Reza Saberi Staying In Iran Until Daughter Roxana Saberi Released

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ALI AKBAR DAREINI | April 9, 2009 12:18 PM EST | AP

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Reza Saberi, the father of American-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi who has been in jail for more than two months in Iran, photographed in Tehran on Thursday April 9, 2009. American female journalist Roxana Saberi has been charged with spying, her lawyer said Wednesday, dashing hopes of a quick release, just days after her parents arrived in the country to press for her freedom. Roxana Saberi asserts her innocence of the charges. (AP Photo/Hasan Sarbakhshian)

TEHRAN, Iran — The father of a jailed American journalist charged by Iran with espionage called Thursday for his daughter's release and said he will not leave the country until she is freed.

Roxana Saberi, a 31-year-old dual American-Iranian citizen, was arrested in late January and initially accused of working without press credentials. But an Iranian judge leveled a far more serious allegation on Wednesday, charging her with spying for the United States.

"I demand them to release my daughter as soon as possible so that she can return to her normal life and continue her job," Saberi's father told The Associated Press in an exclusive interview. "I will stay here until she is freed."

The U.S. government has been pressing for Saberi's release and the new charge this week was a setback at a time when President Barack Obama has expressed a willingness to talk with Iran after many years of rocky relations under the former U.S. administration.

State Department spokesman Robert Wood said Thursday that the espionage charges are "baseless" and that the United States is "deeply concerned."

Saberi has been living in Iran for the last six years, working as a freelance reporter for organizations including National Public Radio and the British Broadcasting Corp.

Her father has said in the past that his daughter told him in a phone call she was arrested after buying a bottle of wine. Under the advice of Saberi's lawyer, he would not comment Thursday on the latest charge.

Iran now alleges that Saberi was passing classified information to U.S. intelligence services.

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"Under the cover of a journalist, she visited government buildings, established contacts with some of the employees, gathered classified information and sent it to the U.S. intelligence services," the judge, who under security rules was identified only by his surname Heidarifard, said Wednesday. "Her activities were discovered by the counterespionage department of the Intelligence Ministry."

In another indication of the seriousness of her case, her lawyer Abolsamad Khorramshahi learned this week that it would be reviewed by Iran's Revolutionary Court, which normally handles cases involving threats to national security. The lawyer said Thursday that he had not yet been allowed to read the text of the indictment, which he expects to see by Saturday.

The judge said Saberi will go on trial next week, but he did not give the exact date.

Iranian-born Reza Saberi and his wife arrived in Iran Sunday and visited their daughter Monday in Evin prison north of Tehran, well-known for holding political prisoners.

"We were allowed to visit her for about 20 minutes," the father said. "We talked to her. She was spiritually better than before. However physically, she was extremely thin and weak but she said she eats now and is going to exercise," he added. "This gave us the hope that she will get better."

Saberi grew up in Fargo, North Dakota. But the Iranian judge in the case told state TV that the judiciary had not yet confirmed her American nationality. The U.S. government has said she is an American citizen.

"She is certainly an American national," her father said. "She also came to Iran and received an Iranian ID card and passport and according to Iranian law, she is Iranian too. She is actually a dual citizen."

The U.S. has been pushing for Saberi's release, and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Wednesday Washington was seeking information from Swiss diplomats in Tehran.

The U.S. broke off diplomatic relations with Iran following the 1979 Islamic revolution and the hostage-taking at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran and Switzerland represents U.S. interests in the country now.

The U.S. and its allies accuse Iran of pursuing a nuclear weapons program, which Tehran denies. But the Obama administration is trying to ease the strained relationship.

On Wednesday, administration officials said U.S. diplomats would attend group talks with Iran over its suspect nuclear program. That is a major departure from President George W. Bush's policy of trying to isolate a nation he once deemed to be evil.

Saberi was one of three missing or detained Americans mentioned in a written message passed by American officials directly to Iranian diplomats last month at an international conference on Afghanistan in The Hague, Netherlands. Clinton attended the conference.

