Connect with us

World

Sister of EU diplomat captive in Iran calls for his release

Published

on

Sister of EU diplomat captive in Iran calls for his release

The sister of Johan Floderus, the 33-year-old Swedish EU diplomat who has been held captive in Iran’s notorious Evin prison for more than 600 days, has said her brother is being used as a “pawn” in a “political game.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Floderus was arrested by Iranian authorities in April 2022 at Tehran airport, after visiting a friend working for the Swedish embassy in Iran. He has since been held under harrowing conditions in the country’s Evin prison.

At the time of his arrest, Floderus worked on the Afghanistan desk of the European External Action Service (EEAS), the bloc’s diplomatic arm.

The Iranian prosecutor is reported to have said last Sunday he is seeking the death sentence for Floderus, who has been accused of spying for Israel and “corruption on earth,” a crime that carries the death penalty under Tehran’s Islamic laws.

Floderus is the latest EU citizen to be arbitrarily detained by the Iranian regime on widely contested criminal charges, known as ‘hostage diplomacy’. While many before him have been released after Tehran secured concessions from governments, the prosecutor’s call for the death penalty has come as a devastating blow to the family. No date has yet been set for the final verdict.

His sister Ingrid Floderus spoke to Euronews at an event in Brussels organised by the #FreeJohanFloderus campaign to call for his release.

Advertisement

“It’s about time that he got home. He is an innocent man,” Ingrid said. “I don’t think that anyone really feels like my brother has done those crimes that he has been accused of.”

“This is about some big political game where my brother is being used as a pawn, and that is really, for me, something I cannot accept,” she added. 

“I don’t think we (Sweden) as a nation or the European Union either should accept that.”

Officials in Stockholm and Brussels have said they are working tirelessly to ensure his release. But Ingrid says that efforts will only be enough once her brother is safely home.

“For me and for our family (…) as long as he’s still there and accused of (these) horrific crimes, then maybe I don’t feel like it’s a success story so far,” she explained.

Advertisement

In a statement, an EU spokesperson said: “We have been very clear from the beginning: Mr. Floderus is innocent. There are absolutely no grounds for keeping (him) in detention.”

“The High Representative persistently raises the case at every occasion and contact with the Iranian authorities, since his detention, requesting his liberation,” the spokesperson explained, adding that the EU is in close cooperation with Swedish authorities on the issue. 

His family have described the harrowing conditions under which  has bheeen held in Tehran’s notorious Evin prison, saying that he has been on a hunger strike at least seven times in order to be able to call his family.

Prison officers have now warned he will not be able to call his family again if he goes on another hunger strike, according to his family. His cell, which he shares with three others, has lighting 24 hours of the day.

“I think he is doing worse and worse,” Ingrid said. “I can see from the pictures from his trial that he looks very different from the brother I know. He looks much skinnier, very pale, of course, since he’s basically never going out and I know that he doesn’t get this much food.”

Advertisement

Floderus is a graduate of the universities of Oxford, Uppsala and SOAS London. He previously held positions at the European Commission’s Department for international partnerships and the cabinet of Swedish Home Affairs Commissioner Ylva Johansson.

“Johan is fond of his family, dogs and CrossFit and has great interest in history, literature and culture,” reads a description from his family.

Present at the event in Brussels on Thursday were two other EU nationals held hostage in Iranian prisons and released in 2022, French-Irish citizen Bernard Phelan and Belgian citizen Olivier Vandecasteele.

ADVERTISEMENT

“There is a pattern of people of certain nationalities being used for diplomatic leverage by Iran’s government. It’s called hostage diplomacy but I see little diplomacy in this. It’s basically blackmail,” Vandecasteele said at the event.

Floderus’s arrest came during Sweden’s trial of Hamid Noury, an Iranian accused of mass executions of dissidents in Tehran in 1988.

Advertisement

World

Paramount’s Jeff Shell Accused in Lawsuit of Leaking UFC, WBD Info

Published

on

Paramount’s Jeff Shell Accused in Lawsuit of Leaking UFC, WBD Info

A professional gambler and FBI informant has made good on his threat to take legal action against Paramount Skydance president Jeff Shell, as attorneys for Robert “R.J.” Cipriani have filed a 67-page complaint against the media exec in Los Angeles County Superior Court.

Among the allegations Cipriani has brought against Shell are breach of oral contract and fraud, charges related to a reformatted Spanish-language TV show that never got off the ground. The court document claims that Shell broke “a clear promise to help [the] plaintiff develop an English-language version” of Roku Channel’s four-part series Serenata de las Estrellas, which was co-produced by Cipriani in 2023.

Cipriani is suing Shell for $150 million in damages.

