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Sarah Shourd, Hiker Jailed For A Year In Iran, Meets With Ahmadinejad

SAMANTHA GROSS   09/24/10 07:00 PM ET   AP

Sarah Shourd Interview
American Sarah Shourd, makes statements at the VIP Lounge of Muscat airport before she flies out of Muscat, Oman, Saturday, Sept. 18, 2010. Shourd, who was released from Iran after more than 13 months in custody, began her journey back to the United States on Saturday after asking her supporters to "extend your prayers" to her fiance and another American man who remain in Tehran accused of spying. (AP Photo / Kamran Jebreili)

NEW YORK — Sarah Shourd, one of three Americans arrested last year while hiking near the Iran-Iraq border, met with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Friday to plead for the release of her still-imprisoned fiance and their friend.

"I'm just going to keep pushing every minute for their release on humanitarian grounds," Shourd told ABC News outside a hotel after she and her mother, Nora Shourd, met with the president.

Shourd, 32, called the encounter "a very gracious gesture and a good meeting," said Ahmadinejad seemed friendly and that it was "a very human encounter, very personal."

Family spokeswoman Samantha Topping confirmed the meeting with Ahmadinejad, who was in New York to attend the United Nations General Assembly. Topping declined to say what was discussed.

Shourd came to New York to advocate for the release of her fiance, Shane Bauer, and their friend Josh Fattal, who remain imprisoned in Tehran after 14 months.

Shourd told The Associated Press on Thursday of the monotony, cramped quarters and fears for her future during her 410 days in an Iranian prison, mostly in solitary confinement.

In one of her first interviews since her Sept. 14 release from Tehran's notorious Evin Prison, she said that she chooses to savor the few moments of joy she found in her imprisonment.

One of her happiest days, she said, was the celebration of her 32nd birthday last month. Somehow the men, who remain in Tehran's notorious Evin Prison, had persuaded a guard into bringing her the cake and even found a way to give her a whiff of liberty.

They talked her through a whole imaginary day that they called a "freedom walk" – from waking up and having pancakes, to going to a lake, then walking to her mother's apartment. When they came to the part of their story where the apartment door opened, Bauer and Fattal spun Shourd around.

"They had brought all the pictures we had of our family and put them on these boxes, so everyone was there, and it was a surprise party. It was beautiful," she said, her voice catching. "I cried."

But most days in prison were far more monotonous – or terrifying.

She recalled how the three made a vow while blindfolded in a prison van shortly after their capture: If they were separated, they would go on hunger strike until they were reunited.

Shourd starved herself for four days, lying alone in her cell and growing weaker. In prison, she kept reviewing her last day of freedom. What could they have done differently? What if, when they asked a tea vendor near a waterfall for advice on a hiking path, they had gone another way?

On the fourth day, the hikers were reunited for five minutes. Shourd began eating again, but their captivity was just beginning.

Alone in her cell, Shourd began going over multiplication tables in her head. It was the only way she could keep out thoughts of her mother. Of whether she knew where her daughter was. Of how worried she must be. Of whether they would see each other again.

If she thought of her mother, she began to fall apart, Shourd recalled.

"I just had to be sure that I was strong when I went into the interrogation room because I wanted to make sure that I didn't, that they didn't manipulate me into saying anything that I didn't want to say," she said.

She wondered whether she'd be hurt. If suddenly the door might open and she'd be dragged away.

Instead, a few times a day, a female guard would come bearing layers of extra clothing and a blindfold, so when Shourd arrived at the interrogation room she couldn't see the faces of her questioners.

She was amazed at their "good cop, bad cop" approach, just like on TV shows back in the U.S.

They had her write down what felt like every detail of her life, from her childhood in Los Angeles to her time living with Bauer in Syria, where she taught English and Bauer, a native of Onamia, Minn., was a freelance journalist. Fattal, who grew up in Pennsylvania, had come to the Middle East to visit them.

Over two months, she wrote hundreds of pages, she said. When she would finish writing an answer to a question, an interrogator would tell her "this is not good enough" and tear up her words. She would write again, and again hear the pages tear.

"I would just write it the same every time," she said.

They questioned her about her e-mails and about her Skype contacts, looking for any indication she had intended to come to Iran.

Shourd says she'd been missing the green mountains of the U.S. after a year in Syria. She and Bauer had heard from friends that the lush lands of northern Iraq had been largely untouched by the war, so they and Fattal traveled to Ahmed Awa waterfall, where they found hundreds of Kurdish families eating at restaurants and camping.

