Author Topic: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years  (Read 3387 times)

Soul Crusher

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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #50 on: April 20, 2009, 10:17:00 AM »
LMAO...

This is her father speaking.

So he's lying now? 

How does her being a jounralist equate to being a spy????


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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #51 on: April 20, 2009, 10:18:09 AM »
How does her being a jounralist equate to being a spy????

I didn't say it did.

However, Whorewell said there is no chance she was a spy because she was only a journalist for a very short time.  I pointed out her father's interview with pics today, explaining she had worked for 6 years as a journalist.

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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #52 on: April 22, 2009, 08:52:55 PM »
Jesse Jackson is requesting visas from the Iranian goverment to travel to Iran to appeal on this woman's behalf.
w

George Whorewell

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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #53 on: April 22, 2009, 08:59:40 PM »
LMAOOOOOO

Go get em Jesse-- Tell Ahmedinijad you want to crush his nuts the same way you said you wanted to crush Obama's nuts when your microphone was accidently left on during that interview last year.

Dos Equis

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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #54 on: May 09, 2009, 12:38:00 PM »
Iranian court to hear journalist's appeal, father says

TEHRAN, Iran (CNN) -- An Iranian court will hear the appeal Sunday of a U.S. journalist imprisoned in Iran, the woman's father told CNN on Saturday.
Roxana Saberi stopped her hunger strike Monday night after her parents visited her in prison.

Reza Saberi, the father of Roxana Saberi, said his lawyer told him the appeal court would be convened Sunday.

"We are waiting to see what happens tomorrow," Reza Saberi said. "It usually takes a day or two after the court convenes for the verdict to be issued."

Roxana Saberi, an Iranian-American journalist, was tried and convicted on espionage charges in a one-day trial last month that was closed to the public. She was sentenced to eight years in prison.

Saberi is appealing her verdict, and Iranian authorities have said they will make sure her appeal process is quick and fair.

Saberi was detained in January and accused of buying a bottle of wine and working as a journalist without proper accreditation, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, a journalists' advocacy group.

Saberi has lived in Iran since 2003 and reported for National Public Radio, the BBC, and ABC News until her press credentials were revoked in 2006, the CPJ said. She continued to file short news items with government permission, according to NPR.

"Without press credentials and under the name of being a reporter, she was carrying out espionage activities," Hassan Haddad, a deputy public prosecutor, told the Iranian Students News Agency.

Authorities said Saberi confessed. Her father said he thinks she was coerced into making damaging statements.

Saberi went on a two-week hunger strike to protest her detention, but she ended it Monday after her parents visited her in Tehran's Evin Prison and pleaded with her to stop, Reza Saberi told CNN.

At one point during the hunger strike, she was brought to a hospital and fed intravenously, her father said.

President Obama, as well as other U.S. and international officials, have denounced her detention and sentencing.

Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi, an Iranian human rights activist, has joined the cause to free Saberi. Ebadi's law firm agreed to represent Saberi in her appeals process but attorneys were blocked from meeting her on six occasions, Ebadi told the CPJ.

The attorneys were trying to meet with Saberi so she could sign documents to make them part of her legal defense team, Ebadi said.

http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/05/09/iran.us.journalist/index.html

Dos Equis

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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #55 on: May 11, 2009, 10:40:03 AM »
The “spy” is free.  Guess we need a replacement.   

U.S. journalist freed in Iran, attorney says
     
TEHRAN, Iran (CNN) -- Iran has released imprisoned Iranian-American journalist Roxana Saberi, her lawyer said Monday.

Attorney Abdolsamad Khorramshahi said a prison official told him shortly before 6 p.m. Monday (9:30 a.m. ET) that Saberi had been freed.

Saberi, 32, was convicted last month on espionage charges in a one-day trial that was closed to the public. She was sentenced to eight years in prison. She denies the charges.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton confirmed the release, and said the U.S. government is "heartened" by the development.

Clinton added, however, that the United States continues to "take issue" with the charges initially brought against Saberi, who is expected to leave Tehran within the next several days.

Earlier, Saberi's father, Reza Saberi, said her release was imminent, and that he had signed paperwork.

"We are very happy with the news," he told CNN. "We were hoping for it."

