[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 74 (Thursday, May 14, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H2964-H2965]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FREE AMERICAN POLITICAL PRISONERS IN IRAN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Michigan (Mr. Kildee) for 5 minutes.
Mr. KILDEE. Mr. Speaker, I come to the floor of the House of
Representatives again to introduce and talk to this body and to the
American people about my constituent, Amir Hekmati. Amir is an
American. He is a United States marine. He is a brother. He is a son.
He is a Michigander. He grew up in my hometown of Flint, Michigan. He
served this country in uniform, as I said, in the United States Marine
Corps. He is of Iranian descent, though he was born in the United
States.
In 2011, for the first time, he traveled to Iran to visit family he
had never met, a grandmother he had never seen. He traveled under his
own name, notified the Iranian Government that he
[[Page H2965]]
was going to be there; and after just a couple of weeks, he was
apprehended, disappeared. His family didn't know where he was for
months until it was revealed that he had been tried, convicted, and
sentenced to death for espionage, a charge that he is completely
innocent of. In fact, the Iranian court of appeals, the appeals
process, even set aside that conviction and set aside his death
sentence. There was no evidence.
They did convict him and sentence him to 10 years, a conviction that
is based on the fact that, under Iranian law, he is considered an
Iranian citizen even though he was born in the United States and never
had even been there before. But the fact that he had served in the
Marine Corps created a set of facts that caused them to convict him of
a crime and sentence him to 10 years.
It has been 3\1/2\ years. For 1,354 days, Amir Hekmati has sat in
Evin prison, a notorious prison in Tehran.
I have introduced, along with a number of other Members, a resolution
calling for the immediate release of the Americans that Iran holds. It
has 28 Republican cosponsors, 27 Democrats, and we are adding them
every day.
This is not even a bipartisan issue; this is a nonpartisan question.
It is beyond politics. This is about the rights of a free man being
held in Iran. So I am asking my colleagues and the American people to
get engaged, to call upon Iran to do what is right and release the
Americans that they hold. And it is really important that this Congress
speak with one voice and carry the voices of all the people that we
represent, asking, telling Iran that if they think they can join the
global community and continue to hold innocent Americans as political
prisoners, they are wrong.
So, please, for those who want to, use the hashtag #freeamirnow to
send a message to thank those Members, as I will, to thank those
Members of Congress who have joined this resolution. I will be sending
out on Twitter a thank-you to each Member who has done so, using
#freeamirnow. I hope other Members of Congress and those across the
country will join us.
Later today we will consider legislation that will define how
Congress will review and offer its input on the potential Iran nuclear
deal. It is really important that we negotiate with those who make this
world more dangerous first before attempting other methods, and it is
important that we give this negotiation a chance. But it is also very
clear that it will be very difficult for this Congress and the American
people to consider any understanding, any agreement, with Iran without
considering their other behavior, whether it is this nuclear agreement
or other engagement with this country. If they continue to hold
Americans as political prisoners, it is impossible for us to ignore
that fact.
It is very clear that we should never trade the freedom of innocent
Americans for concessions at the negotiating table with Iran over their
nuclear capabilities. Again, we should not make their freedom a part of
this deal. They, meaning the American families who are worrying about
their loved ones, don't want this; and I know that Amir Hekmati,
himself, does not want to be part of the consideration, does not want
to be traded for concessions at the nuclear negotiating table.
The onus is on Iran to do what is right, and it is critical that this
body and all the people that we represent speak with a single voice and
make it clear, as the Senate did in their resolution calling upon Iran
to release these Americans. It is important that the people's body
speak for the people of the United States and tell Iran loud and clear
that you cannot hold Americans as political prisoners and be accepted
into the international community.
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