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Sarah Shourd, Iran Prisoner, RELEASED (VIDEO, PHOTOS)


First Posted: 09/14/10 09:10 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 06:40 PM ET

(AP) TEHRAN, Iran — The American woman released by Iran on Tuesday after more than a year in prison said she was humbled and grateful to Iran's president for her freedom shortly before she boarded a flight to the nearby Gulf sultanate of Oman where her mother was awaiting her.

Iran freed Sarah Shourd, 32, after a $500,000 bail was paid to win her freedom. However, the case that has deepened strains between the U.S. and Iran was still far from resolved.


WATCH:

Shortly after announcing Shourd's release, Iranian authorities said they are not considering the immediate release of the two Americans arrested with Shourd – her fiance Shane Bauer and their friend Josh Fattal. Iran has charged all three with spying, though their families say they were innocent hikers arrested in a scenic mountain area along Iran's border with Iraq.

"I want to really offer my thanks to everyone in the world, all of the governments, all of the people, that have been involved, and especially, particularly want to address President Ahmadinejad and all of the Iranian officials, the religious leaders, and thank them for this humanitarian gesture," Shourd told Iran's English-language Press TV at the airport before she boarded her flight out.

"I'm grateful and I'm very humbled by this moment," she added.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has said Shourd was being released on compassionate grounds because of health reasons. Her mother says she has serious medical problems, including a breast lump and precancerous cervical cells.

President Barack Obama welcomed the release but the families of the three Americans had mixed emotions.

"All of our families are relieved and overjoyed that Sarah has at last been released but we're also heartbroken that Shane and Josh are still being denied their freedom for no just cause," they said in a statement.

"We applaud the Iranian authorities for showing compassion in Sarah's case and again call on them to do the only right thing and release Shane and Josh immediately," the families said. "They deserve to come home too. Iran has no grounds to deprive them of their liberty a moment longer."

Obama said all Americans are celebrating Shourd's long-awaited return home.

"I am very pleased that Sarah Shourd has been released by the Iranian government, and will soon be united with her family," Obama said in a statement

Shourd's mother Nora said she has hoped and prayed for this moment for 410 days.

"I cannot wait to wrap Sarah in my arms and hold her close when we are finally together again. Sarah has had a long and difficult detainment and I am going to make sure that she now gets the care and attention she needs and the time and space to recover," she said. "I can only imagine how bittersweet her freedom must be for her, leaving Shane and Josh behind."

PHOTOS: SHOURD AT THE MEHRABAD AIRPORT PRIOR TO LEAVING TEHRAN TODAY:



A U.S. official said Shourd's flight took off from Iran en route to Oman, about a two-hour flight. Her mother was already there awaiting her arrival.

Tehran's chief prosecutor Abbas Jafari Dowlatabadi said a $500,000 bail had been paid to Iran's Bank Melli in Muscat, Oman but it was not immediately clear who paid it. A U.S. official said neither the U.S. government nor the families of the hikers had paid the bail, but could not say who else might have paid it.

Both U.S. officials spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

The release followed days of conflicting statements by Iranian authorities on whether she would be let go. The decision got mired in internal political feuds among Iran's leadership and questions over whether the family could raise the bail money and if it did, would the payment violate sanctions against Iran.

Shortly after Iranian state media announced Shourd's release, the country's hardline judiciary said the "pretrial detention" of Bauer and Fattal had been extended for two more months. Shourd and Bauer are engaged to be married.

"The judge issued the release order and Ms. Shourd was simply set free and she can leave Iran if she wants to," he told state-run English-language Press TV. He said the cases of the two American men, both 28, will be sent to the revolutionary court and "there is no talk of releasing those two right now."

Iran indicted the three Americans on spy-related charges on Sunday and the prosecutor's statement suggested the men would face trials while proceedings against Shourd could be held in absentia.

The U.S. broke off ties with Iran after the 1979 Islamic Revolution, and Switzerland handles U.S. interests in Iran.

Shourd, who grew up in Los Angeles, Bauer, who grew up in Onamia, Minn., and Fattal, who grew up in Elkins Park, Pa., were detained along the Iran-Iraq border on July 31, 2009 and accused of illegally crossing the border and spying in a case that has deepened tensions with Washington. Their families say they were hiking in Iraq's scenic north, and that if they crossed the border, they did so unwittingly.

The stage was set for Shourd's release last week when Ahmadinejad said he intervened as a gesture of Islamic compassion at the end of the holy month of Ramadan. However, the judiciary quickly upstaged the president by saying it was in charge of the case and would set the rules – in the form of the largest known bail for any high-profile Westerner jailed in the past year.