Iran's state-run news agency IRNA, citing a judiciary spokesman, reported that the verdict against Roxana Saberi was "reversed in the appeal court and she is to be freed."

Her sentence has been changed to a two-year jail term suspended for five years, IRNA reported.

State-run Press TV, citing "officials close to the case," reported that the suspended sentence "will be automatically abolished if Saberi shows no unlawful conduct in the next five years."

"So, practically, she is free as of today," Reza Saberi said.

The family will return to the United States "as soon as we can make arrangements for the trip," he said.

The change came a day after Iran's court of appeals held a five-hour session on the case.

The court agreed with Saberi's lawyers that Iran is not at war with the United States -- and that therefore Saberi cannot be punished for cooperating with agents of a nation at war with Iran, according to Khorramshahi.

Saberi was detained in January after initially being accused of buying a bottle of wine and working as a journalist without proper accreditation, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, an advocacy group.

Saberi has lived in Iran since 2003 and reported for international news organizations, including National Public Radio, the BBC and ABC News until her press credentials were revoked in 2006, the Committee to Protect Journalists said. She continued to file short news items, according to NPR.

"Without press credentials and under the name of being a reporter, she was carrying out espionage activities," Hassan Haddad, a deputy public prosecutor, told the Iranian Student's News Agency.

Authorities said Saberi confessed. Her father has said he thinks she was coerced into making damaging statements.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad sent a letter last month to Tehran's prosecutor calling for justice in the cases of Saberi and another detained journalist, Hossein Derakhshan, state-run news agency IRNA reported. Derakhshan is an Iranian-Canadian blogger who has been imprisoned in the country since November.

Reporters Without Borders, a group that fights for journalists' rights worldwide, says Derakhshan was sentenced to four years in prison for disseminating the views of one ayatollah and for "publicity against the government."

Saberi went on a two-week hunger strike to protest her detention, but ended it last Monday after her parents visited her in prison and pleaded with her to stop, Reza Saberi told CNN.

At one point during the hunger strike, she was hospitalized and fed intravenously, her father said. "She was very desperate to get out. ... She was quite relieved to know that the whole world is supporting her."

Saberi's case has prompted denunciations from President Obama, as well as other U.S. and international officials.

The whole experience has been "very depressing" for her, and she has gone through a great deal of frustration, Saberi's father said Monday. "It will take some time before she can overcome it."

He added, "it's not the (Iranian) people -- they are very friendly. We don't understand why it happened."

Journalist advocacy groups welcomed Saberi's release.

"We are thrilled that Roxana Saberi has been released from prison and look forward to welcoming her home," said Joel Simon, executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalists, in a written statement. "But this is also a moment to reflect on the difficult conditions that Iranian journalists endure every day. Several Iranian journalists remain jailed today. We urge they be given the same opportunity for judicial review that was afforded to Roxana Saberi."

"The appeal court's decision to free her can be used as a legal precedent for other journalists currently detained in Iran," said Reporters Without Borders in a statement. "The fact nonetheless remains that, despite her innocence, she is still regarded as guilty by the Iranian authorities. ... The sentence is still unjust, as is the ban on her working as a journalist in Iran."

http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/05/11/iran.us.journalist/index.html

George Whorewell

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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #56 on: May 11, 2009, 04:59:39 PM »
240 still demands she be brought to justice. A legal ruling in Iran = As good as the Supreme Court. She is after all guilty of being a spy- She just cant work in Iran anymore. Buying wine and committing journalism without a license? Absolutely horrible crimes.

Thank God George W Bush isn't in power in Iran. She would be waterboarded and raped while Dick Cheney watched behind a double sided mirror and jacked off. At least the proud and virtuous Ahmedinijahad had the courtesy to let her go despite the fact she was blatantly guilty. They also didn't throw the book at her- She easily could have been sentenced to death by beheading with a dull butcher knife or stoning for shaving her underarms and not being a woman wrapped in a mummy costume before being seen in public.

Parker

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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #57 on: May 11, 2009, 05:05:11 PM »
Why?

Was she a spy?

...and since when did you start objecting to secret trials?
...or is it just a matter of certain things being acceptable only when the USA does them?

