Iran says British-Australian academic freed for 3 Iranians

Iran has freed Kylie Moore-Gilbert, a
British-Australian academic who has been detained in Iran for more than two
years, in exchange for three Iranians held abroad, state TV reported Wednesday.
The state TV report offered no further details
Wednesday beyond saying that the three Iranians released in the swap had been
detained for trying to bypass sanctions.
Moore-Gilbert was a Melbourne University lecturer on
Middle Eastern studies when she was sent to Tehran’s Evin Prison in September
2018 and sentenced to 10 years. She is one of several Westerners held in Iran
on internationally criticized espionage charges that their families and rights
groups say are unfounded.
It was not immediately clear when Moore-Gilbert
would arrive back in Australia. State TV aired video showing her with a gray
hijab sitting at what appeared to be a greeting room at one of Tehran’s
airports. She wore a blue face mask under her chin. The footage showed three
men with Iranian flags over their shoulders — those freed in exchange for her
being released. State TV earlier described them as “economic activists,”
without elaborating.
International pressure on Iran to secure her release
has escalated in recent months following reports that her health was
deteriorating during long stretches of solitary confinement and that she had
been transferred to the notorious Qarchak Prison, east of Tehran.
Moore-Gilbert has gone on hunger strikes and pleaded
for the Australian government to do more to free her. Those pleas included
writing to the prime minister that she had been subjected to “grievous
violations” of her rights, including psychological torture and solitary
confinement.
Her detention has further strained relations between
Iran and the West, which reached a fever pitch earlier this year following the
American killing of a top Iranian general in Baghdad and retaliatory Iranian
strikes on a U.S. military base.