World / Roxana Saberi US Journo 'Very Weak' in Iranian Jail: Father As parents visit, Saberi vows to stretch hunger strike into second week By Newser Editors and Wire Services Posted Apr 27, 2009 12:44 PM CDT Copied Akiko Saberi, the Japanese mother of imprisoned Iranian-American journalist Roxana Saberi, talks as she prepares her 64th birthday cake at her home in Tehran, Iran, April 25, 2009. (AP Photo) An American journalist jailed in Iran for allegedly spying for the US is vowing to remain on a hunger strike until she is freed even though she is "very weak," her father said today. Roxana Saberi has been on a hunger strike for a week, following her conviction in a one-day, closed-door trial. She was sentenced to eight years in prison. Her parents said they visited Roxana in Evin prison yesterday for her 32nd birthday. "Roxana is very weak and pale. She has been on a hunger strike for a week now," her father said. "She is only drinking sweetened water to remain alive." He said he tried to persuade his daughter to end her hunger strike but she refused. "She vowed to remain on hunger strike until she is freed," he said. The US has called the accusations against Saberi, a dual Iranian-American citizen, baseless, and demanded her release. (More Roxana Saberi stories.) Report an error