Iraqi court acquits Briton of antiques smuggling charges
Volker Waldmann (R) and Jim Fitton (C) are handcuffed as they walk to a courtroom escorted by police arriving to court in Baghdad, Iraq, May 22, 2022. (AP Photo)


A retired British geologist jailed in Iraq for antiquities smuggling has been freed and left the country, his family said Sunday. Jim Fitton, 66, was sentenced in June to 15 years in an Iraqi prison. A Baghdad appeals court overturned the conviction and last week ordered his release.

Fitton has now been reunited with family in Malaysia, where he lives. Son-in-law Sam Tasker said Fitton arrived at Kuala Lumpur airport on Friday, and the family was "absolutely over the moon." Fitton missed wedding for his daughter Leila and Tasker in May while he was imprisoned.

Fitton was arrested in March at Baghdad Airport and charged under antiquities laws that carried the possibility of a death sentence.

His case drew international attention after he was convicted of picking up shards of pottery and other fragments from an ancient site in southern Iraq while on an organized geology and archaeology tour. Fitton told the court that he had no criminal intent, and some of the pieces he picked up from an unguarded site were no larger than a fingernail.

Many feared the incident would deter tourists from visiting Iraq, where the government hopes to grow the nascent tourism sector. Frustrated by perceived inaction on the part of the British government, Fitton's family started a petition that garnered more than 350,000 signatures.

Tasker said the public support was "evidence that the actions of the many can move the needle in situations like this, you spurred us on when we were struggling to find hope."

"We as a family will never again doubt the kindness of strangers," he said.