By
Fariba Amini
(first published by Iranian.com)
One evening last week at the Free Library of
Philadelphia, I met Alex Fattal. I saw pain on his face, as he came up to me. A
nice, kind young man, he told me who he was. I learned that he is the brother of
Josh Fattal who, along with two of his friends, was on a
hiking vacation in Iraqi Kurdistan before they were arrested by
the Iranian authorities. This was in July, now it is February, and they are
still in prison. Evin: Where else? The mothers and the families of
Shane, Josh and Sarah have had no direct contact with their loved
ones. No phone calls, nothing. They remain anxious, worried but still hopeful
that they will be released soon. It's been a long excruciating six months. In a
statement released in August 2009 by the fourth hiker, Shon, who, due to
illness, had not joined his friends on the trip: "I hope that people understand
my friends' presence in the area for what it was: a simple and very regrettable
mistake."

Mother of
Shane, Cindy: "Shane has a major in Peace and Conflict Studies in
addition to his minors of Arabic and Journalism degrees. What is important is
that Shane is a compassionate human being who never intended to enter into Iran
and who means no ill will to anyone.
Shane talked about this trip with me and his
family for weeks before. He said it had been recommended by friends and it was
safe. Sarah only had a week off of her teaching job so this was scheduled to be
a short trip. It is heartbreaking not to have any contact with Shane and to have
no independent verification of his condition for over three months.
I feel helpless at times. I ask the Iranian
authorities to please end this nightmare for us and release our children. This
situation has taken its toll on our family. We continue to plea that this be
treated as a humanitarian case and kept separate from any politics. We are a
family; we are not involved in politics."
Mother of
Sarah, Nora: "My daughter Sarah was born in Oak Park, Illinois. She
graduated from Cleveland High School in Encino, California. In 1999, Sarah moved
north and attended the University of California at Berkeley and graduated with
degree in English Literature. She taught English as a second language there. She
and Shane decided to live in the Middle East, to further her Arabic studies and
learn more about the culture and its people; as she would say: 'people just like
us.' She and Shane had been living in Damascus, Syria for a year. She had a
teaching position at the American Language School there and was on a brief
vacation when they both went to Kurdistan for a respite from the city to a place
recommended by their friends as one of the most beautiful places in the world."
"We ask the Iranian government to be just and
compassionate towards our beloved children. They have been punished enough by
the prolonged detention and we, as families have been punished along with them.
Please make the ultimate magnanimous gesture behooving the greatness of your
country and release them to their families."
The Mother of
Josh, Laura, tells the full story:
What happened? How did they end up in
Iran?
Josh, Shane and Sarah were on a one-week vacation
in Iraqi Kurdistan. They left Damascus on July 28th where Shane and Sarah were
living for the past year and Sarah was teaching English. They traveled north
from Damascus to enter Iraq and visited the Kurdish cities of Arbil and
Sulemaniyah. They slept in Sulemaniyah on July 29th and then hired a driver on
July 30th to take them to
Ahmad Awa. At 1:33pm on July 31, they were arrested in the unmarked border
area of Ahmad Awa in Iraqi Kurdistan.
Don't you think it was dangerous to even
go to the area? Were they not told?
Shon Meckfessel, the fourth hiker who was sick the day before Josh, Shane
and Sarah traveled to Ahmad Awa, stayed in Sulemaniyah on July 30th. Shane
called Shon at 1:33pm on July 31 to tell him to call the US Embassy in Baghdad
to alert them that Josh, Shane and Sarah were surrounded by Iranian authorities.
Shon and Shane had been researching areas of Iraqi Kurdistan to hike and
vacation in before the trip. Friends had told them that the mountains and
waterfalls in this area are just
beautiful and picturesque. They did not think it would be dangerous and in
any case they had no intention of going to Iran.
What was the reason being given for their
arrest?
I don't know and I don't understand. The Iranian
government officials said because the hikers entered the Iranian border
illegally. But nothing was marked and the hikers had no intention to go into
Iran. They were just young people who were off from work and wanting to explore
a beautiful area before going back to Damascus.
Have you been in touch with any one of
them since their arrest? Do you know what their condition is at this point?
None of us have had direct contacts with them. We
know that the Swiss ambassador visited them on two occasions once on September
29th and October 29th for about one hour. They had been held in solitary but
moved since. I believe they are in ward 209. We were told that they seemed to be
in good health. But as you can imagine no Iranian or American mother wants to
hear that their child is in captivity. It is particularly disturbing that our
children have had no access to their lawyer.
Have you tried to get visas to go to
Iran? What is the reply from the IRI officials?
We have not heard anything if our visas have been
approved. Officially, it takes a month and as you can imagine we are eager and
waiting to hear back. It would be a great relief for us to see our kids after
six months of no communication at all with them.
What is your plea to the Iranian
government?
We are asking that Josh, Shane and Sarah be
released on humanitarian grounds. We ask for mercy and kindness. We want to see
our children back home. Six months detainment is punishment enough for any
alleged unmarked border crossing. We know that Iranians are compassionate people
and I personally have great respect for your nation.
What are you asking ordinary citizens and
governments to do?
We want people to write to Josh, Shane and Sarah.
We want people to hold vigils and make YouTube videos. We want the international
community to come to our defense and ask the Iranian government to release our
children so that they can come home to us. We want compassion from religious
leaders. Josh, Shane and Sarah are just ordinary young adults who were exploring
the world. They are caring individuals. This is a humanitarian issue unrelated
to global politics.
For a full story and how to help visit:
www.freethehikers.org
... Payvand News - 02/07/10 ... --