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US-Iranian reporter not to move out of Iran
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Roxana Saberi, the freed US-Iranian reporter, said on Tuesday that she has no plan to move out of Iran currently.

United States reporter Roxana Saberi meets the press outside her home in Tehran, Iran, May 12, 2009. Saberi was released from prison on May 11 after an Iranian court reduced her initial eight-year prison term, delivered on charges of spying for the United States, to a two-year suspended sentence. (Xinhua/Ahmad Halabisaz)

United States reporter Roxana Saberi meets the press outside her home in Tehran, Iran, May 12, 2009. Saberi was released from prison on May 11 after an Iranian court reduced her initial eight-year prison term, delivered on charges of spying for the United States, to a two-year suspended sentence. [Ahmad Halabisaz/Xinhua] 

Talking to the reporters in front of her apartment in Tehran, on Dibadji street, Saberi said she is "happy" to be freed (from jail) and reunite with her parents, and she "has no plan to move out of Iran for the time being."

"I have no specific plan to do right now. I want to be by the side of my parents and with my friends," she said.

In a brief sentence she also thanked her journalist friends and their sympathetic feelings toward her.

Her father, Reza Saberi, who was accompanying her also told the reporters that "She is having good food and good sleep."

He also confirmed her daughters remarks that "We are not intending to leave Iran now."

Iran's judiciary spokesman Alireza Jamshidi said on Monday that Ms. Saberi will face "journalism ban", but no "travel ban", according to the local satellite Press TV.

United States reporter Roxana Saberi and her father Reza Saberi meet the press outside their home in Tehran, Iran, May 12, 2009. Saberi was released from prison on May 11 after an Iranian court reduced her initial eight-year prison term, delivered on charges of spying for the United States, to a two-year suspended sentence. (Xinhua/Ahmad Halabisaz)

United States reporter Roxana Saberi and her father Reza Saberi meet the press outside their home in Tehran, Iran, May 12, 2009. Saberi was released from prison on May 11 after an Iranian court reduced her initial eight-year prison term, delivered on charges of spying for the United States, to a two-year suspended sentence. [Ahmad Halabisaz/Xinhua] 

Saberi, a 32-year-old freelance journalist born in the United States and whose father is an Iranian, was arrested in Iran in the second half of January 2009 on charges of espionage for the United States. She was freed from the jail in Tehran on Monday afternoon.

In April, Saberi received eight years of sentence, but in the appeal court on Monday, her sentence was reduced to a two-year suspended term.

In Iran, Saberi has been working for various news organizations including the BBC and US National Public Radio (NPR).

According to Iranian authorities, Saberi had been denied press credentials since 2006, but she defied the ban and continued journalistic activities.

Reza and Akio Saberi, parents of imprisoned Iranian-American journalist Roxana Saberi talk to the media outside her home after she was released from Tehran's Evin Prison May 11, 2009. Saberi walked free on Monday after an Iranian appeals court cut her eight-year jail sentence for spying to a suspended two-year term. Her release resolved a case that had further strained US-Iranian relations, at a time when US President Barack Obama is seeking to reach out to Tehran after three decades of mutual mistrust.[Xinhua] 

(Xinhua News Agency May 13, 2009)

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