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Iran releases foreign Newsweek reporter on bail

          
          Print Story: Iran releases foreiwi Newsweek reporter on bail - Yahoo! News lttp://news.yahoo.conVs/ap/200910 17/ap_on_re_nd_ea/ml_iran/print
          N EWS PRINT Back to story
          Iran releases foreign Newsweek reporter aMso a
          on bail
          By ALl AKBAR DAREI NI, Associated Press Writer
          Sat Oct 17, 6:02 pm ET
          TEHRAN, Iran — Iran released a foreign Newsweek reporter on bail Saturday almost four months after he
          was arrested following the country's disputed presidential election, as embattled opposition leaders
          promised to press on with their campaign against the country's rulers.
          Maziar Bahari, a dual Iranian-Canadian citizen who was released after posting bail of 3 billion rials
          ($300,000), is among more than 100 prisoners put on mass trial as part of the government's attempts to
          silence opposition protests that President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's June 12 re-election was fraudulent.
          The government also waged a bloody crackdown using security forces, but Iran's opposition leaders said
          Friday that the use of force will not silence their demands for democratic change. The defiant statement
          by opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi and former reformist President Mohammad Khatami sent a
          message to their supporters that the protest campaign still had energy though street demonstrations
          fizzled out months ago.
          “The use of force and pressure won't force the Iranian nation to deviate one iota from the path it has
          chosen,” said a statement posted on Khatami's Web site. “And those loyal to ... Iran won't give up their
          patriotic responsibilities despite all problems and threats.”
          Since the violent post-election crackdown, the opposition has been struggling to reinvigorate itself as
          Iran's government under Ahmadinejad cements its control.
          A key part of the government's strategy has been the mass trial of reformist political figures accused of
          supporting the post-election unrest and seeking to topple the ruling system through a “velvet revolution.”
          The trial has so far produced three death sentences.
          The opposition has called the trial a “ridiculous show” and has said that confessions by defendants,
          including Bahari, were obtained under duress.
          In his turn at the stand, Bahari said Western media had attempted to guide events in Iran following the
          election and he sought mercy from Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
          Bahari's family and colleagues said his comments likely came under duress. Like other defendants, he
          has had no access to a lawyer and no specific charges have been announced against him.
          Iran's official Islamic Republic News Agency reported Bahari's release, citing the Tehran prosecutor's
          office. The report did not give a reason for the release, but Bahari's wife in London, who is having a
          difficult pregnancy and is expected to give birth at the end of October, has pleaded for his freedom.
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          Print Story: Iran releases foreiwi Newsweek reporter on bail - Yahoo! News lttp://news.yahoo.conVs/ap/200910 17/ap_on_re_nd_ea/ml_iran/print
          U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon
          also made a joint call in September for Iran to free Bahari, who was arrested on June 21.
          Newsweek welcomed the reporter's release in a statement posted on its Web site, saying “We are
          relieved that Newsweek journalist Maziar Bahari is home with his family today.”
          One of Iran's most prominent pro-reform figures, Saeed Hajjarian, has also been on trial alongside
          Bahari. Reformist Web sites said Saturday that Hajjarian has been convicted of inciting post-election
          unrest and sentenced to a five-year suspended jail term. He was released on bail earlier this month after
          more than three months in prison.
          Judiciary officials were unavailable for comment on Hajjarian's reported sentence.
          Mousavi and Khatami said a “security climate” imposed by hard-liners to try to silence the opposition has
          instead undermined people's trust in the ruling system and paved the way for those who want to change
          the regime.
          On Friday, a hard-line cleric sought to head off an attempt to reinvigorate the anti-government movement
          by warning against a planned opposition rally on Nov. 4 that would coincide with annual state-sponsored
          demonstrations against the United States.
          The cleric, Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati, also had an unusual warning for the security forces, telling them
          any soft treatment of those activists already in detention would be considered treason. “Nobody gives a
          flower to his murderer,” he said in a Friday prayer sermon.
          Thousands of people were arrested in the heavy crackdown that crushed the mass protests in support of
          Mousavi, who claims the presidential election was stolen from him through massive vote fraud. It was the
          country's worst unrest since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. The opposition says at least 72 protesters were
          killed, while the government puts the number of confirmed dead at 30.
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