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U.S. NGO Urges Iran To Free Jailed Employee

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  • U.S. NGO Urges Iran To Free Jailed Employee

    U.S. NGO URGES IRAN TO FREE JAILED EMPLOYEE
    Sue Pleming

    Reuters
    June 2 2009
    UK

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S.-based nongovernmental group urged Tehran
    on Monday to release an employee jailed for nearly a year, appealing
    for the same "fairness" it showed by freeing Iranian-American reporter
    Roxana Saberi last month.

    Silva Harotonian, 34, an Iranian citizen of Armenian descent, was
    working for a U.S. group that arranges educational exchanges when
    she was arrested on June 26 last year.

    Harotonian was based in Armenia for the International Research and
    Exchanges Board and was in Iran working on a U.S.-Iran exchange
    program for maternal and child health professionals.

    In January, she was given a three year jail term on charges of
    involvement in a U.S.-funded plot to overthrow the Islamic system of
    government in Iran. Her first appeal was denied and her lawyers have
    filed a second and final one in recent days.

    Robert Pearson, president of the group and a former U.S. ambassador,
    said the charges against Harotonian were "without foundation,"
    a view that has been echoed by the State Department which provides
    some funding to the group.

    "What we really hope for is for an appeals court in Iran to look
    at her case with the same sense of fairness that a court looked at
    Roxana Saberi's case," he told Reuters, referring to the freelance
    reporter who was jailed on charges of spying for the United States
    but released three weeks ago.

    "She is a loyal, patriotic Iranian citizen and has no criminal intent,"
    added Pearson of his employee.

    After her release, Saberi said she had shared a cell with Harotonian
    for a while in Tehran's Evin prison but offered few details on the
    jailed NGO worker.

    While Harotonian is not an American, U.S.-based relatives and her
    Washington-based employer have urged the State Department to publicly
    press for her release, as they did in Saberi's case.

    After Saberi's release, the State Department urged Iran's leadership
    to also free Harotonian and called the charges against her "without
    foundation."

    "We understand her second appeal is pending and that she is in poor
    and deteriorating health as a direct consequence of her confinement,"
    said the State Department.

    Klara Moradkhan, a cousin of Harotonian who lives in Los Angeles,
    said the jailed NGO worker had no interest in politics and the family
    was shocked at the charges against her.

    "Nothing makes sense," she said of her cousin's case. "We are asking
    for forgiveness and mercy from the government of Iran," she added.

    Iran often accuses the West of seeking to undermine the Islamic state
    through a "soft" or "velvet" revolution with the help of intellectuals
    and others inside the country.

    Iran has cracked down on dissenting voices since President Mahmoud
    Ahmadinejad came to power in 2005, possibly in response to western
    pressure on Tehran to halt its disputed nuclear work.
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