Source:
RFE/RL

Josh Fattal, Sarah Shourd, and
Shane Bauer
www.freethehikers.org
On July 31, 2009, three Americans were arrested
by Iranian forces after they purportedly strayed across the Iranian border while
hiking in Iraqi Kurdistan. Shane Bauer, 27; Sarah Shourd, 31; and Josh Fattal,
27, have been held in Iran ever since, without charges, and are currently in
Tehran's notorious Evin prison. RFE/RL correspondent Nikola Krastev, who last
spoke to the hikers' mothers in May after they traveled to Iran to try to secure
their children's release, catches up with them again ahead of their address on
July 30 before Iran's Permanent Mission to the United Nations.

The American mothers arrived in Tehran carrying roses as a gesture of
good will (May 2010)
RFE/RL: What have you been doing since
your visit to Tehran in May?
Cindy Hickey, mother of Shane Bauer: Well,
we've been writing to Iranian officials asking for meetings, some contacts,
[but] we don't get a response from them. Nora [Shourd] and I actually went to
London and did some media there. And we went to the Iranian mission just last
week and ask for a meeting and we were denied. We haven't heard anything from
Iran. Again, our lawyer was not allowed in [to Tehran's Evin prison, where Sarah
Shourd, Josh Fattal, and Shane Bauer are being held].
RFE/RL: Why did you have to go to London?
Hickey: We wanted to go
somewhere where there was an [Iranian] embassy, so we chose London. We actually
sent two letters requesting a meeting. We got no response, so, Nora and I went
last week at 10 o'clock in the morning and knocked on the door [of the Iranian
Embassy in London] and asked to be seen. And someone finally did answer the door
but a meeting was denied. They told us they couldn't help us.
RFE/RL: When was the last time you communicated with Shane?
Hickey: I left him [in
prison] May 21, the last I saw of Shane when he was loaded on to the elevator
and the doors closed and that was the very last time I saw him. And at that
moment I knew, you know -- I had no idea when I would see him again. We haven't
talked to him, we haven't gotten a phone call. I think they are getting some of
our letters, they're sending letters to us but we've never received any letters
from them. When we met them in Tehran [May 21-22], they said that they have
received some of our letters and they've also received some of the books we've
sent, and that means the world to them because it's their only contact. Now,
from what Shane told me, he's not receiving near the number of letters that I've
sent because I sent letters several times a week and I have for a year.
RFE/RL: Laura [Fattal, mother of Josh Fattal], when was the last time
you spoke to Josh?
Laura Fattal: My husband
spoke to Josh March 9 because he called the house line. We had no notice that he
was calling us and we then understood Nora [Shourd] got a phone call from Sarah,
and Nora said to the other families, "Beware, the kids may be calling." So, we
called my husband and he transferred the house line to his business line so he
can pick up at his work both phones, his work phone and his house phone. And
Josh called 10 minutes later and said 'Hi, dad.' So, it was terrific. I have not
spoken to Josh on the phone. I was happy though, of course, to meet Josh May 20
and 21 in Tehran.
RFE/RL: You will be speaking July 30 before the Permanent Mission of
Iran to the United Nations, what are you going to say?
Fattal: I'm going to say: "I
miss my son, I love my son and Iran is holding Josh, Shane, and Sarah
unjustifiably, it's unnecessary and it's unethical. And they should let him come
home. And there is no reason he should be held, and he shouldn't be held August
1, 2009, and he should not be held July 30, 2010. This could've been solved in
three hours or one day, and one year is outrageous."
RFE/RL: If things don't work out soon, do you plan to apply again for an Iranian
visa and go back to see your children?
Nora Shourd, mother of Sarah Shourd: You
know, we're kind of torn about that and honestly, as much as we'd like to see
our kids, we don't want to just keep going to see our kids, we want to get our
kids released. So hopefully that's the next trip we're going to plan, not just
going to visit them. You know, we always kind of look at things in a way that
maybe something will lead to something else. The only thing that we've actually
seen positively is -- if you could look at it one way, the fact that Amiri [eds.
Iranian scientist Shahram Amiri, who returned to Iran earlier this month after
surfacing in the Iranian interest section of the Pakistani Embassy in
Washington] is back in Iran and kind of right before that, the Russian spies got
released. These are not exactly the same kind of things that we hope are going
to happen to get these kids out but they're kind of in the same category, so we
hope that this will mean something. You know, these kind of things are very
possible, very doable by governments.
RFE/RL: Is there any message you would like to pass to the Iranian
authorities?
Shourd: We really are asking
at this point, we're asking the Iranian government to stop using our kids for
political reasons. They have committed no crime. They haven't been charged with
anything in more than a year. It's very, very obvious to the world now that
they're only keeping them for political reasons. So we call upon them to live up
to their own Islamic values and their own rule of law all of which they've
pretty much bypassed or seem to have forgotten and to let our kids come home to
their families. This is in their power to do, so we ask them to do that.
Copyright (c) 2010 RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org
... Payvand News - 07/30/10 ... --
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