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News ID: 66394
Publish Date : 25 May 2019 - 21:05

Iran Blasts France’s Extradition of National to U.S.

TEHRAN (Dispatches) -- Iran has denounced as brutal and illegal a French court’s verdict to extradite an Iranian engineer to the U.S.
The condemnation came after the French court in Aix-en-Provence approved the extradition of Jalal Rouhollahnejad to the U.S. to face charges of "attempting to illegally import U.S. technology for military purposes on behalf of an Iranian company.”
The non-governmental Center for Civilian Drones along with a number of knowledge-based firms working in the field of aerospace have unanimously condemned the French court’s verdict as politically-motivated, a report by Iran newspaper said.
In a joint statement, the Iranian aerospace firms said high-power industrial microwave systems are new non-military technologies used for detecting UAVs flying in sensitive sites like airports.
"So the technologies have no military use. They are also not under the U.S. sanctions,” the statement said, adding that it is among the basic rights of any country to use such technologies within the regulations of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) to protect airspaces and provide security for sensitive sites like civilian airports.
The Iranian firms also directly addressed the French government saying the extradition is politically-motivated and stand against the principles of the Iran nuclear deal as well as other international rules.
"Such a move will have serious repercussions for the French tradesmen and specialists working in Iran,” the statement warned.
Rouhollahnejad, 41, was detained on Feb. 2 at Nice airport as he got off a plane coming from Tehran. U.S. judicial officials say Rouhollahnejad might have been seeking to import into Iran high-power industrial microwave systems from the U.S. that could be used for military purposes.
U.S. judges claim that Rouhollahnejad acted on behalf of a company linked to Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC).
Rouhollahnejad’s lawyer also described the U.S. arrest warrant as politically-motivated and added he would continue to refuse extradition.
Targeting Iranian scientists is not a new measure by the U.S. to exert pressure on the Islamic Republic. Iran’s Minister of Science, Research and Technology Mansour Gholami said earlier this week that the U.S. has set a trap for Iranian scientists, enabling their entry into the country before arresting them.
Gholami said the U.S. has identified a number of Iranian professors, who have conducted research in certain areas, published relevant scientific articles, and ordered and bought laboratory equipment.
In the latest case, it was recently revealed that prominent Iranian stem cell scientist Masoud Soleimani has been imprisoned by the U.S. for over seven months for false charges of trying to bypass the U.S. sanctions.