Official: Wreckage of missing Indonesian plane believed found

Sarah Shourd, like the other two hikers, is a graduate of University of California-Berkeley.
Authorities have identified what is believed to be the wreckage of a Merpati Nusantara Airlines plane that disappeared shortly after takeoff in eastern Indonesia over the weekend.

The three were arrested in the western Iranian city of Marivan, the deputy governor of Kurdistan province, Iraj Hassanzadeh, told the Fars News Agency. Earlier, Swiss diplomats in Iran and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in Washington had urged Iran to provide information on the hikers. “Obviously, we are concerned,” she said. “We want this matter brought to a resolution as soon as possible and we call on the Iranian government to help us determine the whereabouts of the three missing Americans and return them as quickly as possible.” The three American friends — seasoned travelers who are former students at the University of California, Berkeley — had been hiking along with a fourth companion through parts of Iraq’s Kurdistan region last week. On Friday, when the fourth companion stayed behind at a hotel in Sulaimaniya, Iraq, the three others apparently crossed the unmarked border with Iran and were detained. On Friday, Peshrow Ahmed, spokesman for the security manager of Sulaimaniya, said the three had been in contact with their companion until about 1:30 p.m., when they reported they were “surrounded by Iranian soldiers.” No further communication was received. The Web site of Iran’s Arabic-language Al-alam TV, however, reported that an Iranian security source said the three Americans infiltrated into Iran’s Kurdistan province after being warned that they were close to the border. A fourth person from the group went back to Iraq, said the channel, which is linked to the country’s Revolutionary Guards. Officials at the Swiss Embassy — which represents the U.S. interests in Iran because Washington and Tehran do not have formal relations — said they had spoken to Iranian officials. The Swiss ambassador was expected to seek consular access to them, State Department officials said.

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Kurdish officials identified the detained hikers Sunday as Shane Bauer, Sarah Shourd and Joshua Fattal. The fourth hiker, Shon Meckfessel, stayed behind in Sulaimaniya, the officials said. The University of California, Berkeley, confirmed in a statement Monday that Bauer, 27, Shourd, 30, and Fattal, 27, were former students there, and that Meckfessel took a summer course in Arabic at the university in 2007. Meckfessel now attends the University of Washington. “My husband and I are eager for the best welfare and conditions for our son, Josh, and for the other two companions he’s with,” Laura Fattal, of Elkins Park, Pennsylvania, told CNN Radio. “An that is our only concern, his welfare and the best conditions for him.” Fattal graduated from Berkeley in 2004 with a bachelor’s degree in environmental economics and policy, the university said. He shared his friends’ love of travel and learning, and was described as “fiercely intellectual” by his friend, Chris Foraker, who spoke to CNN affiliate KVAL in Eugene, Oregon. Bauer, a 2007 honors graduate in peace and conflict studies, is a journalist fluent in Arabic working in North Africa and the Middle East, according to the Berkeley statement. He recently produced stories on Iraq and Syria for the San Francisco-based New American Media, and won a top prize at the university in 2007 for his photos of the devastation in Sudan’s Darfur region, the school said. Sandy Close, executive director of the nonprofit Pacific News Service, described Bauer — a photographer whose material was occasionally posted on her Web site in the past — as a “gifted linguist and photographer with a wanderlust for travel and a student of Arab cultures. He’s a remarkably talented guy.” Shourd, a 2003 graduate with an English degree, described herself as a “teacher-activist-writer from California currently based in the Middle East” on a profile listed on a travel Web site. The Berkeley statement called her an “aspiring journalist” who reported a story earlier this year on the Golan Heights in Israel. Meckfessel, a graduate student at the University of Washington, was identified by his grandmother, who told CNN Saturday that he stayed behind because he felt sick. Meckfessel met with a U.S. consular official, the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad said. “My grandson has asked me not to talk to the media,” said the grandmother, Irene Meckfessel of Carmichael, California, before hanging up. Meckfessel is in the final year of a two-year program called MATESOL, or Masters of Arts in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages, according to the university.

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