Shortly after judicial officials announced the bail on Sunday, Shourd's lawyer predicted she could walk free in "two or three days."

Moves to release Shourd have been accompanied by political jockeying in Iran between Ahmadinejad and his more conservative rivals.

On Monday, Shourd's family asked the Iranians to drop or lower the demanded sum because they were having difficulty raising the money.

U.S. sanctions put blanket restrictions on transactions with Iran's main state bank, Bank Melli, which has also been the channel for past bail payments to Iranian courts by foreign detainees. Washington accuses the bank of helping fund Iran's ballistic missile development and its nuclear program, which the U.S. says could eventually lead to atomic weapons. Iran says it only seeks peaceful nuclear reactors for energy.

U.N. sanctions also call on governments to block transactions with Melli and another major Iranian financial institution, Bank Saderat, if there are "reasonable grounds" they could contribute to Iran's nuclear activities.

___

Associated Press Writers Gretchen Ehlke in Milwaukee, Matthew Lee in Washington, D.C. and Amy Forliti in Minneapolis, Minnesota contributed to this report.

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(AP) TEHRAN, Iran — The American woman released by Iran on Tuesday after more than a year in prison said she was humbled and grateful to Iran's president for her freedom shortly before she board...
(AP) TEHRAN, Iran — The American woman released by Iran on Tuesday after more than a year in prison said she was humbled and grateful to Iran's president for her freedom shortly before she board...
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03:22 AM on 09/20/2010
I have trouble believing these are misguided hikers. Who hikes around Iran, Then they come up with a half a million.Haed to believe story here/
02:28 PM on 09/16/2010
For all the anti-immigrant people who say we are a country of laws and that Latinos are illegal, well, Iran is a country of laws and they reacted just like the minutemen and their supporters here.
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01:45 PM on 09/16/2010
Ok...Who paid the ransom ?

`fess up.
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calluna
Hates spiders. Likes chocolate.
07:18 PM on 09/16/2010
The ransom was paid by Omani donors. Exactly whom, the Omani government isn't saying, since they are leading the negotiations with the Iranians.

Thus speaketh CNN
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08:10 PM on 09/16/2010
CNN ?...hmmm...

Thanx
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khg1
10:59 PM on 09/15/2010
No way Imadinnerjaket did it for press pre UN visit. If he was a humanitarian, they would never have been arrested in the first place and Iranian troops would not have killed and jailed protesters.
11:47 PM on 09/15/2010
Yes, the King is responsible for everything in Iran, wait a second that's Saudi Arabia.
12:37 PM on 09/16/2010
So by your "logic," the US cannot be described as humanitarian either, since Latinos are routinely arrested in the US for wandering over the border and the US has also shot and arrested protesters in its past, not to mention provided the Shah with the means to torture kill and repress Iranian citizens for a period of 26 years. Glad we cleared that up.
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LogicalMathMan
Math, Finance, English, Business Instructor
12:52 PM on 09/16/2010
You might be too well-informed to make any sense to that poster.
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Hard2kill
10:15 PM on 09/15/2010
She is too old than her age...
03:25 AM on 09/16/2010
Being held under extreme stress will tend to do that to a person.
09:17 PM on 09/15/2010
410 days of prayer, and $500,000 was all it took to get her freed. It is genuinely unfortunate the prayerful folks didn't include the two young men in their prayers, they'd be freed as well...right?
10:20 PM on 09/15/2010
One at the time.

You should start to pray for the other two.

If it worked once, it will work again.
03:26 AM on 09/16/2010
LOL, I'm so with you on this.
09:14 PM on 09/15/2010
I'm not a fan of the regime in Tehran but objectively speaking, their claim that these "hikers" are "spies/agents" is certainly plausible.

These three individuals crossed into Iran from Iraqi Kurdistan, which has a solid Mossad influence present.

Food for thought ..
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LogicalMathMan
Math, Finance, English, Business Instructor
12:55 PM on 09/16/2010
I agree. As a hiker myself, there are several countries all over the world that are US-friendly with scenery that is immeasurably more serene than what the mountains of Iran offer.

