The Hamilton Spectator

Belgium, Iran conduct prisoner swap

-

Belgium and Iran exchanged prisoners on Friday in a controvers­ial move that saw an Iranian diplomat convicted of attempting to bomb exiles in France bedecked in flowers on his return to Tehran while an aid worker was heading back to Brussels. The swap took place in Oman, long an interlocut­or for the West with Iran.

Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo said in a statement that the aid worker, Olivier Vandecaste­ele, had been freed and said that for him, “the choice was always clear: Olivier’s life was always the most important.”

He said Vandecaste­ele had been unjustly held in Iran for 455 days and added that “in Belgium, we abandon no one. Not least someone who is innocent.”

Iranian state TV later showed the diplomat, Assadollah Assadi, being welcomed at the airport by Iran’s judiciary chief and the secretary of human rights council Kazem Gharibabad­i. The TV showed Assadi sitting next to Gharibabad­i, wearing a floral wreath around his neck and holding a bouquet of flowers.

In January, Iran sentenced Vandecaste­ele to a lengthy prison term and 74 lashes after convicting him of espionage in a closed-door trial. He was also fined $1 million (U.S.). Vandecaste­ele was arrested in Iran in February 2022 while packing up his belongings, after working with the Norwegian Refugee Council and Relief Internatio­nal in the Islamic Republic from 2015 to 2021, according to Amnesty Internatio­nal.

His family and the Belgian government strongly denied Iran’s claims, made without offering evidence, that he was a spy.

In 2021, Belgium convicted Assadi of mastermind­ing a thwarted bomb attack against an exiled Iranian opposition group in France and sentenced him to 20 years in prison. Prosecutor­s tied Assadi to a couple, stopped by the Belgian police and found with 550 grams of TATP explosives and a detonator in 2018. They had been trying to target a meeting in Villepinte, France, of the Mujahedeen-e-Khalq, an exiled Iranian opposition group known as the MEK.

Assadi was arrested a day later in Germany and transferre­d to Belgium. Belgian intelligen­ce identified him as an officer of Iran’s intelligen­ce and security ministry who operated undercover at the Iranian Embassy in Austria. Iran denied Assadi’s involvemen­t.

 ?? ?? Olivier Vandecaste­ele looks out of the window of a Belgian military plane on Friday in Oman following his release after being detained in Iran for 15 months. He was exchanged for Assadollah Assadi, below, an Iranian diplomat convicted of attempting to bomb exiles in France.
Olivier Vandecaste­ele looks out of the window of a Belgian military plane on Friday in Oman following his release after being detained in Iran for 15 months. He was exchanged for Assadollah Assadi, below, an Iranian diplomat convicted of attempting to bomb exiles in France.
 ?? ??
 ?? BELGIUM GOVERNMENT VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
BELGIUM GOVERNMENT VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada