Iran has formally charged a French couple with spying for Israel and plotting to overthrow the government, diplomatic and family sources said on Wednesday.
Cecile Kohler and Jacques Paris have been in Iranian custody since May 2022.
Officials said that the charges include espionage, conspiracy against the regime, and “corruption on earth” — a serious offence that carries the death penalty. However, their families and French diplomats said that the accusations are baseless.
The couple has been charged with “spying” for Israel, a French diplomatic source and relatives told AFP.
Iranian officials have also charged the pair with “conspiracy to overthrow the regime” and “corruption on earth”, the sources said, adding that the country accused them of “spying” for Israel’s intelligence agency Mossad.
“All we know is that they have seen a judge who confirmed the three charges,” said Kohler’s sister, adding that the two French nationals were still being denied access to independent lawyers.
All three charges carry the death penalty.
“These charges, if they are confirmed, are completely unfounded,” said the diplomatic source.
Tehran has not confirmed the new charges.
The news came a day after a French diplomat was able to visit the two French nationals, whose families had demanded proof that they were alive after Israeli strikes.
The French foreign ministry did not specify where the visit occurred, amid uncertainty over the couple’s whereabouts.
The fate of Kohler and Paris had been unknown since Israel targeted Tehran’s Evin prison in an air strike last week, before a US-proposed ceasefire between the Middle East foes came into force.
Iran’s judiciary said the Israeli strike on the prison had killed at least 79 people.
It has also said the Iranian prison authority transferred inmates out of Evin prison, without specifying their number or identifying them.
Several women prisoners have been transferred to Qarchak prison for women outside Tehran, which has a notorious reputation for its conditions.
Kohler, 40, and Paris, her 72-year-old partner, have been held in Iran since May 2022 on espionage charges their families reject.
Iran is believed to hold around 20 European nationals, many of whose cases have never been publicised, in what some Western governments including France describe as a strategy of hostage-taking aimed at extracting concessions from the West.
Three Europeans, who have not been identified, have also been arrested in the wake of the current conflict, two of whom are accused of spying for Israel, according to the authorities.
Iran indicts French couple for spying and plotting against regime