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  • Roxana Saberi

    Authorities in Iran have arrested and detained an American freelance journalist who has reported for NPR, the BBC and other news organizations.

    Roxana Saberi, 31, was born in the United States to an Iranian-born father and Japanese-born mother. Saberi moved to Iran six years ago and was arrested in Tehran almost a month ago. In an interview with NPR, her father, Reza Saberi, said he last heard from her on Feb. 10.


    "She called from an unknown place and said she's been kept in detention," he said from Fargo, N.D., where her family lives. He said she had been in detention for 10 days at that point.

    "She said that she had bought a bottle of wine and the person that sold it had reported it and then they came and arrested her," he said, adding that that was just an excuse to arrest her.

    Her father says he doesn't know where Saberi is being held or what the charges are. They've stayed quiet until now, in hopes she would be released.

    Saberi grew up in North Dakota, where she was a star high school soccer player and pianist. In 1997, she was named Miss North Dakota. She moved to Iran six years ago, where she had been working as a freelance journalist and completing work on a master's degree in Iranian studies and international relations.

    Iranian officials revoked Saberi's press credentials more than a year ago, but the government tolerated her reporting short news stories out of Iran. Her father said she was planning to move back to the United States later this year.

    The Committee to Protect Journalists said that at the end of last year, Iran was "the sixth-leading jailer of journalists." The group's Web site says more than 30 journalists were investigated or detained there in 2008.


  • #2
    Iran will soon release Roxana Saberi, a freelance US journalist with Iranian nationality, after more than a month in detention, the ISNA news agency reported on Friday.

    Hassan Haddad, Tehran's deputy prosecutor for security matters, said Saberi, 31, would be freed within a few days, ISNA said.

    "The investigation has been carried out and she will be released within a few days," Haddad said without giving further details.

    The ISNA report comes a day after US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said that Iran was expected to be invited to a high-level conference on Afghanistan likely to be held by end of this month.

    Her statement is the latest overture by the new US administration of President Barack Obama after Obama extended a diplomatic hand towards Iran soon after he took office in January.

    American media, citing Saberi's father, reported last week that the US-born journalist was arrested in late January on charges of buying alcohol, which is prohibited in the Islamic republic.

    Last week the Iranian foreign ministry said Saberi was working "illegally" in the country after her press card was revoked in 2006.

    Later Iran's judiciary said she had been arrested on the orders of a revolutionary court, which handles security charges in Iran, and kept in Tehran's Evin prison.

    Saberi, who has reported for NPR, the BBC and Fox News, has been living in Iran for six years, working as a journalist and pursuing a master's degree in Iranian studies and international relations.

    She was also writing a book about Iran, according to NPR, which also said that she was planning to move back to the United States later this year.

    Iran, which does not recognise dual nationality, has detained several Iranian-Americans in recent years.

    In May 2007, US-Iranian academicians Haleh Esfandiari and Kian Tajbakhsh along with California-based peace activist Ali Shakeri were arrested and held for more than 100 days on suspicion of causing harm to national security.

    US-Iranian journalist Parnaz Azima had her passport confiscated in January 2007 for eight months after she arrived in Iran on a private visit.

    She avoided jail by paying bail of around 550,000 dollars and subsequently left the country.

    Former FBI agent Robert Levinson has been missing for nearly two years since vanishing on the Gulf island of Kish.

    Since Obama took office, Washington has been working on extending a diplomatic hand towards Tehran.

    The two have had no diplomatic relations for three decades and relations worsened during the tenure of former US president George W. Bush largely over Tehran's controversial nuclear programme.

    Washington suspects that its atomic drive is a cover for ambitions to build a nuclear bomb, charges strongly denied by Tehran.

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      • #4
        The father of a Iranian-American journalist imprisoned in Iran said on Tuesday that his daughter had become suicidal and threatened to mount a hunger strike as her confinement drags on.

        Reza Saberi told Reuters he spoke to 31-year-old freelance journalist Roxana Saberi by telephone early Tuesday morning.

        "I am very worried. She is pretty suicidal," said the elder Saberi, who lives in Fargo, North Dakota. "She is saying she will go on a hunger strike if they keep her there. I tried to calm her down. I told her we are doing everything and to just hold on. Don't give in. We will try to secure her release."

        Roxana Saberi has been jailed since Jan. 31 and was being held at Tehran's Evin prison.

        Saberi said his daughter told him she had met with a prosecutor in Tehran and been told she may be in prison for several months and possibly up to two years.

        U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has demanded that Tehran immediately release the journalist. And an official from the Iranian prosecutor's office said earlier this month that Iran's investigation of Saberi had been completed and she would be freed soon.

        U.S.-born Saberi has worked for National Public Radio, the BBC, ABC News and other international media outlets.

        An Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman had said Saberi was working illegally after her press card was withdrawn two years ago.

        Saberi's father said she was arrested ostensibly for buying a bottle of wine, which is banned under Iran's Islamic law.

        He confirmed her credentials as a correspondent had been revoked, but said she had stayed in Tehran to pursue a master's degree and was doing research for a book about Iranian society.

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            رضا صابری، پدر رکسانا صابری، خبرنگار ایرانی-آمریکایی که در ایران در بازداشت به سر می برد به رادیو فردا گفته است که روز دوشنبه با دخترش برای مدت نیم ساعت ملاقات کرده است.

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              • #9
                An Iranian-American journalist has gone on trial in Iran for spying for the US and a verdict is expected soon, the judiciary said on Tuesday.
                Roxana Saberi, 31, who has dual citizenship, was arrested in late January and initially accused of working without press credentials.

                But an Iranian judge made a far more serious allegation against her last week, charging her with spying for the United States.

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                  سایت نواندیش ايرانيان ، اخبار انتخابات ، اخبار رتبه بندى معلمان و فرهنگيان ، اصلاح طلبان ، محمد خاتمى ، سيدحسن خمينى ، بورس ، بازار سكه ارز ، ثبت نام خودرو ، همسان سازى حقوق بازنشستگان ، ميرحسين موسوي ، مهدي كروبي ، كارشناسي داوري ، نقد فيلم، اخبار هنرمندان ، استقلال ، پرسپوليس ، نقد فیلم ، معرفی فیلم

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