Mehdi Hashemi Rafsanjani | |
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Hashemi Rafsanjani in 2014
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|
Born |
Mehdi Hashemi Bahramani 20 September 1969 Tehran, Iran |
Nationality | Iranian |
Occupation | Businessman |
Known for | Statoil corruption case |
Criminal charge | Multiple Unknown "security offences and financial crimes" |
Criminal penalty | 10 years in prison |
Spouse(s) | Fereshteh Hashemi Rafsanjani |
Children | 2 |
Parent(s) |
Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani Effat Marashi |
Conviction(s) | Corruption crimes |
Capture status
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In Prison |
Date apprehended
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11 August 2015 |
Imprisoned at | Evin Prison |
Mehdi Hashemi Rafsanjani (Persian: مهدی هاشمی رفسنجانی; born 20 September 1969) is an Iranian businessman and the fourth child of Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, former President of Iran.
Rafsanjani was born on 20 September 1969 in Tehran. He attended elementary, junior and high school at the Nikan High School, graduating in 1987. He was accepted at University of Tehran where he majored in telecommunication, obtaining his bachelor's degree in 1992. He earned a master's degree from Sharif University of Technology in the energy engineering field, and worked on a PhD in the energy engineering field at Islamic Azad University.
In October 2010, he began studying for a PhD at Wolfson College, Oxford in oriental studies with a focus on the Iranian constitution.
In 2007 authorities in France arrested the CEO and other officers of the giant oil company Total S.A. on charges that Total had bribed Iranian officials. From 1997 to 2003, Total paid out €60,000,000 ($80,000,000) for a favorable contract in the PSEEZ off-shore natural gas field. Much of this money was allegedly paid into bank accounts controlled by Mehdi Rafsanjani, then head of the state-owned company Gaz Iran.
Rafsanjani denied this allegation, and threatened the newspapers which reported it with prosecution.
In the 2009 Iran poll protests trial, a defendant (Hamzeh Karami) accused Rafsanjani of spending assets of the Iranian Fuel Conservation Organization to finance his father's 2005 campaign. Rafsanjani questioned the credibility of the confession pointing out that Karami "stood trial on Tuesday without a defense attorney after having spent over 70 days in solitary", and accused president Ahmadinejad of embezzling a far larger amount "that went missing from the Tehran governor’s office in 2005." The trial has been widely condemned in both Iran and elsewhere as a "show trial" employing coerced confessions.