‘There is no indication’: French couple Irani jail has a three -year mark

Paris: 24 -hour lights with lights and a few times a week was allowed out for only 30 minutes, a French couple, held in Iran since Wednesday, marked three years of underdeveloped in the Islamic Republic of Iran on Wednesday, which was not likely to end the end of their ordinance.Cecil Kohlar and Jacques were held on Paris, espionage allegations, according to their families, they have been jailed in very strict circumstances and feel rapidly disappointing.They are one of the many Europeans who are still in some European countries including Iran, including France, belonging to the Islamic Republic’s nuclear program as a intentional strategy to hold hostage to remove concessions from the West at the time of tension.Kohaler, a 40 -year -old literary teacher from East France and his partner Paris, was arrested on the last day of a tourist trip to Iran in the 70s, on May 7, 2022. He is conducted in Section 209, which is seen as reserved for political prisoners in Evin Jail in Tehran.He is the last known French captive in Iran after some recent release and is considered by the French government as “state hostages”.“This is very difficult. We are tired. We never thought it could last long,” Cesil Kohler’s sister Nomi told AFP ahead of the anniversary, which hopes to look at dozens of rallies across France on Wednesday to pay attention to her plight.“Cecil and Jacks are rapidly desperate and are less and less optimistic,” Nomi said, who leads the campaign for his sister’s release.French President Emmanuel Macron said on Wednesday that the Paris was working “tirelessly” to free the couple.Macron wrote on social media, “I assure their families that our support is unbreakable.”‘Disgusting situation’ The pair were forced to broadcast “Confession” on Iranian state television a few months after their arrest and received only four cannons trips in three years.According to the French Foreign Ministry, two French citizens are subjected to the conditions “equal to torture under international law”.“Unfortunately, there are no signs of hope really,” Nomi Kohlar said. “Our only lever is to raise, in the hope that it is making as much noise as possible that it will be heard in Iran,” she said.Their lights are kept 24 hours a day and are allowed only 30 minutes two or three times a week. Rare and small calls to his loved ones are held under the highest monitoring, final on 14 April. They are subject to intensive psychological pressure.“For several months, they have been told that a decision is imminent, that it will be extremely serious, they are given time limit every time and nothing happens,” Nomi Kohlar said.Relationships between France and Iran have become even more stressful in recent weeks, Paris has threatened to impose new restrictions against Tehran and increase international alarm about the Iranian nuclear program.At the end of February, an Iranian woman, Mahdih Essefandiyari, was arrested in France for promoting terrorism on social media, while a Franco-Irani influential person is due to going on a test on the same charge.According to the Ministry of External Affairs, the release of Kohalar and Paris remains a “full priority” for France.The couple is placed in “inhuman conditions or in the amount of torture”, Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Borot said in a video message released on X for the anniversary.Barrot stated that they were “hostages” and “victims of Iranian rule” and that France “was tirelessly fighting for their release”. But he also called other French citizens to stay away from Iran.France has stated that it would file a complaint against Iran against Iran at the Hague-based International Court of Justice, welcomed by their families on the fate of both, but the case is unlikely to hurry the case in the short term.Other Europeans held in Iran include Iranian-Swedish academic Ahmadreza Patelis, who was arrested during a visit to Iran in April 2016 and sentenced to death in 2017 on espionage charges, which his family says that are false.