The 80-year-old father of an Iranian-American detained in Iran since last fall has himself been arrested in Tehran, his family said on Wednesday.
Baquer Namazi, a former UN Children’s Fund official and the father of Siamak Namazi, was taken into custody on Monday, his wife, Effie Namazi, announced in a Facebook post. Effie Namazi said she believed her husband, also a US citizen, had been taken to Tehran’s infamous Evin Prison, where their son has been in custody since October.
“This is a nightmare I can’t describe,” Effie Namazi wrote.
Photo: Reuters / Ahmad Kiarostami
Baquer Namazi’s arrest came on the heels of the recent prisoner exchange between the US and Iran that did not include his son, a business consultant. Four Iranian-Americans, including Jason Rezaian, a Washington Post reporter, were freed, as were seven prisoners held by the US.
The exchange occurred as the accord that limited Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for the lifting of Western sanctions was about to go into effect.
However, Siamak Namazi’s arrest, and the failure of Tehran’s government to release him, frightened other Iranian-Americans who had hoped that the nuclear deal might herald a new era of warmer relations and business opportunities. Some of them canceled trips to Iran, waiting for his release or at least to learn why he had been taken into custody in the first place.
Citing privacy considerations, the US State Department on Wednesday said that it did not plan to release any information about Baquer Namazi’s arrest.
“We are aware of reports that a US citizen was detained in Iran,” State Department spokesman Mark Toner said in a statement.
At a US Senate hearing on Wednesday, South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham asked US Secretary of State John Kerry about Baquer Namazi’s arrest.
“I am very familiar with this and I am engaged on it specifically, but I am not permitted due to privacy reasons to go into details here,” Kerry said, according to a transcript provided by the State Department.
Effie Namazi said that neither she nor a lawyer had been able to find out about Baquer Namazi’s status. The lawyer, she added, was unable to get permission to see Baquer Namazi, a former UNICEF representative in Kenya and Egypt.
She said her husband has a serious heart condition as well as other health problems that require medication.
The elder Namazi’s detention came as Iranians prepare to vote in parliamentary elections today. The elections have heightened tensions between hard-liners, who control the judiciary and the powerful clerical councils, and reformers. It was unclear if that acrimony had anything to do with the arrest.
Siamak Namazi had been visiting Iran when he was arrested. He grew up in Iran, Somalia, Kenya, Egypt and the US, studying international relations at Tufts and urban planning at Rutgers. He returned to Iran in 1999 as a consultant for foreign businesses, and in 2007 he moved to Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
While working for UNICEF in Egypt in 1994, Baquer Namazi survived an attack by Islamist militants who opened fire on two cars traveling in the southern part of the country, killing four police officers and an aid worker.
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