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French Iran-Ophile Takes Unexpected Trip -- To Prison

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  • French Iran-Ophile Takes Unexpected Trip -- To Prison

    FRENCH IRAN-OPHILE TAKES UNEXPECTED TRIP -- TO PRISON

    Los Angeles Times
    Associated Press

    Clotilde Reiss' Iranian nanny sparked her interest in Iran. "She's
    not political," a friend says.

    Clotilde Reiss has been fascinated by Iran since she was a child. Now
    she finds herself in the notorious Evin Prison, accused of espionage,
    a charge her friends call absurd. By Borzou Daragahi July 8, 2009

    Reporting from Beirut -- The young, quiet Frenchwoman became fascinated
    with Iran not because she wanted to fight against Islamic radicalism
    or because she was lured by the mystique of the Orient, like most
    scholars, but for more mundane reasons. As a child in Paris, her
    longtime nanny was Iranian, teaching her bits of Persian as she grew
    up. Shortly after her mother died eight years ago, she immersed herself
    in the language and culture of the country, eventually spending months
    in Iran studying Persian and teaching French at colleges.

    Now Clotilde Reiss, 23, sits in Tehran's Evin Prison, Western diplomats
    say. She was arrested July 1 and accused of espionage. Her detention
    has placed her at the center of an international drama that pits the
    European Union against Iran, which is trying to suppress protests
    following the June 12 presidential election, marred by accusations of
    fraud. A Western official in Tehran said she allegedly was photographed
    taking part in anti-government demonstrations, had pictures of protests
    on her cellphone camera and wrote an e-mail to a journalist describing
    the unrest.

    "That is not espionage and cannot be so. The accusation is absurd,"
    French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said Monday.

    "She's not political," said a longtime friend, among the small group of
    European scholars who travel to Iran to conduct social and political
    research. The friend spoke on condition of anonymity because of
    security concerns. "But she's Iranian in her heart."

    Reiss finds herself among a group of foreign nationals caught up in
    the recent unrest. Greek British journalist Iason Athanasiadis was
    arrested at Imam Khomeini International Airport as he tried to leave
    the country and was held for two weeks. Iranian Canadian journalist
    Maziar Bahari, a freelance correspondent for Newsweek and broadcast
    media, is in prison, as is Hossein Rassam, an Iranian who is the top
    political analyst at the British Embassy in Tehran. In an effort to
    paint the unrest as the work of foreign agents, the government has
    accused all of taking part in or provoking postelection protests.

    But the soft-spoken Reiss appears miscast for such a role. She
    studied Iran in the French city of Lille and at the Sorbonne in
    Paris and traveled to Iran last year as a fellow for the French
    Research Institute in Tehran, returning five months ago to teach
    language classes at a university in the city of Esfahan. Reiss found
    an apartment in the historic city's ancient Jolfa section, the heart
    of Iran's Armenian Christian community, her friends say. She decorated
    her apartment with Persian rugs and made friends with her neighbors,
    who adopted the young woman with exceptional command of Persian
    as one of their own. During weekends she would travel to Tehran or
    the cities of the lush Caspian Sea coast, or welcome visitors from
    Tehran to her home. On July 1, as she tried to leave the country for
    Beirut, she disappeared. French and Iranian authorities confirmed
    Monday that she was being held in Evin, accused of espionage. French
    President Nicolas Sarkozy has dismissed the charge as "pure fantasy"
    and demanded her release. "Let me say in the clearest and simplest
    way possible: We demand the release of our compatriot," Sarkozy said
    Tuesday. "I do not doubt for an instant that she will be released
    very, very soon." A Western diplomat in Tehran said she is also
    accused of sending one straightforward e-mail describing events in
    Esfahan to a journalist in Tehran, which authorities say they have
    tracked. Friends say she never tried to hide anything. "Of course
    we know that being a researcher in Iran, we're under surveillance,"
    said one friend. "We know that our Internet is monitored and our
    phone is tapped. But we were always cautious and we never took
    any risks." Though she may have marched in peaceful protests or
    taken pictures of them with her cellphone, friends say they cannot
    imagine her taking part in riots or damaging property. "She's not the
    kind of girl who would jump in the fire," said one friend. "She's
    always respectful of morality and behavior. She knows very well
    Iran so she wouldn't take stupid risks." [email protected]
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