Las Vegas Review-Journal

Iran releases Canadian-Iranian after eight months in prison

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Oman for their help in the matter.

Hoodfar, 65, was questioned and barred from leaving Iran in March after traveling to the country to visit family following the death of her husband. Her family said she has been held in Tehran’s Evin Prison since June. Hoodfar until recently taught anthropolo­gy and sociology at Montreal’s Concordia University.

In July, Iran announced indictment­s for Hoodfar and three others, without providing any details about the accusation­s. In recent weeks, Hoodfar’s supporters described her health as deteriorat­ing while she was in solitary confinemen­t, saying she was “barely able to walk or talk.”

Hoodfar’s supporters had pressed diplomats to discuss her case during the recent United Nations General Assembly in New York. Canadian Foreign Minister Stephane Dion met with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif on the sidelines of the meeting Wednesday, state television reported.

The state-run Oman News Agency published pictures of Hoodfar arriving in Muscat, the Omani capital, on an air force jet and being greeted by her niece. It quoted Hoodfar as saying she’d spend time in Muscat before returning to Canada.

“I’m really grateful to his majesty, Sultan Qaboos, for making this happen … after so many months, so many days in prison,” a soft-spoken Hoodfar told Omani state television.

Oman, a Gulf Arab country on the southeaste­rn tip of the Arabian Peninsula, is a U.S. ally and has been ruled by Sultan Qaboos bin Said since 1970. It has served as a mediator between Iran and the West on previous occasions.

Canada has not had an embassy in Iran since 2012, when its then-Conservati­ve-led government cut diplomatic ties over Tehran’s contested nuclear program and other issues.

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