Iran has not yet responded to the message, which sought information about the three.

Human rights groups have repeatedly criticized Iran for arresting journalists and suppressing freedom of speech. The government has arrested several Iranian-Americans in the past few years, citing alleged attempts to overthrow its Islamic government through what it calls a "soft revolution."

Filed by Stuart Whatley
TEHRAN, Iran — The father of a jailed American journalist charged by Iran with espionage called Thursday for his daughter's release and said he will not leave the country until she is freed. Ro...
TEHRAN, Iran — The father of a jailed American journalist charged by Iran with espionage called Thursday for his daughter's release and said he will not leave the country until she is freed. Ro...
 
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To the Saberi family and friends of journalists everywhere,
All the best as you try to get some truth and transparency and freedom from a government lacking in all three attributes. Please ignore the ignorant accusations of some Huff-posters; obviously we need to support courageous reporters in hostile environments.
Background from 'Reporters without Borders' http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=30812

Reporters Without Borders is very worried by the charge of spying brought against American-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi yesterday by deputy prosecutor Hassan Zare Dehnavi (better known as Hassan Haddad), who said that “Saberi has admitted the charges against her.”

... Most of the journalists arrested and jailed in Iran are charged with spying.

Journalist arrested in the past on this charge include Siamak Pourzand (in 2000), Hossein Ghazian (in 2004), Parnaz Azima (in 2006), Mehrnoushe Solouki (in 2007) and Yosef Azizi Banitrof (in 2008). All were convicted on spying charges brought by Dehnavi and his boss, Tehran chief prosecutor Said Mortazavi. As a result of physical and psychological pressure, most of them confessed to the charges.

Dehnavi, who continues to call himself Hassan Haddad, was one of the torturers in Evin prison in the 1980s. While a judge at the Tehran revolutionary court’s 26th chamber from 2000 to 2005, he sentenced several journalists to long prison terms. He has been Mortazavi’s right-hand man since 2006. It was Mortazavi who was chiefly responsible for Canadian-Iranian press photographer Zahra Kazemi’s death in detention in July 2003.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:27 PM on 04/11/2009
- Baghooli I'm a Fan of Baghooli 3 fans permalink

It's all about politics, US want her citizens free from Iran and Iran want her citizens free from US which are being held in Iraq, at the end of day everyone will going to go home free and Mrs. Saberi will have her 15 minutes fame and fortune and can live rich from her books and speech deals for rest of her life for a couple of months of inconvenience with free room and breakfast, talk about being at right place and right time, win win for all.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:53 PM on 04/09/2009
- Mollabaji I'm a Fan of Mollabaji 16 fans permalink

Her father: " I demand"? Who does he think he is to make "demands"?

If she truly was only a journalist, how is it that she has been living in Iran as an Iranian with Iranian passport and I.D. card for 6 years? A journalist my a--!
Just look at the inside cover of your passport where it is stated: If you travel to the country of your birth, even if an American citizen, you will be subject to that country's laws and American laws cannot protect you.
She is going to be tried and the court of law will decide her faith no matter what her father "demands"!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:09 PM on 04/09/2009
- Usama I'm a Fan of Usama 19 fans permalink
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Im sorry Mr Saberi, but merely going to another country and ignoring actual legal charges doesn't bode well: " I demand them to release my daughter as soon as possible so that she can return to her normal life and continue her job."

Mr Saberi should advice his Congressmen that the US Congress has contributed to the legal problem that his daughter is in. First, the US Congress permitted US journalist press credentials to be a legitimate cover for espionage, thereby putting all US journalists under scrutiny and open to spying charges. As well, the US Congress passed acts calling for the overthrow of the Iranian regime. This alone means Americans in Iran could be exposed to added security attention, if not closely monitored by Iranian security. It should be noted that America would be just as harsh, if not harsher, on an Iranian man in USA suspected of spying for Iranian intel on American state nuclear secrets.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:17 PM on 04/09/2009
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