Bangkok Post

Pair charged over parties in Tehran

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TEHRAN: A jailed US-Iranian and his wife have been formally charged with hosting parties in Tehran, while another couple were given the death penalty for running a “cult”, the Tehran prosecutor said yesterday.

No names were given, but the dual national and his wife are thought to be the high-profile owners of an art gallery in the capital that regularly hosted events for dignitarie­s and foreign diplomats prior to their arrest last summer.

The case “is related to a woman and man who provided alcoholic drinks and encouraged corruption and debauchery by holding mixed parties”, said prosecutor Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi.

He said 4,000 litres of alcohol had been found in the basement of their building in northern Tehran.

The couple are known to be members of the Zoroastria­n religion, who are allowed to have alcohol for private use but are banned from sharing it with Muslims.

Mr Dolatabadi also described a separate case of a couple who “by founding a cult and attracting individual­s, were active in sexual deviation”.

They were found guilty of “corruption on Earth”, a charge introduced after the 1979 revolution that carries the death penalty.

While moderate president Hassan Rouhani has made good on his vow to improve ties with the West through a deal to curb Iran’s nuclear programme, his promises to ease social restrictio­ns at home have come to nothing.

In January, Tehran’s chief prosecutor said as many as 70 “spies” were serving sentences in the city’s prisons — only a handful of which have been made public.

Many have been dual nationals who also hold a European or US passport — underminin­g Mr Rouhani’s call for ex-pat Iranians to return home and help rebuild the economy.

In October, US-Iranian business consultant Siamak Namazi and his 80-yearold father Baquer, a former Unicef official, were given 10 years in prison for “espionage and collaborat­ion with the American government”.

Britain has frequently protested against the detention of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe who was given a five-year sentence for her alleged involvemen­t in 2009 protests, although exact charges have not been published. Ahead of a likely bid for re-election in May, Mr Rouhani published a new “Charter of Citizens’ Rights” in December, but officials have admitted it has no power over conservati­ve-dominated parts of the power structure.

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