Iran General NewsBush demands Iran release Americans

Bush demands Iran release Americans

-

AP: President Bush on Friday demanded that Iran “immediately and unconditionally” release four Iranian-Americans detained for alleged espionage and provide information about a former FBI agent missing in the country. Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) – President Bush on Friday demanded that Iran “immediately and unconditionally” release four Iranian-Americans detained for alleged espionage and provide information about a former FBI agent missing in the country.

“I strongly condemn their detention at the hands of Iranian authorities,” the president said in a written statement, stepping up pressure on Tehran over the cases.

The United States has denied that the four detainees are spies or employees of the U.S. government. The State Department on Thursday warned U.S. citizens against traveling to Iran, accusing its Islamic authorities of a “disturbing pattern” of harassment of Iranian-Americans.

The four detained scholars and activists are Haleh Esfandiari, director of the Middle East Program at the Washington-based Woodrow Wilson Center for Scholars; Kian Tajbakhsh with George Soros’ Open Society Institute; journalist Parnaz Azima from the U.S.-funded Radio Farda; and Ali Shakeri, a peace activist and founding board member at the University of California, Irvine, Center for Citizen Peacebuilding.

“These individuals have dedicated themselves to building bridges between the American and Iranian people, a goal the Iranian regime claims to support,” Bush said. “Their presence in Iran – to visit their parents or to conduct humanitarian work – poses no threat.”

At the State Department, deputy spokesman Tom Casey said Tehran has still not responded to repeated requests for access to the detainees by Swiss officials who act as intermediaries for the United States in Iran because the two nations do not have diplomatic relations.

“This is hardly the stuff of espionage, this is hardly the stuff of government disputes,” he told reporters.

“It is absolutely incredible to us to think that there could be any possible doubt in the Iranians’ minds that these individuals are there simply to conduct normal, basic human interactions, including family visits,” Casey said.

Bush’s statement also said he was “disturbed” by the fact that Iran has still not provided any information about the welfare and whereabouts of former FBI agent Robert Levinson who went missing in Iran while on private business there in March.

“I call on Iran’s leaders to tell us what they know about his whereabouts,” the president said.

Latest news

Iran’s Regime Executes Two More Protesters from the January Uprising

This morning, two more protesters were executed by Iran's regime. Mizan, the state-run news agency affiliated with the judiciary of...

The Collapse of Iran’s Economic Resilience

The latest international reports show that the Iranian regime’s economy ranks near the bottom among 130 global economies. This...

Iranian Nurses Protest Unpaid Outstanding Claims

On May 30, a group of nurses in Yazd Province held a protest rally outside the Governor-General's Office, demanding...

Physician Migration, A Warning Alarm for Iran’s Healthcare System

With physicians and nurses emigrating abroad, the human resources crisis in Iran’s healthcare system has entered a new phase....

Denmark Accuses Iran’s Regime of Terrorism Threat

According to Al Arabiya, Denmark's Security and Intelligence Service (PET) announced that Iran's regime has played a more prominent...

Workers At Iran’s Makran Steel Face Nine Months of Unpaid Wages

The ongoing crisis of unpaid workers’ wages in contracted projects has once again made headlines at Makran Steel in...

Must read

Suspect spy denies stealing secrets for Iran

AP: A British army interpreter suspected of spying for...

Why Iran Reopens Schools Despite the Coronavirus Risk?

By Pooya Stone On September 5, schools were officially reopened...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you