Source: ABC
The Market Online - At The Bell

Join our daily newsletter At The Bell to receive exclusive market insights

  • An Australian woman has been released from an Iranian prison after spending more than 800 days locked up for alleged espionage offences
  • Footage released by local media overnight shows Kylie Moore-Gilbert being freed from detention in exchange for three Iranian men being released
  • The Prime Minister has welcomed her release but declined to say whether it came as a result of a prisoner swap
  • The University of Melbourne lecturer was detained in Tehran in September 2018 and handed a 10-year sentence for spying
  • Kylie has always denied the accusations against her and said in a statement that it was “bittersweet” to be leaving the country

An Australian academic has been released from an Iranian prison after spending more than 800 days locked up for alleged espionage offences.

Kylie Moore-Gilbert was freed from detention in exchange for the release of three Iranian men imprisoned abroad.

She was first locked up back in September 2018 after being convicted of spying on the Iran Government — a charge she flatly denies.

Video of Kylie’s release was released overnight by local media, showing the University of Melbourne lecturer at what appears to be Tehran airport.

Three men, draped in the Iran flag, can also be seen being released.

The Prime Minister has welcomed the news but declined to say whether the change was as a result of a prisoner swap.

“She’s with Australian officials who are giving her all the support she needs, there’ll be quite an adjustment for Kylie, she’s gone through a terrible ordeal, an absolutely awful ordeal,” Scott Morrison told Seven.

“The injustice of her detention and her conviction, Australia has always rejected, and I’m just so pleased that Kylie’s coming home,” he added.

In a statement following her release, Kylie thanked the Federal Government for its support over the last two-and-a-half years.

The Australian also said leaving Iran was bittersweet and again denied the accusation of spying which has been levelled against her.

“I have nothing but respect, love and admiration for the great nation of Iran and its warm-hearted, generous and brave people,” she said.

“It is with bittersweet feelings that I depart your country, despite the injustices which I have been subjected to,” she added.

More From The Market Online
ASX concept

ASX 200 reacts to an RBA 25bps rate hike by… closing somewhat firmly in the green?

Colour me surprised – the ASX200 successfully priced something in for once, with today’s RBA rate hike not scaring the market down into
India Russia flag

Not just AUKUS indexes: USA’s war on Iran visible on India’s NIFTY; Russia’s MOEX

While the Australian market is busy watching Wall Street, gold, and oil prices – and the prices of relevant stocks exposed to those

Oil prices see money markets bet on two more RBA hikes for 2026; NAB see CPI @ 5%

Despite earlier this week claiming that Australian CPI could hit 5% by the middle of the year, National Australia Bank’s (ASX:NAB) chief
Social media concept

The US Energy Sec’s overnight tweet bungle underlines social media’s increasing influence on markets

In a world where investing is becoming more and more intertwined with social media narratives (read: emotion), thus becoming more volatile – something