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Moms Of U.S. Hikers Jailed In Iran 'Shocked' By New Report On Arrest

DOUG GLASS   06/24/10 11:22 PM ET   AP

Iran Us Hikers

MINNEAPOLIS — The mothers of three American hikers held in Iran on suspicion of espionage said Thursday they hope a report that their children were arrested on the Iraqi side of the border will help lead to their release.

Shane Bauer, Sarah Shourd and Josh Fattal were arrested July 31 during what their families have said was a simple hiking trip along the Iraq-Iran border. They have said if the hikers crossed into Iran it was an accident.

The Nation reported Thursday that two witnesses from a Kurdish village near the border say the Americans were on Iraqi territory when they were arrested by Iranian forces. The publication said the witnesses wouldn't allow their names to be used because they feared retaliation from Iran.

Two Iraqi security officials contradicted the account, telling The Associated Press that the hikers were arrested on Iranian soil.

"We have to focus and assimilate this, but it's shocking," Nora Shourd, Sarah's mother, said in an interview on CNN. "It's shocking it hasn't come out in the public, that it happened to these kids, and that this is the reason they're being held."

"What it does for me is it pushes me into the hope that the Iranian authorities can investigate this, see it for what it is, and release them immediately," Cindy Hickey, Shane Bauer's mother, said in an interview with AP.

Bauer had worked as a freelancer journalist, and wrote at least one piece on Iraq for The Nation, but the publication has said he wasn't on assignment for them at the time of his arrest.

The magazine said its story was based on a five-month investigation. It described its witnesses as people from Zalum, a few miles from the Iran border.

"Obviously these are disconcerting allegations," State Department spokesman Mark Toner said. "We have no evidence to back up those allegations. We would just again call on the Iranian authorities to immediately release Josh Fattal, Shane Bauer, Sarah Shourd as well as all other American citizens who are being unjustly detained."

The Nation's report said the witnesses followed the obviously Western hikers out of curiosity as they descended a mountain straddling the border. The witnesses said uniformed guards from Iran's national police force waved the hikers toward the Iranian side using threatening gestures and when their calls were ignored, one officer fired a round in the air. The hikers continued to hesitate, and the guards walked a few yards into Iraqi territory to arrest them, the witnesses said, according to The Nation.

The rugged, mountainous region is part of the disputed area between Iraq and Iran, with few fences or distinct border markings, making it difficult for visitors to know which side they are on. It's also seen sporadic clashes in recent years between Iranian forces and a Kurdish rebel group known as the Party for Free Life in Kurdistan.

Iraqi border police Brig. Gen. Ahmed Gharib told AP Thursday that the three Americans passed through Zalum, a tourist village near the border where there is a waterfall and a cafe, on the way to climbing a mountain – the peak of which he said is in Iran.

"The three Americans were arrested inside Iranian territory," said Gharib, who is based in the Kurdish-Iraqi city of Sulaimaniyah.

"When they reached the top of mountain, the Iranian guards arrested them because there is an Iranian outpost on the top of mountain," he said.

Hakim Qadir Hama, the director of the Sulaimaniyah provincial security service, told AP that Zalum village police warned the Americans about climbing the mountain as they would all but certainly stray across the Iranian border, "but no one listened to them." Hama said authorities launched an investigation the day after the hikers disappeared, and ultimately concluded that the Americans had entered Iran and were arrested there.

Laura Fattal, Josh's mother, said she was grateful that the magazine's report had put the hikers back in the news.

"If this helps gain their release, it's wonderful," she said.

The hikers' mothers have grown increasingly frustrated since traveling to Iran in May to visit their children, who were being held at Evin Prison in Tehran. Earlier this month, they demanded that Iran release the hikers or put them on trial, and said they were being used as pawns in a standoff with the U.S.

Iran's top human rights official said recently that the three would probably go on trial soon if prosecutors decide they have enough evidence.

Fattal, 28, is from Pennsylvania. Shourd, 31, is from California and Bauer, 27, from Minnesota. All three are graduates of the University of California at Berkeley.

___

Associated Press writers Matthew Lee in Washington, Yahya Barzanji in Sulaimaniyah, Iraq, and Lara Jakes in Baghdad contributed to this report.

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MINNEAPOLIS — The mothers of three American hikers held in Iran on suspicion of espionage said Thursday they hope a report that their children were arrested on the Iraqi side of the border will ...
MINNEAPOLIS — The mothers of three American hikers held in Iran on suspicion of espionage said Thursday they hope a report that their children were arrested on the Iraqi side of the border will ...
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09:08 PM on 06/30/2010
Hikers? More like, "Left Wing Trouble Makers". Nobody goes "hiking" on the Iranian border without an agenda. No sympathy at all for these Liberal creeps. Let the Iranians have them.
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Fein
And this too shall pass.
03:39 PM on 07/01/2010
If they were actually spies, they'd probably be 'right wingers'. In that case, they'd feel right at home in a non democratic, militarized, religious autocracy, without equal right for women. In fact, Iran's a right winger's paradise! They probably won't want to come home!
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Fein
And this too shall pass.
08:11 PM on 06/30/2010
I have no idea if these people are spies or not. But the fact that they were dual nationals and/or speak a number of the local dialects fluently certainly negates the argument that they were too stupid to understand that they fit the profile of spies perfectly. Of course, they were Americans so I guess that's not impossible.
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StuntHunt
09:22 AM on 07/19/2010
Whatever the case, only a fool or a troublemaker would do what they did. They knowingly went to flirt with disaster, and they got it. I have no sympathy for them.
04:47 AM on 06/27/2010
All of Iranians authors do it at HP.

