Ahmadinejad plays to UN’s gallery with release of American hikers

IRAN will soon free two Americans jailed for spying, president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said yesterday, in what he called a humanitarian gesture weeks before he travels to the United Nations in New York.

“I think these two persons will be freed in a couple of days,” the Iranian leader said through an interpreter in an interview broadcast on NBC’s Today show. “We do it, for example, in a humanitarian gesture.”

Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal were sentenced in Iran last month to eight years in prison.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

They had been arrested in July 2009 along with a third American, Sarah Shourd, near Iran’s border with Iraq, where they said they were hiking in the mountains as tourists and mistakenly crossed into Iran when they stepped off a dirt road while near a waterfall in the Kurdish region of Iraq.

Bauer and Fattal were convicted last month and share a cell in Tehran’s Evin prison.

Shourd was allowed to go home after being freed on $500,000 bail in September 2010.

Washington has denied they were spies. US secretary of state Hillary Clinton said she was encouraged by Mr Ahmadinejad’s remarks.

“We have followed this very closely and we are encouraged by what the Iranian government has said,” she told reporters.

Their lawyer said the men would soon be free and given permission to leave Iran.

“The appeals court has agreed for the release of Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal on $500,000 bail for each of them … They can leave Iran right after their release,” Masoud Shafie said. “I just left the court a few minutes ago and informed the Swiss embassy about the recent development.”

The Swiss mission represents US interests in Iran.

Shourd is living in Oakland, California; Fattal is from Philadelphia and Bauer – who proposed marriage to Shourd while in prison – grew up in Minnesota.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The last direct contact family members had with Bauer and Fattal was in May 2010 when their mothers were permitted a short visit in Tehran.

The announcement, ahead of Mr Ahmadinejad’s trip to New York to participate at the UN General Assembly meeting on 22 September, was seen by analysts as a move to ease mounting diplomatic pressure on Iran.

“Ahmadinejad secured the release to gain popularity in America and also to evade political pressure,” said analyst Reza Fakuri. The affair has heightened tensions between Tehran and Washington, also at odds over Iran’s disputed nuclear work.

The spokesman for the families of the hikers said that “they have heard the media reports and they are hopeful”.

Mr Ahmadinejad complained about “hostile approach” of US officials towards Iran, calling attention to Iranians imprisoned in the United States. “These two people are having a very good condition here in prison. It’s like staying in a hotel. I think the problem is in the approach of the American politicians and leaders,” he said.

“Let me ask a question: are they really the problem? You know how many Iranians are now in the American jails? They’re all human beings. It’s not about only two people in Iran.”

The men’s supporters say evidence against them has never been made public, and that the sentence came as a shock after hopes for their release had been boosted by comments from Iran’s foreign minister.