/ 11 May 2009

Iran to free jailed US journalist

An American journalist jailed in Iran will be freed on Monday and can leave the country immediately, her lawyer said after an appeals court suspended her eight-year prison sentence.

Roxana Saberi, a 32-year-old dual American-Iranian national, was convicted last month of spying for the US and sentenced to eight years in prison.

Her case caused tension between the United States and Iran at a time with President Barack Obama had said he wanted to engage Washington’s long-time adversary in a dialogue. The US has called the charges against her ”baseless” and demanded she be freed.

Iran’s judiciary announced that the appeals court, which heard her case on Sunday, had reduced her jail term to a suspended two-year sentence, said one of her lawyers, Abdolsamad Khorramshahi.

He told the Associated Press (AP) that Saberi will be ”released today”.

Her other lawyer, Saleh Nikbakht, said she is ”entitled to leave Iran immediately”.

Saberi’s father, who lives in Fargo, North Dakota, said he was waiting for his daughter outside Evin prison, where she has been held since January.

”In the next few days, we will make travel plans to return home,” Reza Saberi told AP.

Roxana Saberi, who grew up in Fargo, moved to Iran six years ago and has worked as a freelance journalist for several organisations, including National Public Radio and the BBC.

She had gone on a hunger strike in prison to protest her jailing but ended it earlier this month after two weeks for health reasons.

US Senator Byron Dorgan said her release would be ”wonderful” but also stressed that her jailing was a ”miscarriage of justice” that ”could not stand the test of public opinion”.

”They [Iranian officials] surely must have felt the weight of international pressure,” the North Dakota Democrat told AP.

The Paris-based Reporters sans frontières also welcomed the decision to suspend Saberi’s sentence and looked forward to her imminent release.

The former 1997 Miss North Dakota was arrested in late January and initially accused of working without press credentials. But an Iranian judge later levelled the far more serious charge of espionage.

Iran has not released many details about her case. Iran’s intelligence minister has said that the initial investigation was done by an expert on security and counterespionage at the Intelligence Ministry before her case was referred to court.

Her Iranian-born father has said his daughter had been working on a book about the culture and people of Iran, and hoped to finish it and return to the United States this year.

The United States broke off ties with Iran after the 1979 Islamic Revolution and the takeover of the US Embassy in Tehran by hard-line students. — Sapa-AP