Working for NPR is about as far away from being spy as Lil Kim is for being a role model for virgins

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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #58 on: May 11, 2009, 10:06:05 PM »
Working for NPR is about as far away from being spy as Lil Kim is for being a role model for virgins

I never said she was a spy, ...I merely asked the question.
My question was in response to the obvious knee-jerk reaction by most on here.
No one knew the situation. The outrage was not against the sentencing and conviction of an innocent person,
but rather clearly the sentencing and conviction of an American.

ps: Some virgins actually view Lil Kim as their role models.  :P
w

tu_holmes

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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #59 on: May 12, 2009, 01:42:14 PM »
So would you guys say that our Secretary of State did a good job in getting our US citizen out of Iran?

Dos Equis

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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #60 on: May 12, 2009, 01:48:13 PM »
No.

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Dos Equis

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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #62 on: May 12, 2009, 03:44:19 PM »
Why?

I think her public response was pathetic.

Did she influence the Iran appeals court to set this woman free?  If not, then I'd say she has zero to do with the woman being released. 

tu_holmes

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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #63 on: May 12, 2009, 03:48:08 PM »
I think her public response was pathetic.

Did she influence the Iran appeals court to set this woman free?  If not, then I'd say she has zero to do with the woman being released. 

You think that the evil Iranians would release a woman they accused of being a spy without a little pressure?

Really?

Interesting.

Dos Equis

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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #64 on: May 12, 2009, 04:07:45 PM »
You think that the evil Iranians would release a woman they accused of being a spy without a little pressure?

Really?

Interesting.

That wasn't your question.  You asked:  "So would you guys say that our Secretary of State did a good job in getting our US citizen out of Iran?" 

You didn't ask whether someone exerted "a little pressure."  The comments by Hillary and others at the jump were "a little pressure." 

tu_holmes

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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #65 on: May 12, 2009, 04:10:31 PM »
That wasn't your question.  You asked:  "So would you guys say that our Secretary of State did a good job in getting our US citizen out of Iran?" 

You didn't ask whether someone exerted "a little pressure."  The comments by Hillary and others at the jump were "a little pressure." 

So then you don't think her pressure had anything to do with the release?

Seems to me that if the goal is to ensure the release of the person, then Hillary did a fine job... She accomplished her goal.

You disagree I take it.

Dos Equis

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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #66 on: May 12, 2009, 04:14:59 PM »
So then you don't think her pressure had anything to do with the release?

Seems to me that if the goal is to ensure the release of the person, then Hillary did a fine job... She accomplished her goal.

You disagree I take it.

Like I said, if her wimpy comments influenced the appeals court to set the woman free, then yes Hillary did a fine job. 

George Whorewell

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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #67 on: May 13, 2009, 06:17:27 PM »
So a single wrongly convicted prisoner in an Iranian prison is released after those incredibly strong words from our brilliant secretary of state, but 8+ years worth of tough talk, diplomacy, Israeli threats and bowing down to Iran by America, the EU and the rest of the civilized world can't put a stop to Iran's Nuclear program?

Maybe Clinton should just say she is very dissipointed in Iran and their nuclear program will cease to exist.

tu_holmes

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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #68 on: May 13, 2009, 06:23:48 PM »
So a single wrongly convicted prisoner in an Iranian prison is released after those incredibly strong words from our brilliant secretary of state, but 8+ years worth of tough talk, diplomacy, Israeli threats and bowing down to Iran by America, the EU and the rest of the civilized world can't put a stop to Iran's Nuclear program?

Maybe Clinton should just say she is very dissipointed in Iran and their nuclear program will cease to exist.

Well, I've only seen one result from Iran so far in regards to what the US wanted... This was it.

Maybe you're right... perhaps she does just need to express her disappointment and shit will get done.

Dos Equis

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Re: Iran sentences U.S. journalist to 8 years
« Reply #69 on: May 13, 2009, 06:48:38 PM »
So a single wrongly convicted prisoner in an Iranian prison is released after those incredibly strong words from our brilliant secretary of state, but 8+ years worth of tough talk, diplomacy, Israeli threats and bowing down to Iran by America, the EU and the rest of the civilized world can't put a stop to Iran's Nuclear program?

Maybe Clinton should just say she is very dissipointed in Iran and their nuclear program will cease to exist.

lol.  :)