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Iran frees Arab minority rights campaigner held on death row

Mansouri, 69, defender of Arab rights in Iran, was tried for being 'enemy of God' - charge often used to condemn political dissidents to death
Demonstrators hold a portrait of Abdullah al-Mansouri during a demonstration of Amnesty International in front of the Iranian embassy in The Hague, 11 May 2007 (AFP)

A Dutch-Iranian human rights campaigner who had been sentenced to death in Iran has been freed and allowed to return home to the Netherlands, his son told a Dutch press agency on Friday.

Abdullah al-Mansouri, 69, arrived home on August 20, his son Adnan told the ANP press agency.

"He did not expect to leave prison alive," the son said.

A defender of Arab minority rights in Iran, Mansouri was sentenced to death in 2007 for "terrorism", but this was later commuted to 15 years in prison.

He does not know why he was released so early, ANP reported. His son said Iranian prisoners can be released early for good behaviour.

Mansouri was convicted for his work in the Khuzestan province of western Iran, where the majority Sunni-Arab population has pushed for greater rights and autonomy.

Human rights organisations have accused the government of suppressing the language and culture of Iranian Arabs, seizing land and killing protesters.

He was arrested in May 2006 in Syria, a close ally of Tehran, and extradited to Iran.

Wife (R) of human right activist Mansouri in 2007 in the Netherlands (AFP)

"There are two other Arab activists [of the Ahwaz region in Iran] who were handed with Mansouri to the Iranian authorities," Hadi Torfi, a London-based journalist originally from the Ahwaz region, told MEE.

"Saeed Saliki and Taher Mazraa have not been freed and there is fear for their lives," added Torfi.

Mansouri was tried for the religious offence of "Moharebeh" -- often translated as "enemy of God" -- a charge often used to condemn political dissidents to death in Iran.

Rich in oil, the region saw numerous bombings by separatists in the mid-2000s.

It was claimed he had assisted Iraq during its war with Iran in the 1980s, although Amnesty International said no evidence was ever made public.

Dutch Foreign Minister Frans Timmermans said he was "glad" Mansouri had returned home.

"The Netherlands invested a lot in his release and we are grateful for the cooperation of the Iranian government."

Mansouri was awarded for his work in support of the Arab minority by Queen Beatrix. He gained Dutch citizenship in the 1980s after fleeing Iran.

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