Obama's politic towards Iran might be positive
posted on
May 11, 2009 05:05AM
We may not make much money, but we sure have a lot of fun!
2nd UPDATE:Iran Cuts US Reporter's Sentence;To Leave Jail Monday
(Adds Khoramshahi quotes, background) TEHRAN (AFP)--Jailed U.S.-born reporter Roxana Saberi will be freed on Monday after an Iranian court reduced her prison term for spying to a two-year suspended sentence, her lawyer said. Saberi, a U.S.-Iranian national who was sentenced last month to an eight-year jail term by a revolutionary court on charges of spying for the U.S., will be freed within two hours, he said. "The verdict of the previous court has been quashed," lawyer Saleh Nikbakht said. "Her punishment has been changed to a suspended two-year sentence and she will be out of prison in one and half hours." The ruling was greeted with joy and relief by Saberi's father. It comes just a day after a Tehran court heard a closed-door appeal by Saberi, who was initially detained in January reportedly for buying alcohol, an illegal act in the Islamic republic. The case triggered deep concern in Washington, which dismissed the spying charges against the 32-year-old Saberi as baseless, and among human rights groups. Saberi, who has been detained in Tehran's notorious Evin prison, had been accused of "cooperating with a hostile state," a charge which carries a prison term of one to 10 years.
But Nikbakht said the appeal court had quashed the initial verdict issued on April 13 on the grounds that the U.S. and Iran could not be defined as hostile towards each other. "She was sentenced to two years suspended for gathering secret documents," Nikbakht said. Her father, who had arrived in Iran from the U.S. in March to seek her release, voiced delight at the news of her impending release. "We are very happy," Reza Saberi told AFP. "We are going to Evin prison to take her home." He told Al-Jazeera television that he saw his daughter Sunday and that "she is feeling well," but had lost weight. The former U.S. beauty queen began a hunger strike on April 21 in protest at the sentence, taking in only water or sugared water, but she ended it after about two weeks after being briefly hospitalized in the prison clinic. The sentence against Saberi was the harshest ever meted out to a dual national on security charges in Iran and came just weeks after new U.S. President Barack Obama proposed dialogue with Tehran after three decades of severed ties. Saberi's other lawyer Abdolsamad Khoramshahi told AFP that it would be up to the journalist herself whether to stay in Iran or leave. Asked whether the authorities would immediately return her passport he said: "These are marginal issues and details which they will talk about later." Obama himself said that he was "especially concerned" about Saberi but Iran insisted the case was an internal matter and urged foreign states especially her native U.S. not to "interfere." However, shortly after the eight-year sentence was announced President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and judiciary chief Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahrudi called for a fair appeal. Iran, which does not recognize dual nationality, has said Saberi had continued working "illegally" after her press card was revoked in 2006. Saberi has reported for U.S. National Public Radio, the BBC and Fox News, and has lived in Iran for the past six years. Click here to go to Dow Jones NewsPlus, a web front page of today's most important business and market news, analysis and commentary: http://www.djnewsplus.com/access/al?... You can use this link on the day this article is published and the following day. (END) Dow Jones Newswires May 11, 2009 08:48 ET (12:48 GMT)
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