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TEHERAN, Iran �
An American journalist jailed in
Iran has been convicted of spying and sentenced to
eight years in prison just days after she was tried behind
closed doors, her lawyer said Saturday, dashing any hopes
for her quick release.
The verdict was
the first time Iran has found an American journalist guilty
of spying, and it was unclear how the conviction would
affect recent overtures by the Obama administration for
better relations and engagement with Washington's longtime
adversary.
Roxana Saberi,
a 31-year-old dual American-Iranian citizen, was arrested in
late January and initially accused of working without press
credentials. But earlier this month, an Iranian judge
leveled a far more serious allegation, charging her with
spying for the United States.
She appeared
before an Iranian court behind closed doors on Monday in an
unusually swift one-day trial. Her lawyer was permitted to
attend, but had declined to discuss any details. The Fargo,
North Dakota native had been living in Iran for six years
and had worked as a freelance reporter for several news
organizations including National
Public Radio and the British
Broadcasting Corp.
"Saberi has
been sentenced to eight years in jail. I'll definitely
appeal the verdict," lawyer Abdolsamad Khorramshahi told The
Associated Press. It was not immediately known when she was
convicted.
The United
States has called the charges against Saberi baseless and
has demanded her release, and the conviction and prison
sentence could put strains on efforts to improve ties.
President Barack Obama has
said it wants to engage Iran in talks on its nuclear program
and other issues � a departure from the
tough talk of the
Bush administration.
Iran has been
mostly lukewarm to the overtures, but Iran's hard-line
president gave the clearest signal yet on Wednesday that the
Islamic Republic was also willing to start a new
relationship with Washington.
In a speech,
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
said Iran was preparing new proposals aimed at breaking an
impasse with the West over its nuclear program.
But it was
uncertain how Washington would react to Saberi's conviction.
On Thursday, the State Department said Saberi's jailing was
not helpful and that Iran would gain U.S. good will if it
"responded in a positive way" to the case.
North Dakota
Senator Byron Dorgan called
on the Iranian government to "show compassion" and release
Saberi. "This is a shocking
miscarriage of justice," the Democrat said in a
statement issued Saturday.
Some
conservative Iranian lawmakers played down Saberi's
conviction, saying the verdict would not affect any ongoing
efforts to build trust between Washington and Iran.
"Although
there is a wall of mistrust between Iran and the United
States, the judicial verdict won't affect possible future
talks between the two countries. The verdict is based on
evidence," said lawmaker Hosseini Sobhaninia.
The United
States severed diplomatic relations
with Iran after its 1979 Islamic revolution and takeover of
the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. Relations deteriorated further
under the former President George
W. Bush, who labeled Iran as part of the so-called "Axis
of Evil" along with Saddam Hussein's Iraq and
North Korea.
Iran's
judiciary is dominated by hard-liners, which some analysts
say are trying to derail efforts to improve U.S.-Iran
relations.
Saberi's
conviction comes about two months ahead of key
presidential elections in
June. Ahmadinejad is seeking re-election, but the
hard-liner's popularity has waned as Iran's economy
struggles with high-inflation and unemployment. The June 12
vote is pitting the hard-liners against reformists � led by
a former prime minister Mir Hossein Mousavi � who support
better relations with the U.S.
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." But they were never put on trial and were
eventually released from prison.
Journalist watchdog groups
criticized the conviction. The New
York-based Committee to Protect Journalists said in a
statement on Saturday that her trial "lacked transparency."
"We call on
the Iranian authorities to release her on bail pending her
appeal," Mohamed Abdel Dayem, the group's Middle East and
North Africa program coordinator, said in the statement.
Iran has
released few details about the charges against Saberi.
Iranian officials initially said she had been arrested for
working in the Islamic Republic
without press credentials and she had told her father in a
phone conversation that she was arrested after buying a
bottle of wine.
An Iranian
investigative judge involved in the case charged that Saberi
was passing classified information
to U.S. intelligence services.
Her parents,
who traveled to Iran from their home in Fargo in a bid to
help win their daughter's release, could not immediately be
reached for comment on Saturday.
Her
Iranian-born father, Reza Saberi, has said his daughter, who
was Miss North Dakota in
1997, had been working on a book about the culture and
people of Iran, and hoped to finish it and return to the
United States this year.
Sumber:
Yahoo News
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