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Reuters
Reuters
World
By Parisa Hafezi and Arshad Mohammed

Iranian-American, 85, held in Tehran for six years leaves Iran

Baquer Namazi, 85, an Iranian-American who was jailed in Iran on spying charges, that the United States called baseless, is pictured upon his arrival in Muscat, Oman October 5, 2022. Oman News Agency/Handout via REUTERS

Baquer Namazi, an 85-year-old Iranian American who was jailed in Iran on spying charges the United States called baseless, is now in Abu Dhabi and will soon receive urgent medical care, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Wednesday.

Namazi, who had been detained since 2016, travelled to Abu Dhabi after departing Iran for Muscat, Blinken said in a statement.

Baquer Namazi gestures prior to takeoff to Muscat, Oman, on board airplane in Tehran, Iran October 5, 2022. Courtesy of Namazi family/via REUTERS

"He has been reunited with his family and will soon receive urgently needed medical treatment," Blinken said. "We look forward to his full recovery and to welcoming him home to the United States."

An Omani government office had announced on Twitter earlier on Wednesday Namazi's arrival in Muscat after Iran allowed him to leave for medical treatment.

Namazi's departure from Iran was first reported by Iranian state media, publishing a video showing him boarding a private plane accompanied by a man in Omani national dress, but it did not say where he was headed.

The video showed him struggling to climb the stairs to board the plane, on which the light blue insignia of the Royal Air Force of Oman could be seen.

A lawyer for the Namazi family, Jared Genser, said in a statement that Namazi would "undergo a carotid endarterectomy at the Cleveland Clinic (in Abu Dhabi) to clear out a severe blockage to his left internal carotid artery (ICA), which puts him at very high risk for a stroke."

Namazi, a former official with the U.N. children's agency UNICEF, holds U.S. and Iranian citizenship and was one of four Iranian Americans, including his son Siamak, detained in Iran in recent years or barred from leaving the country.

Namazi was convicted in 2016 of "collaboration with a hostile government" and jailed for 10 years. Iranian authorities released him on medical grounds in 2018 and closed his case in 2020, commuting his sentence to time served.

However, they had effectively barred him from leaving until Saturday, when the United Nations said he would be allowed to leave for medical treatment.

SON STILL UNABLE TO LEAVE

His son Siamak, 51, who was also convicted of "collaboration with a hostile government" in 2016, was released from Tehran's Evin prison Saturday on a one-week, renewable furlough after nearly seven years in detention.

The U.S. government has described the charges against both as baseless.

In the statement released by the family's lawyer, Babak Namazi, Baquer Namazi's son, voiced gratitude for his father's departure from Iran but sorrow at his brother Siamak's inability to leave the country.

"While getting my father out of Iran is incredibly important, today is also bittersweet. My brother Siamak as well as Americans Emad (Shargi) and Morad Tahbaz remain detained in Iran and our nightmare will not be over until our entire family (and) the other Americans are reunited with their families," he said.

The other U.S. citizens detained in Iran include environmentalist Tahbaz, 67, who also has British nationality, and businessman Shargi, 58.

"Today is a good day for the Namazi family, but the work is far from over. We now need the United States and Iran to act expeditiously to reach an agreement that will finally bring all of the American hostages home," Genser, the family's lawyer, said, adding that Baquer Namazi will immediately go to the hospital upon his arrival in Abu Dhabi.

It was not immediately clear why Iran had allowed Baquer Namazi to leave the country and Siamak Namazi to be furloughed from prison.

Iranian Americans, whose U.S. citizenship is not recognised by Tehran, are often pawns between the two nations, now at odds over whether to revive a fraying 2015 pact under which Iran limited its nuclear program in return for sanctions relief.

Iran is also grappling with the biggest show of opposition to its clerical authorities since 2019 with dozens of people killed in unrest across the country ignited by the death in police custody of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman.

(Reporting by Parisa Hafezi in Dubai and by Arshad Mohammed in Saint Paul, Minn.; Additional reporting by Chris Gallagher in Washington; Editing by Robert Birsel, William Maclean and Grant McCool)

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