The family of Nobel Peace Prize laureate Narges Mohammadi says she suffered a suspected heart attack in Evin Prison. Her brother has publicly stated that her life is in imminent danger and demanded an immediate transfer to a hospital.

Mohammadi was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2023 for her decades of work advocating for human rights and democracy in Iran, particularly the rights of women. She has been imprisoned repeatedly. Her current incarceration predates the war.

The war has made her situation worse. International attention that might otherwise pressure Iran to provide adequate medical care has been diverted entirely to military developments. The diplomatic channels through which prisoner welfare is typically communicated have been severed or repurposed for ceasefire negotiations.

Iran’s government has a documented history of allowing political prisoners to deteriorate medically while in custody. The pattern is familiar enough to have a name in human rights circles: medical neglect as a form of punishment.

Is anyone paying attention? The Nobel Committee has issued a statement. A handful of human rights organizations have renewed their calls for her release. But the machinery of international pressure that might actually compel Iran to act is currently occupied with other matters.

Narges Mohammadi is 54 years old. She has dedicated her life to the idea that Iranian citizens deserve basic freedoms. She is in a prison cell with a suspected heart attack, and the world that gave her its most prestigious peace prize is looking the other way.