Iran won't swap US prisoners: official
IRAN has no plans to swap three Americans jailed in Tehran for an Iranian nuclear scientist it says is being held in the Unites States, an Iranian official said yesterday.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said it's not Iran's practice to "exchange people whose cases are still with the judiciary" and dismissed suggestions the fate of the three Americans is linked to that of scientist Sharam Amiri.
"These two cases are not comparable," Mehmanparst told reporters in Tehran. "Iran will use legal channels to secure the release of Amiri."
Iran claims the scientist, who disappeared while on a pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia, was abducted by the US in 2009.
The three Americans - Sarah Shourd, her boyfriend Shane Bauer and their friend Josh Fattal - were arrested along the Iraqi border last July.
Iran has accused them of espionage and entering the country illegally. Their families say the three were hiking in Iraq's largely peaceful mountainous northern Kurdish region and that if they crossed the border, it was accidental.
Iran allowed the mothers of the three to visit them in May, the families' first contact with them since they were taken into Iranian custody. The mothers had hoped to secure their children's' release, but returned empty-handed to the US after a two-day visit.
Also in May, Iran's Intelligence Minister Heidar Moslehi signaled Tehran might be open to a prisoner swap with the US for the three Americans. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had also mentioned a swap in March, but nothing was officially proposed.
Before Amiri disappeared, he worked at Iran's Malek Ashtar University, an institution closely connected to the country's powerful Revolutionary Guard.
US media reported in March that Amiri had defected to the US and was assisting the CIA in efforts to undermine Iran's nuclear program.
Mehmanparast's remarks came after Iran's state TV on Monday showed a video of a man it identified as Amiri. The footage showed him speaking through what appeared to be a webcam, saying he was abducted while on a pilgrimage to Medina, injected with a tranquilizer and taken to the US.
The man in the footage was shown next to a photograph of Amiri and bore a close resemblance. He said the video was recorded on April 5 in Tucson, Arizona, and that he has been tortured while in the US.
A US official dismissed the Iranian claim, saying it was false.
"It's absurd for anyone to claim that the United States is in the business of torturing people into false claims of defection or anything else. That's not how we work, it makes no sense, and it's just not so."
The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the claim without authorization.
Mehmanparast said the Americans are held "under conditions that go beyond international standards on detentions, while Amiri has had no consular access and there has been no way to verify his state of health."
Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said it's not Iran's practice to "exchange people whose cases are still with the judiciary" and dismissed suggestions the fate of the three Americans is linked to that of scientist Sharam Amiri.
"These two cases are not comparable," Mehmanparst told reporters in Tehran. "Iran will use legal channels to secure the release of Amiri."
Iran claims the scientist, who disappeared while on a pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia, was abducted by the US in 2009.
The three Americans - Sarah Shourd, her boyfriend Shane Bauer and their friend Josh Fattal - were arrested along the Iraqi border last July.
Iran has accused them of espionage and entering the country illegally. Their families say the three were hiking in Iraq's largely peaceful mountainous northern Kurdish region and that if they crossed the border, it was accidental.
Iran allowed the mothers of the three to visit them in May, the families' first contact with them since they were taken into Iranian custody. The mothers had hoped to secure their children's' release, but returned empty-handed to the US after a two-day visit.
Also in May, Iran's Intelligence Minister Heidar Moslehi signaled Tehran might be open to a prisoner swap with the US for the three Americans. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had also mentioned a swap in March, but nothing was officially proposed.
Before Amiri disappeared, he worked at Iran's Malek Ashtar University, an institution closely connected to the country's powerful Revolutionary Guard.
US media reported in March that Amiri had defected to the US and was assisting the CIA in efforts to undermine Iran's nuclear program.
Mehmanparast's remarks came after Iran's state TV on Monday showed a video of a man it identified as Amiri. The footage showed him speaking through what appeared to be a webcam, saying he was abducted while on a pilgrimage to Medina, injected with a tranquilizer and taken to the US.
The man in the footage was shown next to a photograph of Amiri and bore a close resemblance. He said the video was recorded on April 5 in Tucson, Arizona, and that he has been tortured while in the US.
A US official dismissed the Iranian claim, saying it was false.
"It's absurd for anyone to claim that the United States is in the business of torturing people into false claims of defection or anything else. That's not how we work, it makes no sense, and it's just not so."
The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the claim without authorization.
Mehmanparast said the Americans are held "under conditions that go beyond international standards on detentions, while Amiri has had no consular access and there has been no way to verify his state of health."
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