Mr. Sam Sedaei ask me a direct question and the censor my answers!

How fair is that?
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06:32 AM on 06/27/2010
It's because your posts are incoherent at best, or crazy meaningless rants at worst. I'd honestly suggest a year of English lessons, and then perhaps return to the thread.
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persianadvocate
06:32 PM on 06/27/2010
And yet, we all respect him far more than you.
03:22 AM on 06/27/2010
Josh Shahryar is a blogger that censors public opinion in an attempt to show a positive reception of his articles.
04:48 AM on 06/27/2010
All of Iranians authors do it at HP.

Mr. Sam Sedaei ask me a direct question and then censor my answers!

How fair is that?
01:39 AM on 06/28/2010
absolutely. You are right. But Josh makes an art of it in an attempt to pretend he wrote an appealing piece. I think we should routinely point this out in our comments whenever we can.
01:24 AM on 06/27/2010
USA/Israeli strike on Iran = US formerly backing Shah + Iran-Iraq War + (US invasion of Iraq x 2) + kidnapped Iranian officials in Iraq + US pressure on Iran on nuclear processing + kidnapped and killed Iranian nuclear scientists + US sanctions of Iran
Espionage variables (satellite, US special forces, Mossad, paid Iranian informers, Kurdish infiltrators, US hikers on Iran-Iraq border?)
01:55 AM on 06/27/2010
I never understood the true source of hostilities toward Iran, after all there are other countries in the world outside complete influence of US.

Is this because US had Iran as a slave before 1979?

Once a slave always a slave?
01:23 AM on 06/28/2010
Part of the problem is that Iran won't do what we tell them to do for some reason.
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Fein
And this too shall pass.
02:21 PM on 07/01/2010
Pretty much. Almost all of the prosperity of the UK and ALL their oil in WW2 was free, from Iran. So when the Iranians overthrew the Shah, (and don't be surprised when you find Shah loyalists here) UK and USA became determined to return Iran to a vassal state that feeds all it's oil to US/UK companies just like Iraq does today. And they may just succeed. It's the same thing with Venezuela, anytime a U.S. coup fails, welcome abord the Axis of Evil!
05:08 PM on 06/26/2010
I think parents of these "KIDS" should put pressure on Obama to make a prisoners swap instead of letting their "KIDS" to be pawn in political propaganda against Iran.

The parents should sue anybody who try to use their "KIDS" as propaganda tools against Iran, because this is not in the interests of their "KIDS".
12:12 AM on 06/27/2010
You sure skipped the logic classes, didn't you?
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persianadvocate
12:51 AM on 06/27/2010
Do you have anything worthwhile to say or just insults that somehow pass the moderator's filters?
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Kalila97
04:33 PM on 06/26/2010
The hikers are in their mid and late 20's but referred to as "kids" by their moms? Just like the two Asian journalists, both married women, were referred to constantly by family and the media as "girls" when they stumbled into North Korea. Very transparent.
12:15 AM on 06/27/2010
In case you don't have a Mom, let me explain: Moms always refer to their children as "kids"
07:54 PM on 06/30/2010
second the comment by petera... my 24 is and always WILL be considered a kid. I've actually even referred to him as my baby (but don't tell him that. :-)
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persianadvocate
10:33 AM on 06/26/2010
The mothers were let in to observe how American spies transfer information and to show that Iran's military, in actuality, is not as barbaric as the US against its enemies. Everything is calculated...

Now back to the real story: 1.5 million Palestinians jailed by Israel with the American stamp of approval. Huh?
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persianadvocate
10:53 AM on 06/26/2010
sorry, I should clarify. I was too general there.

