Chattanooga Times Free Press

Thailand approves Iranian transfer; Australian freed

- BY TASSANEE VEJPONGSA AND NICK PERRY

BANGKOK — Thailand said Thursday it transferre­d three Iranians involved in a botched 2012 bomb plot back to Tehran, as Iran released an Australian academic who was imprisoned for more than two years on spying charges.

While Thai off icials declined to call it a swap and Iran referred to the men as “economic activists,” the arrangemen­t freed academic Kylie Moore-Gilbert and saw the three men linked to a wider bomb plot targeting Israeli diplomats return home to a hero’s welcome.

The bombers wore Iranian flags draped over their shoulders, their faces largely obscured by black baseball caps and surgical masks. It was a sharp contrast to other prisoner exchanges Iran has trumpeted in the past, in which television anchors repeatedly said their names and broadcaste­rs aired images of them reuniting with their families.

The reason for Iran’s refusal to name those freed remains unclear. However, Tehran has long denied being behind the bomb plot and likely hopes to leverage the incoming administra­tion of U. S. President- elect Joe Biden to ease American sanctions imposed by President Donald Trump. Israeli officials declined to immediatel­y comment on the release.

In Australia, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said he was “thrilled and relieved” that Moore-Gilbert, 33, had been released but added that it would take time for her to process her “horrible” ordeal.

“The tone of her voice was very uplifting, particular­ly given what she has been through,” Morrison told Australia’s Network Nine.

Chatchom Akapin, Thailand’s deputy attorney general, told The Associated Press that Thai authoritie­s had approved the transfer of the prisoners under an agreement with Iran.

“These types of transfers aren’t unusual,” he said. “We transfer prisoners to other countries and at the same time receive Thais back under this type of agreement all the time.”

A Thai Correction­s Department official, who spoke on condition of anonymity as no approval had been granted to speak publicly on the issue with journalist­s, said only two of the Iranians were sent home Wednesday under the prison transfer agreement, while one received a pardon in September.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States