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British-Australian academic says Iran tried to recruit her as spy

WION Web Team
Sydney, AustraliaUpdated: Mar 10, 2021, 07:42 AM IST
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Photograph:(AFP)

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Middle East scholar Kylie Moore-Gilbert was arrested in 2018 and sentenced to 10 years in jail for espionage, an allegation she has denied.

A British-Australian academic has claimed Iran tried to recruit her as a spy in exchange for her freedom when she was imprisoned in the country.

Middle East scholar Kylie Moore-Gilbert was arrested in 2018 and sentenced to 10 years in jail for espionage, an allegation she has denied. She was arrested by the hardline Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps after attending an academic conference in the holy city of Qom in central Iran.

In her first media interview since returning to Australia last November, she said Iranian officials asked her "many times" to work as a spy.

"I knew that the reason that they didn't engage in any meaningful negotiations with the Australians was because they wanted to recruit me. They wanted me (to work) for them as a spy," she told Sky News Australia on Tuesday.

Moore-Gilbert also said she was beaten during her detention and suffered "psychological torture" from spending seven months in solitary confinement. She said at times she "felt broken" by the experience of prison and had suicidal thoughts.

"It is so damaging. I would say I felt physical pain from the psychological trauma I had in that room," she said.

"It is a two-by-two metre box -- there is no toilet, there is no television, there is nothing whatsoever."

Moore-Gilbert also criticised the Australian government's approach to her case, which involved keeping it quiet from the media while negotiating behind the scenes for her release.

"I think had my ordeal been made public, there's no way I would have got 10 years," she said.

She was released reportedly in a swap for three Iranians linked to a botched plot to kill Israeli officials in Bangkok.

Moore-Gilbert added that "much greater attention" was paid to her health and wellbeing once her detention made headlines.