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Radio France Internationale
Radio France Internationale
World
RFI

Macron presses Iran to allow released French pair to return home

The pair were held in prison for over three years © Handout / FAMILY HANDOUT/AFP/File

Paris (AFP) – President Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday urged his Iranian counterpart to let two French citizens return home, as they were released after over three years in prison on espionage charges their families vehemently denied.

Meanwhile an Iranian citizen arrested in France in February on charges of promoting "terrorism" on social media, and who Tehran had said could be swapped in the case, was now at Iran's embassy in Paris, the Iranian foreign minister said.

Cecile Kohler, 41, and Jacques Paris, 72 were arrested in May 2022 at the end of a trip to Iran that their families say was purely touristic in nature.

They were freed from Tehran's Evin prison late on Tuesday in what the Iranian authorities described as a conditional release, and immediately taken by French diplomats to France's mission in Tehran.

On Wednesday, Macron asked his Iranian counterpart Massoud Pezeshkian in a telephone conversation for their "full and complete release ... as soon as possible", the Elysee said.

Earlier Wednesday Kohler and Paris spoke to Macron via videoconference, said French ambassador to Tehran Pierre Cochard, who described their call as "very moving".

Both teachers, although Paris is retired, the pair were among a number of Europeans caught up in what activists and some Western governments -- including France -- describe as a deliberate strategy of hostage-taking by Iran to extract concessions from the West.

Tehran has said the pair have been granted "conditional release" and "will be placed under surveillance until the next stage of the judicial proceedings."

French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot told France 2 TV that their release is "a first step".

Their sentences on charges of spying for France and Israel, issued last month after a closed-door trial, amounted to 17 years in prison for Paris and 20 years for Kohler.

Iran, which has previously carried out exchanges of Westerners for Iranians held by the West, had said they could be freed as part of a swap deal with France, which would also see the release of Iranian Mahdieh Esfandiari.

Esfandiari was arrested in France in February on charges of promoting "terrorism" on social media, according to French authorities.

She is to go on trial in Paris from January 13 but was last month released on bail by the French judicial authorities in a move welcomed by Tehran.

"Our citizen in France, Ms Esfandiari, is now free, she is at our embassy, and hopefully, she will return once her trial is over," Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Wednesday.

Asked by France 2 if there had been a deal with Tehran, Barrot declined to comment, saying their release had come about "as the fruit of the work of French diplomacy".

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