Iran’s top rights official says authorities considering family request to visit US hikers

By Frank Jordans, AP
Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Iran mulling family visit for US hikers: official

GENEVA — Iranian authorities are considering a request by the families of three detained American hikers to visit them in prison, Iran’s top human rights official said Tuesday.

Mohammad Javad Larijani — the secretary general of Iran’s High Council for Human Rights and a member of one of the country’s most influential families — said his office has recommended that the request be granted.

“We are working on that with the security people and judges,” he told reporters in Geneva. “We have recommended that the families should be able to see them, and I hope that this will be done.”

In a statement, the families welcomed the announcement.

Larijani said the Swiss ambassador in Tehran made the request to his office “about 2-3 weeks ago.” Switzerland has represented U.S. consular interests in Iran since Washington and Tehran broke off diplomatic relations following the Islamic revolution three decades ago.

The Swiss Foreign Ministry confirmed that it was in touch with Iranian officials about the family visit, but declined to elaborate.

Larijani’s comment came at a time of tense relations between Iran and the United States regarding Tehran’s nuclear program and its crackdown on public opposition to the nation’s disputed presidential election in June.

On Monday, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said the Islamic republic is becoming a military dictatorship, leading Iran’s foreign minister to say that was a good characterization of the United States and its government.

The families of the three detained Americans — Shane Bauer, Sarah Shourd and Josh Fattal — say they were hiking in Iraq’s northern Kurdistan region in July when they accidentally crossed the border into Iran.

“This latest report that our visa request is being viewed favorably is encouraging,” the families said, adding that they hoped it would be granted soon and they would be able to meet with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

“We have waited over a month already for news about the visas and we have endured over 200 days without communication from Shane, Sarah and Josh,” they said Tuesday. “The lack of contact with them is heartbreaking for us and certainly demoralizing for them.”

Iran’s foreign minister said in late December that the three would be tried in court, but he did not say when that would happen or what the three would be charged with, other than to say they had “suspicious aims.”

Earlier, the country’s chief prosecutor said they were accused of spying.

Swiss diplomats last saw the hikers at the end of October, but have not been able to visit them since.

Still, Larijani said the hikers had “full access with the Swiss Embassy and there were several meetings with them.”

Larijani said it was “quite possible” that the Americans had strayed into Iran by mistake, but that “the security people want to be sure this is true” because the area they were in was known for “terrorist activities.”

“We should assume that they are innocent,” he added.

____

Associated Press writer Patrick Walters in Philadelphia contributed to this report.

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