Iran calls on its expats to return as US fears of treachery by mullahs
Iranian
Chief Justice Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Ejei's call for the return of expatriates
with open judicial files has been met with astonishment and denunciation due to
the black file of the Iranian regime in dealing with this category.
US
warning
US Special
Envoy for Iranian Affairs Robert Malley warned Iranian citizens living abroad
not to go to Iran due to the possibility of being kidnapped and detained for
being dual nationals, especially as Iranian prisons are suffering from the
outbreak of the corona virus.
“It is in
the interest of Iranians abroad who have files or cases in Iran to return to
the country,” Mohseni-Ejei said on Monday, August 9, adding, “Currently there
are people abroad who do not have an agent for their property and facilities at
home, and some stakeholders scare them from returning to the country, but if
these people return, their financial problems will be clarified through a
simple, accurate and clear investigation.”
Kidnapping
and imprisonment
The US State
Department announced that “American citizens who have traveled to Iran have
been kidnapped, imprisoned and charged with serious charges.”
“Iranian
authorities continue to unjustly detain American citizens, especially
Iranian-American citizens, including students, journalists, businessmen and
academics, on charges such as espionage and posing a threat to national
security,” it continued.
The
statement also added that Iranian officials are continuously delaying the
possibility of providing lawyers for detained US citizens, and the State
Department advised citizens who need an urgent trip to Tehran to write their
will before going on this dangerous journey and to authorize the appropriate
people to take custody of any children and pets they leave behind, as well as
their property.
According to
Human Rights Watch, the security services in Iran have increased the targeting
of Iranian citizens with dual nationalities and foreign nationals, believing that
they have links with Western academic, economic and cultural institutions.
Documented
cases
Human Rights
Watch also documented the cases of 14 dual nationals arrested by the Iranian
Revolutionary Guards' intelligence since 2014, in which courts accused them in
many cases of collaborating with an “enemy country,” without disclosing any
evidence. Controversy raged over Iranian citizens who hold Western
nationalities and are imprisoned by the regime, while their number, according
to UN human rights reports, ranges between 30 to 50 people who are being
accused of espionage.
The Iranian
regime uses the card of foreign detainees as a bargaining chip to achieve its
political goals by extorting Western countries and putting pressure to achieve
its interests in the negotiations in Vienna, Austria.