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News Middle East
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Iran releases jailed Swedes
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| Johanssen, centre, and Hjortmar, right, were jailed after photographing military installations [AFP] |
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Iran has released two Swedish construction workers who were jailed on espionage charges last year.
Stefan Johanssen and Jari Hjortmar were arrested in March 2006 for taking pictures of military installations on Iran's southern island of Qeshm and sentenced to two years in prison.
The men were handed over to Swedish officials at the foreign ministry on Monday evening just hours after a spokesman had issued a statement saying their release was imminent.
"I was treated well and I appreciate this gesture and I'm looking forward to going back to my family," Johanssen said.
Ali Bagheri, the Iranian foreign ministry's spokesman for northern European affairs, said: "They were pardoned after requests from the Swedish authorities and their families, and after going through the legal process and to show goodwill."
'Dialogue better'
Urban Ahlin, deputy head of the Swedish parliament's foreign affairs committee, was there to welcome the two men after visiting Iran three times in a bid to win the men's release. "It is good for Iran and good for Sweden to show that dialogue is better and it is better not to be isolated. In the future Iranian and Swedish relations will improve," he said.
Their release comes less than two weeks after 15 British naval personnel held by Iran on accusations of illegally entering Iranian waters were suddenly pardoned and freed. Two other Europeans, German tourist Donald Klein and French boat skipper Stephane Lherbier, were also both freed earlier this year before completing 18-month sentences for violating Iran's territorial waters.
Bagheri denied that the recent spate of releases were linked to growing pressure over Iran's nuclear programme. "The Iranian approach to this matter is humanitarian and it is very evident and clear," he said, noting that Iran had also recently allowed a visit by the pair's families. "There is no link on nuclear as the nuclear issue has its own path," he added.
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