Mossad has dug its teeth in Iraq and Afghanistan and that's common knowledge in that region.
06:08 PM on 09/15/2010
I am very glad she has been released and hope the other two will also but is anyone else wondering what the heck these people were doing hiking in the middle of a war zone? I mean you don't just wake up one day and say, "Mom and dad I am going to take a vacation and go hiking in errrrrrrrrrrrrrr Iraq..."
06:45 PM on 09/15/2010
I have asked that question from very first time I heard they had gotten pinched over there. WOW! Couldn't have just gone to Yosemite?
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LogicalMathMan
Math, Finance, English, Business Instructor
12:57 PM on 09/16/2010
Oh, I paid not credence to the US media version of this story. There is some complicity that is not kosher here.
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Wozzeck
Pearl Bay, Australia
02:46 PM on 09/15/2010
Glad that she has been released. Looking at this case from a different perspective, though:
what would happen if three Iranian hikers entered the USA across the the Canadian border?
They might well have been subjected to CIA "extraordinary rendition" to Syria, Egypt, or some black hole in Eastern Europe for "enhanced interrogation".
12:33 PM on 09/16/2010
Wozzeck-- A bit off topic, but i was wondering if you could refresh my memory as to the name of the AP reporter who was writing articles with a Tehran byline from Massachusetts. Any links you could provide which concern his reporting methods would also be appreciated.
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Wozzeck
Pearl Bay, Australia
01:16 PM on 09/15/2010
DON'T TAKE MY VEIL!!!

IF I TOOK IT OFF, NOBODY WOULD BE ABLE TO CONTROL THEMSELVES BECAUSE OF MY BEAUTY.
01:19 PM on 09/15/2010
I thought I was responding to the veil article about France.
01:10 PM on 09/15/2010
$500,000 of taxpayer money to release this shallow, ignorant woman !
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02:05 PM on 09/15/2010
The Bernie Madoff Endowment Fund possibly payed it .

: )
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Wozzeck
Pearl Bay, Australia
02:52 PM on 09/15/2010
Guilty of poor judgment, perhaps, but she's neither ignorant nor shallow.
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rougebaisers
08:22 AM on 09/15/2010
Gee, should I apologize to Minijob for all the really nasty things I said about him? Nah.
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Meldy1
Nurse,(I don't work anymore!)&Pianist
07:28 AM on 09/15/2010
I will delete Iran from my favorite places!I still respect the Iranian people who cares about other people too.The late Pres.Cory Aquino mounted a civil disobedience revolution against the dictatorship of Marcos and won!So,I hope that the Iranian people do solve their own problems,there are many options in this complex world.
07:58 AM on 09/15/2010
Would you take US off that list after reading this":

"She went to MIT and Brandeis, married a Brigham and Women's physician, made her home in Boston, cared for her children, and raised money for charities. Aafia Siddiqui was a normal woman living a normal American life. Until the FBI called her a terror"

http://www.bostonmagazine.com/articles/whos_afraid_of_aafia_siddiqui/
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Meldy1
Nurse,(I don't work anymore!)&Pianist
06:45 AM on 09/15/2010
Imagine a bail of $500,000,to release her!What was the crime in the first place?See what I've told you about Iran?So please don;t go to these places.....they are dangerous,corrupt,and many more to say!We are delighted that she's free but there are two more fellow Americans jailed!
I will never go to Iran,not for a million,billion,trillion bucks.
10:34 AM on 09/15/2010
Quote: First "What was the crime in the first place?" then you jump to your own conclusion in the next sentence: "See what I've told you about Iran?" and your following sentence: "So please don;t go to these places.....they are dangerous,corrupt,and many more to say!"

You speak with such confidence, have you visited Iran? Tell us more about what you think about Iran. I know of Americans (of European ancestry too) who visited Iran and had a great time, but they weren't "hikers" "hiking" into the country in a mountaneous border region, they entered the country legally. Usually, it's not a good way to visit any country by walking in through the border un-announced and in the middle of nowhere.

I don't know what they were up to, but it seems exteremely fishy for sure, also, they werent "kids" (30 years olds?), maybe their acting goofy is their only cover left, for they only meant to go "hiking" over there.
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LogicalMathMan
Math, Finance, English, Business Instructor
01:00 PM on 09/16/2010
I agree...fishy and it stinks.
06:37 AM on 09/15/2010
American arrogance: I think I'll go to a country like Iran and think nothing may happen to me because I dont' necessarily believe in politics and they'll understand that and not bother me. I'm just doing my thing and don't have a political position.
06:48 AM on 09/15/2010
Exactly...
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garder54
07:47 AM on 09/15/2010
So its her fault? That's a joke. I'd like to see you take this stance if it was your family being held overseas.
08:29 AM on 09/15/2010
As an American you don't go to a country like Iran and think you can do what you want because you want to do it and think nothing is going to happen to you. I hope you sorta remember that the prez of this country was of the students that orchestrated the American hostage crisis in Iran in the 70's?
09:44 AM on 09/15/2010
Yes it is. At some point common sense needs to guide our actions. If you're breathing you know the hardline stance that prevails in Iran. Is anyone really surprise that they were held in captivity after being caught? They should be grateful that they were not shot on sight which could just as easily have happened.