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- Blogger Returned to Prison Two Days After Surgery - Death Sentences Upheld for Kurdish Political Prisoners - Dr. Maleki Summoned to Serve Prison Sentence - Journalists Detained in IRGC's Solitary Cells - Journalist Saeed Razavi Faghih detained at airport
- Gingrich Warns of Iranian Nuclear Attack
- Incoming IAF chief: Iran is our top concern - Raising the stakes on Iran - Iran to place nuclear plate in reactor within month - Peres: Iran is greatest threat to Mideast peace - 'Israel must have credible military option on Iran'
- In the Iranian regime women’s main duty is housework
- Young Iranians with low incomes avoiding marriage - Iran’s “nude revolutionary” Farahani says image is symbolic - Five women suspiciously die in Varamin Prison - Women’s rights activist released from Evin - Iranian police ban boots with jeans
- We Need to Talk to Iran, but How?
- Can a nuclear Iran be deterred? - Is Georgia joining anti-Iran coalition? - Ex-CIA spy: Iran's miscalculation over war - The message we need to send Iran - If sanctions on Iran fail, war may be inevitable
- Nasrallah: Iran is aiding us, but isn't dictating our actions
- Top Iran military official aiding Assad's crackdown - Iran appears to be helping Syrian regime - Syria Importing Iranian Snipers to Murder Protesters - Azerbaijan arrests plot suspects, cites Iran link - How Iran Controls Afghanistan |
Wednesday 12 August 2009Iran says Frenchwoman cannot leave if freed on bailTEHRAN (Reuters) - France has agreed to provide bail for Clotilde Reiss, a French teaching assistant tried in Iran on spying charges but she will not be allowed to leave the country, Iranian news agencies said on Wednesday. "The French embassy in Tehran has conveyed an official letter to Iran's Foreign Ministry agreeing to provide bail and written guarantees for the release of Clotilde Reiss," an unnamed government official told the official IRNA agency. French government spokesman Luc Chatel said France was doing everything it could to free Reiss and was prepared to stand bail. "The French government has indicated that it was ready for the moment to pay this bail for Clotilde Reiss," he told i-tele television. "The government's aim is to obtain her final release," he said. Reiss, 24, was arrested on spying charges on July 1 as she prepared to return home after five months spent working as a teaching assistant at the University of Isfahan. She is currently awaiting sentencing after standing trial last week. She has been accused of taking part in a Western plot to destabilize the Iranian government following unrest after the June 12 election in which hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was re-elected. France has dismissed the charges as baseless and has pressed Tehran for her immediate release. Tehran prosecutor Saeed Mortazavi said Reiss would have to stay in Iran even if she is allowed out on bail. "Clotilde Reiss is not allowed to leave Iran until her sentence is issued and she is punished for her crimes," Mortazavi told the semi-official Fars agency. "Reiss is under arrest. But her trial procedure is finished. Any decision on whether she should be released on bail until the sentence is issued ... depends on the judge of her case." French officials have said that Reiss, who took photographs of demonstrations that broke out after the June 12 election and sent them to friends over the Internet, could stay in the French embassy in Tehran if she were released on bail. On Tuesday, a statement from President Nicolas Sarkozy's office said a staff member from the French embassy in Tehran also on trial for spying had been released from jail although she was still being prosecuted. Along with Reiss, Nazak Afshar, who works at the cultural section of the embassy, is among dozens of defendants facing mass trials aimed at cracking down on the protests that erupted after the disputed election. |