Iran forced British prisoner family to pay last-minute cash fine to secure release
The family of British Iranian prisoner Anoosheh Ashoori was
forced to pay £27,000 ($35,000) to the Iranian government within 12 hours to
secure his release.
They rushed to raise the money and deliver it in cash to
Evin prison authorities, who have detained political prisoners for years.
British Foreign Office negotiators were informed late on
Monday that Ashoori’s release would not be processed unless the fine was paid
the following day.
The money was paid and Ashooori was released along with
famous fellow British Iranian detainee Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe on Wednesday
after Britain released £400 million ($527 million) that the regime claimed it
was owed following a deal between the British government and the old Iranian
monarchy in the 1970s.
Ashoori was arrested in 2017 while visiting his mother and
two years later was sentenced to 12 years behind bars for “spying for Israel’s
Mossad” and for “acquiring illegitimate wealth.” Ashoori strenuously denied the
charges.
His wife Sherry Izadi told The Guardian: “We had less than
12 hours to raise the money, taking out loans using our credit cards and
opening new accounts. My only thought was: ‘How are we going to do this in
time?’”
She added: “At first the government officials in Tehran
demanded my nephew meet them outside the prison with a suitcase full of cash,
but he demanded to go inside the prison and be given a receipt. They kept
dragging it out, demanding to count the money and check whether it was
counterfeit.”
Izadi was unable to tell Ashoori about the deal for his
release. “I could not tell him what I knew since I was told lives were at
risk,” she said.
The family is planning to launch a crowdfunding website to
help recover the funds they urgently gathered to secure his freedom.
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