Russia says no deal to free Israeli-American backpacker being considered
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                  Euroasian Jewish News

                  Russia says no deal to free Israeli-American backpacker being considered

                  Israeli-American Naama Issachar, jailed for drug smuggling, attends her appeal hearing at the Moscow Regional Court on December 19, 2019. (Kirill KUDRYAVTSEV / AFP)

                  Russia says no deal to free Israeli-American backpacker being considered

                  15.01.2020, Russia

                  Moscow indicated Tuesday that it was not considering a deal with Jerusalem that would see an Israeli-American backpacker freed from imprisonment in Russia, despite Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowing to do everything in his power to have her released.

                  Issachar, 27, has been held by Russia since April when some 10 grams of cannabis were found in her luggage during a layover in Moscow. She was sentenced to seven and a half years for drug smuggling, a charge she denied, noting she had not sought to enter Russia during the stopover on her way back to Israel from India.

                  “As far as I know, an exchange option is not being looked at,” Moscow’s deputy foreign minister, Yevgeny Ivanov said, according to Russia’s Tass news agency.

                  “As far as I know, an exchange option is not being looked at,” Moscow’s deputy foreign minister, Yevgeny Ivanov said, according to Russia’s Tass news agency.

                  “She was convicted on criminal charges,” Ivanov continued. “As for [Issachar’s] complaints with the European Court of Human Rights, it is the job of her attorneys. We can advise nothing about that. It is her right.”

                  Issachar’s case has become a cause célèbre in Israel. Netanyahu, who has touted close ties with Moscow, promised during a campaign event in December to spring Issachar from Russian prison.

                  Russian President Vladimir Putin is slated to visit Israel next week, raising hopes among some for a goodwill gesture of diplomatic breakthrough in her case.

                  On Friday, Israel released two Syrian prisoners in what was seen as a gesture toward Putin.

                  A Russian court last month rejected an appeal against Issachar’s conviction. Her mother said she would file another appeal with a higher-level court and also turn to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg.

                  The Times of Israel