America is not always barbaric. I'm American. I am speaking specifically of cases like Gitmo. The IDF has shown that it has no remorse for its enemies (or allies) either. Google "USS Liberty" and see what the veterans from that ship, attacked by Israel, say about our ally. Look up their testimonies. These are US war veterans who survived even as Israel used its Gatling-like guns on the people trying to flee in life rafts. The word "remorse" is used several times in describing what the IDF didn't have for its ally.
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nk5otr
11:17 PM on 06/26/2010
While you are in Google, try these terms: "Iranian Hostage Crisis", "attack on U.S.S. Cole" and "9/11 attacks", and "Lebanon Marine Barracks Bombing"
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06:36 AM on 06/27/2010
How much is the Iranian regime paying you for your services? Do you expect your name on a brick when Israel is annihilated or is it just for the cash?
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Fein
And this too shall pass.
10:54 AM on 06/27/2010
I agree that the sheer stupidity of 'hiking' on the Iran/Iraq border is suspicious and and that the 'kids' are being used by the U.S. as propaganda pawns.
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Andman0121
10:01 AM on 06/26/2010
Lesson: dont be an idi0t by hiking in areas like these. Very simple.

hope they get back ok
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12:29 PM on 06/27/2010
Hiking in areas like WHAT?

http://wikitravel.org/en/Kurdistan

The idi0ts are people who ignorantly, from the comfort of their own basement, slander places like this where locals depend on tourism and constantly fight misconceptions.

The place you live is far, far more dangerous but I'm not calling you and i-words.

It's OK to not know about places, but don't make stuff up about them. The world is more complicated than what you have been told.
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AnotherAndy
09:22 PM on 07/03/2010
OFFICIAL WARNING: Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada advises against non-essential travel to the provinces of Dahuk, Erbil, and Sulaymaniyah, which are under the control of the Kurdistan Regional Government.

While there are still some attacks and threats from terrorist groups, this region has been significantly less susceptible to the violence plaguing the rest of Iraq.

Border areas with Turkey and Iran should be avoided at all times. As borders are porous, travelers can unknowingly cross into Turkey and Iran, which could lead to serious problems with Turkish and Iranian authorities. Furthermore, in response to security concerns, Turkish and Iranian military forces have been carrying out periodic cross-border operations against identified Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) targets in border areas with Iraq.
http://www.voyage.gc.ca/countries_pays/report_rapport-eng.asp?id=133000
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KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
09:09 AM on 06/26/2010
Mom's can grasp at all the straws they want. Every piece of evidence, including reports of the last Iraqis to see them, indicate they Were in Iran, and knew they were going into Iran.

They liked it so much they wanted to go without a visa, so let them stay a few years.
05:30 AM on 06/26/2010
Hikers in a War Zone, What a load Bull!!
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persianadvocate
10:55 AM on 06/26/2010
Anyone wanna go gardening in Kyrgyzstan?
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06:37 AM on 06/27/2010
Why would anyone be stupid enough to do that? It's certainly not something that's been a peacefully established tourist activity for decades, like hiking in the mountains around Suleymaniah.
06:25 PM on 06/25/2010
They were not lost. They knew exactly where they were.

http://mybigfatanti-zionistlife.blogspot.com/2009/08/american-hiker-claimed-to-be-iranian.html
03:17 AM on 06/26/2010
Thanks for the link.
03:26 AM on 06/26/2010
Also, this original report from last year:
====================
http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=102635§ionid=351020101
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06:04 PM on 06/25/2010
Were the campsites in Helmand Province all booked up?
03:35 PM on 06/25/2010
next time don't arrest mexicans who happened to hike their way into your side of the border.
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Kalila97
04:34 PM on 06/26/2010
why not?
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05:31 PM on 06/27/2010
they are detained and released back into their country, of course – you do know that, right?
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goddessNdiva
Internet surfer extraordinaire.
02:35 PM on 06/25/2010
I think that this fall, I will go hiking on the border of chechnya. Should be fun and willing to pay the fare for anyone who wishes to joing me. Of course, this will be a one way ticket .

Seriously, those "hickers" and their story seems strange to say the least.
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KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
09:12 AM on 06/26/2010
Chechnya wouldn't be that bad. Easy enough to get a visa.
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06:39 AM on 06/27/2010
What the heck is a "hicker"? Listen, just because you're too ignorant to know that this particular area has been popular with hikers and tourists for decades, and has had virtually NO violent incidents, doesn't mean that it's not true.

I'm absolutely positive that the place you live is far more dangerous for Americans; does that make your story "strange"?
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goddessNdiva
Internet surfer extraordinaire.
04:34 PM on 06/28/2010
If it's that safe how about you re-trace their steps and go there. Bon voyage.

In the meantime, I will be free to be ignorant while they are imprisoned with their ignorance.
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AnotherAndy
09:21 PM on 07/03/2010
Last time I checked, Canada wasn't issuing travel warnings about my neighborhood in the US.

OFFICIAL WARNING: Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada advises against non-essential travel to the provinces of Dahuk, Erbil, and Sulaymaniyah, which are under the control of the Kurdistan Regional Government.

While there are still some attacks and threats from terrorist groups, this region has been significantly less susceptible to the violence plaguing the rest of Iraq.

Border areas with Turkey and Iran should be avoided at all times. As borders are porous, travelers can unknowingly cross into Turkey and Iran, which could lead to serious problems with Turkish and Iranian authorities. Furthermore, in response to security concerns, Turkish and Iranian military forces have been carrying out periodic cross-border operations against identified Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) targets in border areas with Iraq.
http://www.voyage.gc.ca/countries_pays/report_rapport-eng.asp?id=133000