Iran releases Franco-German accused of spying

Iran has released a 19-year-old Franco-German national days after throwing out spying charges against him, the French foreign minister told AFP on Wednesday.
“Lennart Monterlos is free,” said Jean-Noel Barrot, with sources close to the case saying the young man would travel to France on Thursday.
“We are relieved that our son will return to us,” Monterlos’s parents said in a written statement through their lawyer, Chirinne Ardakani.
Monterlos was arrested on June 16 in the southern city of Bandar Abbas, on the third day of the brief war between Iran and Israel.
The sports and travel enthusiast had been cycling alone across Iran on a Europe-to-Asia bike trip.
The Iranian judiciary announced the espionage accusations would be dropped on Monday.
He had been released from prison over the weekend and was hosted by the French embassy in Tehran while awaiting the paperwork to allow him to leave the Islamic Republic, several sources close to the case told AFP.
Monterlos, who has a German mother and a French father and grew up in eastern France, was arrested after the Iran-Israel war broke out as he was preparing to cross the border into Afghanistan, his Iranian visa near expiration.
France, which has multiple other nationals imprisoned in the Islamic Republic, had condemned Monterlos’s detention as arbitrary.
French couple Cecile Kohler and Jacques Paris, accused of spying for Israel, have been in detention in Iran for nearly three and a half years and face the death penalty.
“I have not forgotten Cecile Kohler and Jacques Paris, whose immediate release we demand,” Barrot said.
Along with other European countries, France suspects Iran of taking Western citizens hostage to trade their freedom for concessions, notably on its nuclear plans and the lifting of economic sanctions.
Iran is believed to hold about 20 Europeans in detention.