TEHRAN, Iran — Iran’s foreign minister said Saturday that the courts are willing in “the near future” to commute the prison sentences of two Americans convicted of spying. The Americans’ lawyer, meanwhile, was in court trying to arrange a $1 million bail-for- freedom deal.
The release rests in the hands of the hard-line judiciary, and Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi gave no clear timetable. He also raised the issue of Iranians held in U.S. prisons, suggesting the Americans’ release might be drawn out to bring attention to inmates Iran wants freed.
In a case that has added to the acrimony and deep distrust between Iran and the U.S., Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal, both 29, were detained along the Iran-Iraq border in July 2009 with their friend Sarah Shourd. Shourd was released last September with mediation by the Persian Gulf nation of Oman after $500,000 was paid.
The two men were convicted of illegally entering Iran and spying for the United States. They were sentenced to a total of eight years in prison each.
They denied the charges and appealed the verdicts, opening the way for the possible deal to free them in exchange for $500,000 bail each.
Bauer’s 25-year-old sister, Shan non Bauer, lives in Boulder. She has organized “Free the Hikers” vigils calling for his release.
Salehi said at a news conference that Iran’s judiciary was ready to commute the sentences as a gesture of Islamic mercy. But he did not give any clear indication of when the pair could be released.
“The judiciary’s decision is to commute (the Americans’) punishment,” the foreign minister said. “We expect the judiciary to make its decision in the near future.”
“We hope this issue will be finalized so that both families of Iranians who are waiting (for inmates in U.S. prisons) as well as the families of these U.S. nationals will, God willing, hear good news,” Salehi said.
Northern Iraq’s mountains attract tourists
The Americans say they may have mistakenly crossed into Iran when they stepped off a dirt road while hiking near a waterfall in the semiautonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq. Considerably more stable and peaceful than other parts of Iraq, the Kurdish north has attracted some adventurous foreign tourists keen to see its scenic mountains.
Sarah Shourd and Shane Bauer, who got engaged after their arrest, had been living together in Damascus, Syria, where Bauer was a freelance journalist and Shourd was an English teacher. Josh Fattal, an environmental activist, went to visit them shortly before their trip to Iraq. Shourd was released last September.
The three are graduates of the University of California at Berkeley, where they became friends.