“This case arises from the oldest form of fraud: A powerful man took everything a less powerful man had to offer, promised to repay him, lied to him when he asked about it and then refused to compensate him at all,” the second paragraph of the complaint states.

Cipriani claims he had provided Shell with what amounts to 18 months of “sophisticated, high-value crisis communications services,” all of which went uncompensated. Shell allegedly agreed to develop Star Serenade, an adaptation of Serenata, in exchange for these services, but did not follow through.

Advertisement

The legal document also includes allegations that Shell had disclosed sensitive information about the Paramount’s bid to acquire the Warner Bros. Discovery assets. Cipriani states that Shell in a Feb. 2 meeting had told him that PSKY “intended to enhance and ‘sweeten’ its pending hostile tender offer … to $30 per share in cash,” information that was not made public until Feb. 10. (Cipriani claimed that Shell during that same meeting referred to WBD CEO David Zaslav as a “suck-up.”)

Cipriani went on to state that Shell told him, “We’re paying way too much for Warner Bros. If we could just wait another year, we could get it a whole lot cheaper.”

Paramount and WBD formally entered a $111 billion merger agreement on Feb. 27. Should the deal be met with regulatory approval, the combined CBS Sports/TNT Sports portfolio will bring the rights to the NFL, NHL, MLB, college football, the UFC, the Masters and March Madness under one roof. Shell did not participate in the briefing Paramount convened with analysts the following Monday.

A few pages deeper into the complaint, Cipriani stated he had filed a complaint with the Securities and Exchange Commission related to disclosures Shell had made to him regarding the then-pending $7.7 billion Paramount-UFC deal. Cipriani claims Shell told him about the pact 26 days before it went public. Shell is said to have shared details of the negotiations with Cipriani despite the fact that “even UFC president Dana White did not yet know of the transaction.” (Oddly enough, Cipriani’s complaint alleges that Shell characterized the talks as “very hush hush” while he was spilling the beans.)

The legal complaint includes a screen shot of what appears to be a WhatsApp conversation between Cipriani and Shell, in which the latter states, “We are buying ALL of the UFC rights for the next 7 years for Paramount.”

Advertisement

When a draft of Cipriani’s complaint began circulating last month, an attorney representing Shell said the document was “riddled with clear errors of fact and law.” With the complaint now filed, Shell will have to opportunity to formally rebut Cipriani.

Shell is currently the subject of an internal Paramount investigation related to Cipriani’s claims and is expected to remain on the sidelines until the inquiry is complete. That said, no official action has been taken, and he remains on the job as of Tuesday afternoon.

Continue Reading

World

Cuban activist to Trump: ‘Make Cuba great again’ by ending communist rule

Published

on

Cuban activist to Trump: ‘Make Cuba great again’ by ending communist rule

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

As Cuba faces rolling blackouts, food shortages and renewed protests, Cuban human rights activist Rosa María Payá is warning in an interview to Fox News Digital that the island’s deepening crisis cannot be solved with economic reforms alone and is urging the United States to maintain pressure on the communist government in Havana.

The recent outages and shortages are tied to Cuba’s worsening energy and economic crisis. 

A recent nationwide blackout was triggered by a failure at the Antonio Guiteras thermoelectric plant, the island’s largest power station, cutting electricity across much of the country, according to Reuters. The crisis has been compounded by fuel shortages after the Trump administration moved to curtail oil shipments to the island, particularly from Venezuela — one of Cuba’s main suppliers. 

Cuban officials say U.S. sanctions have worsened the country’s economic difficulties, while repeated power plant failures and an aging electrical grid have left millions facing prolonged blackouts that have fueled growing public frustration and protests.

Advertisement

RUSSIA WARNS AGAINST ‘PROVOCATIVE ACTIONS’ AROUND CUBA AFTER 4 KILLED ONBOARD US-REGISTERED SPEEDBOAT

The state-run company blamed U.S. sanctions in an official statement, saying, “Without ending the financial blockade, there can be no permanent energy stability,” according to CubaHeadlines.

Rosa Maria Paya, daughter of late Cuban dissident Oswaldo Paya, is seen during a tribute to her father’s memory in Santiago, Chile, April 17, 2017.  (Ivan Alvarado/Reuters)

The Trump administration has increased pressure on Cuba in recent months, tightening sanctions and targeting oil shipments that help power the island’s energy system. The measures are part of a broader effort to weaken the Cuban government and support democratic change on the island. 

“To President Trump, it’s important for you to know that the Cuban people are grateful for what this administration is doing and that we are ready, and we want to make Cuba great again,” Payá said, addressing him directly. “And that means an end to the communist dictatorship, not just a new economy, but a new republic.” 

Advertisement

Her appeal comes as Cuba has re-emerged in Washington’s foreign policy discussions. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, the son of Cuban immigrants and one of the most prominent Cuban–American voices in U.S. politics, long has advocated a tougher stance toward Havana and stronger support for pro-democracy movements on the island. 

