
TEHRAN, Iran – An Iranian-American
businessman and his father have been
sentenced to 10 years in prison in Iran, a state-
run judicial news agency reported Tuesday, the
latest dual nationals imprisoned since the
nuclear deal.
The announcement by the Mizan news agency
came a day after it released footage of
businessman Siamak Namazi. The video
highlighted recent tensions between Iran and
the U.S. and was a sign of the power still
wielded by hard-liners in the Islamic Republic.
The Mizan report said Namazi and his 80-year-
old father Baquer Namazi, a former UNICEF
representative who once served as governor of
Iran's oil-rich Khuzestan province under the
U.S.-backed shah, were convicted of
"cooperating with the hostile American
government." It did not elaborate.
A Namazi family statement posted online
described the sentences as "beyond
comprehension."
"My father has been handed practically a death
sentence and it will be a criminal act by me,
his only able son, not to fight for my father's
life and freedom as well as that (of) my
brother," wrote another son, Babak Namazi.
The U.S. State Department said it was "deeply
concerned" by reports of the sentencing.
"We join recent calls by international
organizations and UN human rights experts for
the immediate release of all U.S. citizens
unjustly detained in Iran, including Siamak and
Baquer Namazi, so that they can return to their
families," said a State Department spokesman,
Mark Toner.
UNICEF, the U.N. children's agency, expressed
"deep sadness and personal concern" over the
sentence of Baquer Namazi.
"The entire UNICEF family are deeply
concerned for his health and well-being,"
UNICEF said. "Baquer has been a humanitarian
all his life. We appeal for his release on
humanitarian grounds."
The Mizan report said Nizar Zakka, a U.S.
permanent resident from Lebanon, also
received a 10-year prison sentence. His
supporters had earlier told The Associated
Press about the sentence, though the Mizan
report was the first official Iranian confirmation
of it.
It said two others had been convicted as well,
without naming them or identifying their
nationalities.
Later Tuesday, the semi-official Fars news
agency quoted Tehran prosecutor Abbas Jafari
Dolatabadi as saying three Iranians were
sentenced to 10-years imprisonment for
"espionage and cooperating with the U.S.
government." He named them as Farhad
Abdesaleh, Kamran Ghaderi and Alireza
Omidvar, without elaborating. It was unclear if
they had lawyers or if they were among the
two previously mentioned by Mizan.
The Namazi family fled after the 1979 Islamic
Revolution, but appears to have kept business
ties in Iran, and the younger Namazi traveled
back several times. He also wrote several
articles calling for improved ties between Iran
and the U.S., and urging Iranian-Americans to
act as a bridge between the rival governments.
Still, Siamak Namazi's efforts raised suspicions
among hard-liners in Iran. In May 2015, a hard-
line Iranian website called Fardanews
specifically pointed to him in a highly critical
article, accusing him of being part of efforts to
allow the West to infiltrate Iran.
On Monday, Mizan released a video of the
younger Namazi, the first images of him since
his detention in October 2015. The montage of
clips included an Iranian drone flying over a
U.S. aircraft carrier and American sailors on
their knees after being briefly detained by Iran
in January.
It showed Namazi's U.S. passport, his United
Arab Emirates ID card and a clip of him in a
conference room, his arms raised at his sides.

At the end of the video, it also showed a still
image of Rep. Ed Royce, R-Calif., who chairs
the House's Foreign Affairs Committee, quoting
him describing Namazi's arrest as a "latest
show of contempt for America."
Iran does not recognize dual nationalities,
meaning those detained cannot receive
consular assistance. In most cases, dual
nationals have faced secret charges in closed-
door hearings in Iran's Revolutionary Court,
which handles cases involving alleged attempts
to overthrow the government.
The Namazis were not released as part of a
January deal that freed detained Washington
Post journalist Jason Rezaian and three other
Iranian-Americans in exchange for pardons or
charges being dropped against seven Iranians.
That deal also saw the U.S. make a $400
million cash delivery to Iran.
Analysts and family members of those detained
in Iran have suggested Iran wants to negotiate
another deal with the West to free those held.
In September, Iran freed a retired Canadian-
Iranian university professor amid negotiations
to reopen embassies in the two nations.
Others with Western ties recently detained in
Iran include Robin Shahini, an Iranian-American
detained while visiting family who previously
had made online comments criticizing Iran's
human rights record, and Nazanin Zaghari-
Ratcliffe, a British-Iranian woman sentenced to
five years in prison on allegations of planning
the "soft toppling" of Iran's government while
traveling with her young daughter.
Still missing is former FBI agent Robert
Levinson, who vanished in Iran in 2007 while on
an unauthorized CIA mission.
"We also respectfully underscore the
importance of Iran cooperating with the United
States to determine the whereabouts of Mr.
Robert Levinson, who went missing on Iran's
Kish Island," said Toner, the State Department
spokesman. "As President Obama stated last
January, we will not rest until the Levinson
family is whole again."
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