The National - News

Petition filed for Rezaian at the UN

Hopes are high for pressuring Iran into releasing journalist

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WASHINGTON // The Washington Post has filed an urgent petition with the United Nations in the hopes that it will pressure Iran to release journalist Jason Rezaian, the newspaper’s executive editor said yesterday. Rezaian was arrested more than a year ago along with his wife Yeganeh Salehi, who is The

National’s Tehran correspond­ent. She was released on bail in October but he has been held for months without charges in soli- tary confinemen­t in Evin Prison.

The Post’s lawyers and his family say that Rezaian has lost 23 kilograms since his arrest and remains under severe psychologi­cal strain. His supporters had hoped that the conclusion of United States-led talks on Iran’s nuclear programme last week would pave the way for his release, speculatin­g that he might have been detained by Iran as leverage in negotiatio­ns.

“Every aspect of this case – his incarcerat­ion, his trial, the conditions of his imprisonme­nt – has been a disgracefu­l violation of human rights,” said the Post’s executive editor, Martin Baron.

US officials said that they insisted upon keeping the nuclear talks separate from discussion­s about Rezaian and other US prisoners held in Iran in case the negotiatio­ns faltered – a tactic that Rezaian’s brother, Ali, said he supported.

However, US secretary of state John Kerry has said that US officials raised the issue of captive Americans with Iran persistent­ly during the nuclear deliberati­ons. But despite this, Rezaian remains in jail without another trial date publicly scheduled.

The Post petition was filed with a UN working group that focuses on unlawful detentions. The newspaper’s lawyers said that Iran has been responsive to about a third of the cases filed with the working group in the past decade. Jay Kennedy, the newspaper’s general counsel, said that the tactic had not been tried sooner because “we never expected his detention to last this long”.

In Tehran, deputy foreign minister Abbas Araghchi said yesterday that cases of “imprisoned citizens” were discussed with their American counterpar­ts during the nuclear talks. He said “humanitari­an” reasons had motivated the discussion but did not elaborate.

It was the first confirmati­on by the Iranians of any talks that may have involved the fate of Rezaian and other US prisoners in Iran.

 ?? Molly Riley / AP Photo ?? Ali Rezaian, brother of Jason Rezaian, The Washington Post’s Tehran bureau chief who is currently in Evin Prison in Iran, arrives at a news conference at the National Press Club to give an update on the case in Washington.
Molly Riley / AP Photo Ali Rezaian, brother of Jason Rezaian, The Washington Post’s Tehran bureau chief who is currently in Evin Prison in Iran, arrives at a news conference at the National Press Club to give an update on the case in Washington.

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