DHAKA:
Four Iranian-Americans, including Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian, have
been freed in Iran
in a prisoner swap deal.
Iranian
and US
officials said, reports Al Jazeera.
Rezaian,
who was taken into custody in July 2014 and convicted on espionage charges last
year, was to be flown to Switzerland along with former US Marine Amir Hekmati,
pastor Saeed Abedini and Nosratollah Khosravi-Roodsari, US officials said.
But
early Sunday morning in Tehran,
the plane scheduled to take them out of the country had not taken off for
unexplained reasons, Washington Post reported.
In
return for the Americans, the US
will pardon or drop charges against seven Iranians - six of whom are dual
US-Iranian citizens - accused or convicted of violating US sanctions.
In
addition, the US will drop Interpol ‘red notices’, essentially arrest warrants,
on 14 Iranian fugitives it has sought, officials said.
US student Matthew Trevithick
was released in Iran
independently of the exchange on Saturday and has already left the country.
The
swap came as diplomats gathered in Vienna
to announce the lifting of international sanctions and bring the country of 80
million people back to the global economic stage.
The
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) announced in Vienna
that Tehran had complied with the requirements
of a deal reached last year, under which it was to curb its nuclear program in
return for the lifting of sanctions imposed by the United States, United Nations and
European Union.
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