیش بسوی قیام سراسری ، ما بر اندازیم# کانونهای شورشی در شهرهای ایران # #Iran
#سال_سرنگونی #ایران #کروناویروس #قیام_تا_پیروزی #coronavirus
اعتصاب واعتراض #شورش #زندانیان ، تظاهرات# سرنگونی #COVID2019 # اتحادوهمبستگی - مرگ_بر_دیکتاتور #مجاهدین خلق ایران