The Hana Human Rights Organization has been informed that Delir Salimi, a 40-year-old citizen, son of Abdulrahman and a resident of Saqqez, remains in a legal limbo at the Shahramfar detention center in Sanandaj. He suffers from a severe kidney disease, yet despite the deterioration of his condition, no medical care has been provided by the detention center authorities, causing serious concern for his family.
Hana emphasizes that, despite more than 168 days of Delir Salimi’s arbitrary detention, he continues to be denied basic rights afforded to detainees, including access to a lawyer, visits with his family, and medical services. During his illegal detention, he has only been allowed a few one-minute phone calls, which occurred solely due to repeated inquiries by his family to security authorities.
According to a well-informed source, the family’s repeated follow-ups have so far yielded no results, and security officials have provided vague and irresponsible statements, claiming that they must “wait for a case response from Tehran.”
The source added that security officials had previously stated that Delir Salimi would be transferred to a public prison on 1 December 2025; however, no action has been taken, and the family remains completely uninformed.
The ongoing legal uncertainty and lack of medical care have caused extreme concern for Salimi’s health, particularly for his child.
The Hana Human Rights Organization expresses deep concern over Delir Salimi’s situation and holds the Sanandaj Prosecutor and the Commander of the Kurdistan Quds Force directly responsible for safeguarding his life and health.
Hana further notes that the Shahramfar high-security detention center, operated by the Kurdistan Intelligence branch of the IRGC, is not officially registered among the detention centers and prisons of the Iranian Prisons Organization. This raises additional serious concerns regarding Salimi’s fate. Based on Hana’s investigations, security interrogators at Shahramfar routinely employ systematic torture against activists and political detainees.
