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U.S. State Department believes espionage related charges in Iran are “baseless”

almasakinMissoula, May 13 (Al-Masakin)–State Department spokesman Ian Kelly told reporters at today’s daily press briefing that charges made against an American who stole a confidential document related to U.S. involvement in Iraq from Iran’s Expediency Council was a “baseless” charge.

Iran charged former freelance reporter Roxana Saberi who worked as a website translator at Iran’s Expediency Council with copying a classified report and removing it from the building.  Saberi was charged with espionage and sentenced to eight years in prison after she confessed at a closed trial.  She later apologized to the Iranian government and her sentence was reduced to two years suspended sentence, expelled from the country, and forbidden to work as a reporter in Iran for five years in a move the Iranian government called “Islamic mercy.”

In response to a reporter’s question this morning, Mr. Kelly acknowledged that Saberi had taken the document and then went on to say in response to a follow-up question that charges related to such activity were nevertheless “baseless.”
QUESTION: The lawyer – one of the lawyers for Roxana Saberi says that she – that the Iranian case against her was based on her having acquired a confidential Iranian Government report.
MR. KELLY: Mm-hmm.
QUESTION: That she acquired such a report, I am not suggesting in any way applies that she was guilty of espionage, but it may indeed have violated Iranian laws about – you know, covering the confidentiality of such reports. The Department was very consistent in saying that the charges against her were baseless. Do you stick with that, or does this change your view of the charges?
MR. KELLY: No, we haven’t changed our views. We continue to maintain that the charges against her are baseless. And our concern throughout, of course, has been Ms. Saberi’s well-being and her safe return to the United States.

Although Saberi was employed as an office worker at the Expediency Council, not as a journalist, she later sought to exploit earlier employment as a freelance journalist for NPR, Fox News, and the BBC to suggest that she had been imprisoned on charges related to journalism.  Saberi’s lawyer told the Associated Press May 12 that Saberi had in fact been arrested for stealing a document from the government office.

The Expediency Discernment Council is an administrative assembly appointed by the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution and was created upon the revision to the Constitution of Islamic Republic of Iran in 1988.

EHC / EHC

May 13, 2009 - Posted by almasakinnewsagency | Al-Masakin, Iran, Journalism, Roxana Saberi, U.S. State Department | | No Comments Yet