The Trump administration recently has increased pressure on the Cuban government, including measures targeting oil shipments that help sustain the island’s struggling energy sector. 

Trump praised Rubio during a press conference Tuesday and suggested he could play a central role in any potential negotiations with Havana.

“Marco Rubio is doing a great job,” Trump said. “I think he’s going to go down as the greatest secretary of state in history. They trust Marco.”

“We want to work with President Trump and with Secretary Rubio, the opposition is united,” Payá said. “We have a plan. It’s called the Freedom Accord,” she added, referring to a democratic transition framework promoted by opposition groups in Cuba. “We are ready to lead this process. The moment is now, Mr. President.”

Advertisement

Opposition groups have developed the Freedom Accord, a political roadmap for democratic change, which she says would guide a transition away from the current system in Cuba. 

Payá, 37, who escaped the country 13 years ago, has spent the past decade advocating internationally for democratic change in Cuba. 

She is the daughter of prominent dissident Oswaldo Payá, founder of the Christian Liberation Movement and architect of the Varela Project, a petition campaign in the early 2000s that gathered more than 25,000 signatures demanding free elections and civil liberties in Cuba.

Her father died in 2012 alongside fellow activist Harold Cepero in what Payá describes as an assassination by the Cuban regime. Cuban authorities said the men were killed in a car crash in eastern Cuba, but the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights later concluded there were “serious indications” that Cuban state agents were involved in the deaths.

“After the Cuban regime assassinated my father … I have been trying to follow his legacy together with many, many other Cubans on the island and in exile that today believe that we have a real chance and freedom,” she said, describing a movement that today includes activists both on the island and in exile.

Advertisement

FLORIDA LAUNCHES PROBE AFTER CUBA KILLS 4 ABOARD US-FLAGGED SPEEDBOAT NEAR KEYS

Members of the “Ladies in White” opposition group march beside the funeral procession of Oswaldo Paya, one of Cuba’s best-known dissidents, in Havana, July 24, 2012.  (Reuters)

The crisis inside Cuba has reached a level where basic survival has become a daily struggle for many families, according to Payá.  

“The situation today is that mothers don’t know if they are going to be able to feed their child tonight,” she said. “Most of the island has been suffering blackouts that last for days on many occasions.”The island has experienced waves of unrest in recent years driven by economic collapse and political repression. 

The largest demonstrations against the regime erupted on July 11, 2021, when thousands of Cubans took to the streets across the island chanting “freedom” in the biggest protests since the 1959 revolution.

Advertisement

Authorities responded with mass arrests and prison sentences for many demonstrators. 

For Payá, those protests reflected something deeper than economic frustration.

“The Cuban people have been fighting for freedom for the last 67 years,” she said. “We are demanding political freedom, not just a new economy.”

Despite comparisons between Cuba’s crisis and the political turmoil in Venezuela, Payá argues the situation in Cuba is fundamentally different. 

“Cuba’s situation is quite different,” she said. “This is the longest running communist dictatorship in the Western hemisphere.” 

Advertisement

MARCO RUBIO EMERGES AS KEY TRUMP POWER PLAYER AFTER VENEZUELA OPERATION

Cuban exiles block the Palmetto Expressway at Coral Way in support of protesters in Cuba in 2021 in Miami.  (Pedro Portal/Miami Herald via AP)

While she emphasized that Cubans themselves must ultimately drive political change, Payá said international pressure remains essential because of the regime’s ability to repress dissent.

Her appeal comes as Cuba has re-emerged in Washington’s foreign policy discussions.

Payá said the Cuban opposition hopes the United States will continue supporting democratic change on the island.

Advertisement

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Anabel Oliva, 20, speaks outside the University of Havana during a protest against disruptions in classes due to energy and internet shortages, amid U.S. sanctions and an oil blockade that have deepened the country’s crisis, in Havana, Cuba, March 9, 2026.  (Norlys Perez/Reuters)

“I believe that President Trump knows very well, better than anyone, the difference between a real deal and a better one,” she said. “He understands that this dictatorship must end.”

“To end the crisis,” she added, “we need to end the regime.”

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House and Rubio for comment and has not yet received a reply. 

Advertisement

Reuters contributed to this report.

Continue Reading

World

Israeli air strike targets building in south Lebanon

Published

on

Israeli air strike targets building in south Lebanon

An Israeli air strike has heavily damaged a building in southern Lebanon’s Tyre district.

An Israeli air strike has heavily damaged a building in southern Lebanon’s Tyre district as Israeli forces continue to attack across the area. The army says it is targeting Hezbollah military infrastructure and has warned residents south of the Litani river to leave.

Continue Reading

Trending