The first indication they were near the Iran border was three hours into their hike when they met Iranian officials on a trail leading from the waterfall. By then, it was too late.

Shourd tried to resist her imprisonment at first. She constantly yelled, cried or begged her captors for a phone call. She was confined to her 10-foot-by-5-foot cell. At night, the bit of sunlight from the window would dim, but the lights stayed on.

Eventually, the interrogations ended. The two men were moved into a cell together. The three Americans were allowed to see each other, at first for 30 minutes each day, then for an hour, then for two.

The trio had local TV, including 15 minutes of English-language news every day. They received a bundle of letters from their parents and siblings about once a month. And they had books in English. Shourd read the Quran, using her basic Arabic to communicate haltingly with some Farsi-speaking guards about religion.

Shourd would spend all day saving up details to tell the other two. At first, the three went over what they called "reruns" – reviewing every memory of their lives in tremendous detail. When those ran out, they started to dream of the future and what they would do on the outside.

Some plans were bigger than others.

On one evening, Bauer asked Fattal to stay in their cell during their allotted time outdoors, so that the couple could have a moment alone.

The two sat on a rough wool mat, cockroaches skittering around them and dust filling the air. They held hands, and Bauer asked her to marry him. He made them engagement rings from two thin pieces of string.

"It's not what every person thinks of as romantic, but it was romantic for me," Shourd said.

And now, she is back on the outside, appearing on "The Oprah Winfrey Show," preparing for a tour of TV studios, a bit of string tied around her finger.

She feels some guilt, she said, but she pushes that aside. She learned in prison how to ignore negative emotions.

She thinks of the men, of the strong, supportive faces they put on when they learned only she would leave. She still doesn't know who paid her $500,000 bail, though she said an Omani official told her of an Iranian citizen who attempted to mortgage his home to pay it.

Ahmadinejad had told the AP that he hoped Bauer and Fattal would be able to provide evidence that "they had no ill intention in crossing the border" so that they can be released.

Iran has issued espionage-related indictments against the three of them, which could bring trials for the two men and proceedings in absentia for Shourd, although she says she hasn't ruled out returning to face trial.

She wants the world to see Bauer and Fattal, who are passing long days in a cramped space not much larger than a towel.

Shourd said they exercised to stay sane. There were days she would force herself to run or do jumping jacks despite the tears streaming down her face.

The men got even more inventive. They would lift their beds. They would stockpile water bottles, fill them with water, pile them into bags and lift them. They were intent on staying strong.

Part of her wishes she were still with them. Out here she can't protect them. She doesn't know that the books are still available or whether the guards are still being kind.

"The only thing that gives my freedom meaning is that I have this work to do, because honestly if I felt like there was nothing to do out here, if I wasn't needed in so many ways, I would have rather stayed with them," she said.

But out here, she can be their voice. She can do her best to make sure the world doesn't forget. She will be tireless, she said.

And until they're at her side, "my life will not resume."

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NEW YORK — Sarah Shourd, one of three Americans arrested last year while hiking near the Iran-Iraq border, met with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Friday to plead for the release of he...
NEW YORK — Sarah Shourd, one of three Americans arrested last year while hiking near the Iran-Iraq border, met with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Friday to plead for the release of he...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:42 AM on 09/27/2010
Oprah Winfrey Show ?

Of course.
11:48 PM on 09/26/2010
How about an humanitarian gesture from US side?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9POtHpnfCgg
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JoePenn
Shuhada?
10:03 AM on 09/26/2010
Yes -- 'cause he'll be covered so swimmingly by the American press, he's got everything to gain and nothing to lose!
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Whinger
I'm Just Me!
05:02 AM on 09/26/2010
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is playing her like fiddle to enhance his shabby image worldwide.....

