Djalali's wife: no contact since protests erupted

Swedish-Iranian researcher Ahmadreza Djalali has been out of contact with his family in Sweden since the widespread protests in Iran began. His wife, Vida Mehrannia, expresses deep concern for his health in Evin Prison. She hopes the unrest will lead to the regime's downfall and freedom for her husband.

Ahmadreza Djalali, a doctor and researcher affiliated with Karolinska Institutet, was arrested in Iran in 2016 while giving lectures on disaster medicine. In 2017, he was sentenced to death on charges of spying for Mossad, which he denies and which reports suggest were extracted under torture.

Djalali is held in Evin Prison on the outskirts of Tehran, from where he typically calls his family in Sweden. However, since the protests began on December 28, all contact has ceased. The protests started over economic woes but have escalated into nationwide demonstrations against the religious regime, the largest in years.

"We have no communication at all right now, and now the internet has been shut down too," Vida Mehrannia told Expressen. The last she heard from him was on New Year's Day, when his health was poor. "But now I don't know exactly how he is, which worries me enormously. It's awful," she added.

Human rights groups report over 500 people killed by security forces, with the toll possibly higher. Mehrannia worries for both her husband and the protesters. "I hope the EU governments unite and do something, because right now they stand alone," she said, hoping the unrest brings freedom to the people and Djalali.

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As Iran's protests—sparked by economic woes in late December 2025—rage on under a near-total internet blackout, with reports now citing hundreds dead, Swedish-Iranians are voicing anguish over lost contact with family and urging global support. Despite the brutality, many see hope for regime change.

Nationwide protests in Iran that began on December 28, 2025, after a sharp currency slide and broader economic distress entered a second week as authorities imposed a sweeping internet and communications blackout and security forces moved to intensify a crackdown. A U.S.-based rights group said at least 62 people have been killed and more than 2,300 detained, while exiled opposition figure Reza Pahlavi urged further demonstrations and appealed to President Donald Trump for support as European leaders and the United Nations called for restraint.

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