Iranian news agency ISNA reports that the Swedish-Iranian scientist and VUB guest professor Ahmadreza Djalali is expected to be executed on 21 May
According to ISNA’s source, Dr Djalali, who has been sentenced to death, will be executed at the end of the Iranian month of Ordibehesht, which corresponds to 21 May. The agency also links the execution of Dr Djalali to the trial of Hamid Nouri, an Iranian official arrested in Sweden in November 2019. He is being prosecuted for his alleged role in the massacres that took place in Iranian prisons in 1988.
“This news is extremely worrying and again a heavy blow to the family. Iran’s actions are unpredictable and unacceptable. It is literally vital that countries like Belgium and Sweden put pressure on the Iranian authorities to prevent this execution and call for the release of Ahmadreza Djalali”, says Wies De Graeve, director of Amnesty International Flanders.
“The execution of Djalali must be stopped immediately. We call on the Iranian leaders to stop this barbarity. We ask the whole world to keep pressure on Iran to stop the degrading and unjust treatment of Djalali. He has been held unjustly and in shameful conditions for more than six years. Djalali must be released so that his family can finally embrace him again”, says Jan Danckaert, ad interim rector VUB.
For six years, Ahmadreza Djalali has been arbitrarily imprisoned in Iran. He was accused of espionage and after a manifestly unfair trial was sentenced to death for “spreading corruption on earth”. He has been tortured and his health is poor.
“It shows a far-reaching disdain for humanity when you repeatedly use prisoners with dual nationality as a bargaining tool and threaten them with execution to put pressure on other countries,” says Prof Gerlant van Berlaer, Djalali’s friend and colleague.
Background
Dr Djalali specialises in disaster medicine and was arrested in April 2016 during a working visit to Iran and charged with espionage. For the first 10 days, no one knew where he was being held. In late October 2017, he was sentenced to death after a manifestly unfair trial. He was forced to confess by means of psychological torture and spent the first three months of his detention in solitary confinement. His lawyer was not allowed to visit him until seven months after his arrest.
Dr Djalali’s health is poor and he has not been allowed to call his wife and children in Sweden since November 2020, which makes the situation almost unbearable for them.
Appeal
Amnesty International and VUB want Dr Djalali’s plight to be given as much publicity as possible worldwide. Belgium, Sweden, the EU and the international community must convince Iran to release him. Pending his release, he should at least be treated humanely: he should be allowed to contact his family and receive the necessary medical care.
In Belgium, more than 130,000 people have signed Amnesty International’s petition calling for the death penalty to be lifted and for him to be released.