The Iranian equivalent of Saddam Hussein, we've seen it all before!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
supertim
06:17 PM on 09/25/2010
maybe Sarah and Mahmoood can get a nice little loft in the Village and live happily ever after...now that would be a movie i would like to see on the Lifetime Channel, although i dont think it would be too popular with the Teabaggers or the Taliban, gee they seem almost the same these days?
04:34 PM on 09/25/2010
So, when will Obama be meeting with uncharged Gitmo prisoners?
10:56 PM on 09/25/2010
Enough talk about Gitmo.What about American prisoners in Iran for crossing an unmarked border
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Antwan17
07:23 AM on 09/26/2010
That's cute, ignore the hundreds of people the U.S. has locked away in it's blacksites, many of whom you've tortured and wring your hands with consternation over 3 people who illegally entered a sovereign nation.
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10:52 PM on 09/26/2010
What about the 8 Iranian prisoners in iraq held without charges.
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wwoody
Retired fishing for the truth.
01:41 PM on 09/25/2010
Ms. Shourd, is a unsung hero to with stand being in a cell no larger than towel. And to not to have any animosity toward them.
01:07 PM on 09/25/2010
I loathe everything about these hikers. Every single little thing. At the risk of sounding insensitive, they deserve to rot in an Iranian prison for the rest of their lives. Darwinism demands it. If they truly were just hikers, they are literally the dumbest people on earth.

My chocolate lab has more intelligence in the gleam of his eyes than these hippies. HIKING in IRAQ? DURING a WAR? On the IRANIAN BORDER?? Id*ots!

Somehow, even under extreme conditions of captivity, they still manage to pull off "massive tool" look.
03:15 PM on 09/25/2010
all of that may be true, but no one deserves to be in jail for being stupid. There are lots of stupid people everyday on the streets. As to whether they were spies, that possibility remains, but one year is still enough even for a spy.
I have a feeling they all will be released in 2 months. Ahmadinejad would not meet with her otherwise.
10:50 PM on 09/25/2010
I agree with you let them rot.And as for Shourd she should have to repay the half a million dollars,
12:51 PM on 09/25/2010
I really dont care that she was living in Syria before she went hiking. She calls herself an American and an American should not find themselves hiking anywhere near Iran or Iraq. WE ARE AT WAR! If I were the Iranians I would be highly suspicious of any American found hanging out in this area on a vacation! really? Yes Ms Shroud I too will accuse you of spying and espionage! You and your friends should be rescued from the Iranian prison and be imprisoned here in the USA just for reckless endangerment. I am really having a hard time sympathizing with these people. Gosh! do we need our Govt to put out a blast warning?! TRAVEL AT YOUR OWN RISK...IF YOU ARE CAUGHT WE WILL NOT BE COMING TO GET YOUR SILLY ASS!! I hope this is a teaching moment for any other Americans who are thinking of helping out Iraqi tourism with their vacation money. I suspect this family has some financial influence to draw such national interest after doing something so irresponsible.
12:20 PM on 09/25/2010
I'm sorry but these guys were trained!

"...made a vow while blindfolded in a prison van shortly after their capture: If they were separated, they would go on hunger strike until they were reunited"

They new it was important not to be separated as to not contradict each other's story. If I was ever captured I'd be so panic stricken that I'd have a heart attack sooner than to come up with a scheme like this.
12:17 PM on 09/25/2010
Spy
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12:40 AM on 09/27/2010
Aye.
12:14 PM on 09/25/2010
I read they all graduated from UC Berkeley. I guess they were all learning Arabic for a career with the CIA....not. Stockholm Syndrome won't be a problem for them, they probably already liked Ahmindinijab better than the evil USA anyway.
12:06 PM on 09/25/2010
Read rumors that Ahamadinejad was the one to post her bail...
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12:40 AM on 09/27/2010
it was Bernie Madoff
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mtgurl
11:33 AM on 09/25/2010
When she's done sucking up to that little creep and the rest are released, I hope she blasts him in the press.
12:16 PM on 09/25/2010
yea! Obama get going on it
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12:18 PM on 09/25/2010
The others won't be released until Iran gets her 8 that are being held in Iraq by US military.
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ryker88
“I shall seize fate by the throat.” Beethoven
11:24 AM on 09/25/2010
This was, without a doubt, reckless and dangerous behavior on the part of the hikers. There are countless really great places to hike in this world. To pick a place that experiences such political turmoil is hardly a good choice. Unfortunately, we seem to have a significant part of the population who engage in unwise behavior and then want the government to bail them out.

Someone said: "Maybe you detractors are just jealous because you've never been outside your oen county and have no clue how the rest of the world, where the other 6 billion humans live, actually works. Jeebus." Wrong, maybe the ones who choose not to engage in this type of behavior are the ones "with a clue." How arrogant it is to say that those who do not put themselves in explicit danger are less knowledgeable of other cultures! The foolish, naive ones are those who put themselves in the positions of the hikers and never expect anything to happen.
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westphilly726
Just call me Hot Stuff
08:24 AM on 09/26/2010
Well said.