The Daily Telegraph

British-iranian professor arrested by Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard

Abbas Edalat, an anti-war activist, may be in the notorious Evin jail after raid on his home in Tehran

- By Raf Sanchez and Ahmed Vahdat

A BRITISH-IRANIAN academic from Imperial College London has been arrested in Iran, the latest of dozens of dual nationals taken into custody by Tehran since the 2015 nuclear deal.

Abbas Edalat, a professor of computer science and mathematic­s, was in Iran for an academic workshop when he was arrested on April 15 by the Revolution­ary Guard, according to the Centre for Human Rights in Iran.

“Iran’s continued arbitrary arrests of dual nationals without transparen­cy and lack of due process is extremely concerning,” said Hadi Ghaemi, the centre’s executive director.

“The Iranian judiciary and the security establishm­ent, particular­ly the Revolution­ary Guards, are responsibl­e for the wellbeing of these detainees.”

Iran has arrested at least 30 dual nationals since the nuclear agreement, according to human rights groups. There are no exact figures on detainees but Iran is believed to be holding at least four Britons, including Mr Edalat, who strenuousl­y maintains his innocence.

Nazanin Zaghari-ratcliffe, a charity worker with the Thomson Reuters foundation, was sentenced to five years in prison in 2016 on charges she denies of plotting to topple the Iranian government.

Kamal Foroughi, a British-iranian businessma­n, was arrested in 2011 and sentenced to eight years in prison on espionage charges.

Earlier this year Iran also arrested Morad Tahbaz, an Iranian-american businessma­n who is believed to hold a UK passport, during a clampdown on environmen­talists and academics.

The arrest of Mr Edalat comes at a critical moment for the future of the 2015 Iran nuclear agreement.

Donald Trump must decide by May 12 whether or not he will reimpose US sanctions on Tehran, a move that could effectivel­y send the US crashing out of the deal.

According to analysts, Iran’s practice of arresting dual nationals is motivated partly by a desire to use the detainees as leverage in negotiatio­ns with Western countries.

Iranians who live in the West are often viewed with deep suspicion by the Revolution­ary Guard, who are responsibl­e for hunting down foreign spies in Iran.

Mr Edalat is known in the UK as an anti-war activist. In 2005 he founded the Campaign Against Sanctions and Military Interventi­on in Iran, which opposed Western military interventi­on and sanctions on Iran.

The group described itself as an independen­t human rights group with no links to any government­s. It said that Revolution­ary Guard agents raided Mr Edalat’s home in Tehran and confiscate­d books, CDS and a computer.

It is believed Mr Edalat is being held at Evin prison, the notorious Tehran jail where dual nationals are often imprisoned.

There was no immediate response from the Foreign Office.

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