The family of a Belgian aid worker being held in Iran, Olivier Vandecasteele, pleaded Monday for their government to do “everything necessary” to secure his release.
Last week, Belgian Justice Minister Vincent Van Quickenborne announced Olivier’s detention.
This came in the wake of the parliament’s approval of a controversial prisoner-swap treaty with Iran. The text still has to be submitted to a full vote to be ratified.
“Even though he’s innocent, he has been rotting away for nearly five months in total solitary confinement,” his sister Nathalie Vandercasteele said in a video released to media.
“Today Olivier needs your support... It is unthinkable for our family that our democratic Belgium isn’t doing everything necessary to get innocent prisoners out of countries like Iran,” she said.
She affirmed that her brother had received two consular visits that revealed he suffered major weight-loss and a foot infection.
“He has spent two months without even a mattress, in a cell lit up around the clock, and being subjected to daily psychological pressure from interrogators,” she said.
In the family video, Vandercasteele’s mother Annie barely held back tears as she implored authorities to get her son freed, AFP reported.
Vandecasteele, 41, was arrested in Iran at the end of February and is being held in Tehran’s notorious Evin prison on charges of “espionage.”
His family, some Belgian MPs and rights groups such as Amnesty International underlined Iran’s tactic of taking foreigners hostage to pressure Western countries to make concessions.
In this case, they say Iran is seeking to force Belgium to release one of its diplomats who was last year found guilty of masterminding a 2018 foiled bomb attack outside Paris.
The diplomat, Assadollah Assadi, 50, is serving a 20-year sentence in a Belgian prison for attempted “terrorist” murder and “participating in the activities of a terrorist group.”
He was attached to Iran’s embassy in Austria where investigators said he served as a regime agent under diplomatic cover.
After European intelligence services uncovered the Iranian plot to set off a bomb at a rally of Iranian dissidents outside Paris, Assadi — who supplied the explosives — was arrested in Germany, where his claim for diplomatic immunity was denied.
He was extradited to Belgium for his trial, and chose not to challenge his sentence on appeal.
Tehran has furiously rejected the charges levelled at the diplomat.
Belgium’s government is currently urging parliament to pass the controversial prisoner-swap treaty with Iran which could pave the way for Vandercasteele and Assadi to each return to his country.