Art world condemns Irans ten-year prison sentence for British Council employee Aras Amiri

Arts

Aras Amiri
Family photo

Art world colleagues of Aras Amiri, the British Council employee jailed in Tehran on 13 May on spying charges, have condemned her ten-year sentence and raised concerns about the 33-year-olds welfare.

The former student of Kingston University in London was detained in March 2018 while visiting her grandmother. According to the Telegraph newspaper, a spokesman for Irans judiciary said that an unnamed Iranian woman “in charge of the Iran desk at the British Council” had been convicted of spying.

“Of course, Im concerned about Aras,” said Chicago-based art historian Hamed Yousefi, who co-organised the exhibition Recalling the Future in 2014 at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London with Amiri. “She is being held in a prison on very serious charges."

Yousefi adds: “The Iranian government is paranoid about all forms of international contact. The charges have changed also, and as far as Im aware have been enforced by the security services rather than through an independent judicial process.”

The Iranian embassy in London declined to comment.

Amiris plight has drawn comparisons with the charity worker Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who is currently serving a five-year prison term in Iran for alleged spying. Amiri's cousin Mohsen Omrani told the BBC that she is currently being held in the same section of Tehran's Evin prison as Zaghari-Ratcliffe.

“These prisoners could be used as bargaining chips,” Yousefi says.

A London-based Middle Eastern curator, who preferred to remain anonymous, also raised fears that Amiri could “be used as a pawn” in a tense stand-off between the Iranian government and the West. “It is really unfortunate that she has been caught up in this as shRead More – Source

[contf]
[contfnew]

the art news paper

[contfnewc]
[contfnewc]