Foreign Policy Magazine Interviews Haleh’s Husband
June 22nd, 2007Haleh Esfandiari is a past contributor to Foreign Policy magazine, which has been following her arrest since last month. Foreign Policy has just published a new interview with Haleh’s husband, Dr. Shaul Bakhash, a professor at George Mason Univerity. Here is an excerpt:
FP: Has anyone heard from Dr. Esfandiari? What are conditions like in the prison?
SB: Haleh has been allowed to make very brief phone calls to her mother in Tehran. These calls last barely a minute, and nothing of substance can be said during them. Our assumption is that there is always a minder standing behind her. But we have absolutely no information on what is going on inside the prison. Our assumption is that she’s still in solitary confinement. Shirin Ebadi describes the cells of Evin prison as very small. Prisoners in this particular security ward sleep on a blanket, not a mattress. Interrogation methods involve intimidation and threats, often fabrications designed to disorient and frighten the detainee. Obviously the aim is often to coerce a false confession from the detainee.
Haleh is 67 years old. She has a fairly serious eye problem, macular degeneration, which requires constant monitoring, and she hasn’t been able to see her eye doctor since she was stopped from leaving Iran. She also has a bone condition which needs monitoring, and we’re not sure whether she has the medications she needs in Evin prison. On one occasion, when her mother tried to deliver some pills that she needs, they refused to accept delivery at the prison gate. Her mother is 93 years old, and we are also very worried about her anxiety and her mental and physical condition as a result of this incarceration.
Dr. Bakhash will be speaking at the rally for Haleh outside the UN on Wednesday at noon. If you can make it to Manhattan, please come and show your support.

SB: Haleh has been allowed to make very brief phone calls to her mother in Tehran. These calls last barely a minute, and nothing of substance can be said during them. Our assumption is that there is always a minder standing behind her. But we have absolutely no information on what is going on inside the prison. Our assumption is that she’s still in solitary confinement. Shirin Ebadi describes the cells of Evin prison as very small. Prisoners in this particular security ward sleep on a blanket, not a mattress. Interrogation methods involve intimidation and threats, often fabrications designed to disorient and frighten the detainee. Obviously the aim is often to coerce a false confession from the detainee.



