UK government urges Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s husband to stop speaking out

Boris Johnson meets with Richard Ratcliffe, the husband of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe who is detained in Iran, at the Foreign & Commonwealth Office in London, Britain, Nov. 15, 2017. (Reuters)
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Updated 03 February 2021
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UK government urges Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s husband to stop speaking out

  • Richard Ratcliffe: London should ‘impose a cost’ on Iranian ‘hostage taking’
  • Ministers concerned that Tehran could level new charges before her release

LONDON: The UK government has urged the husband of jailed British-Iranian Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe to stop publicizing plans to free her on March 7 or risk jeopardizing her release.

But her husband Richard Ratcliffe tweeted that he rejects the government’s advice. “We continue to believe that transparency is the best form of protection from abuse,” he wrote.

“We have also made clear that the government’s role is to remind the Iranian authorities that Nazanin has the UK’s protection, not to act as a messenger for the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) mafia tactics and suppression.”

Zaghari-Ratcliffe, currently under house arrest in Tehran, is nearing the end of a five-year jail sentence on charges of espionage that she denies.

Last year the IRGC leveled new, undisclosed charges against her, but later pulled back following public and diplomatic pressure.

“If anything happens to Nazanin or her family or if she is not released to the UK on 7 March — there should be consequences,” Ratcliffe tweeted.

“We will be discussing with the foreign secretary Dominic Raab his back-up plan. I don’t want there to be any doubt in the foreign secretary’s mind that we are approaching the time to make good on our conversations to impose a cost on hostage taking. My view is that if you won’t do it now, even when Nazanin is not released at the end of her sentence, then it is safe to presume that you never will,” he added.

“Either she is home at the end of her sentence, or there are consequences. Anything else is just noise.”

Ratcliffe and the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) disagree over the best strategy for freeing her. 

He believes that speaking out and applying public pressure is the best way to encourage Tehran to release his wife, while the FCDO is concerned that publicly highlighting her release date could antagonize the regime and prompt new charges.

“I do think it was a remarkable lack of judgment by the FCDO to allow itself to be enrolled in passing on IRGC threats to the family, and say it would be the fault of our campaigning around Nazanin’s release date if something happened to Nazanin or her family,” Ratcliffe wrote, adding that he had repeatedly been told by FCDO ministers to be quiet. 

“The IRGC have an infinite capacity to spot weakness and an opportunity to manipulate — it is why the UK’s weakness on diplomatic protection is so genuinely ill advised. They sniff out every opportunity, unless you push back immediately.”

An FCDO spokesperson said in a statement: “The foreign secretary and FCDO remain in close contact with both Mrs Zaghari-Ratcliffe and her family, and continue to provide our support.

“We do not accept Iran detaining dual British nationals as diplomatic leverage. The regime must end its arbitrary detention of all dual British nationals.

“We continue to do everything we can to secure the release of all dual British nationals so that they can be reunited with their loved ones.”


US military operations ‘ahead of schedule,’ Iranian leaders want to talk: Trump

Updated 41 min 14 sec ago
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US military operations ‘ahead of schedule,’ Iranian leaders want to talk: Trump

  • Trump also said Sunday that 48 Iranian leaders have been killed in the US-Israeli bombardments
  • Iranian ‌President Masoud Pezeshkian said a ​leadership council had temporarily assumed duties

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said on ​Sunday that Iran’s new leadership wants to talk to him and that he has agreed, according to an interview with the Atlantic magazine. 

“They want to talk, and I have agreed to talk, so I will be talking to ‌them. They ‌should have done ​it ‌sooner. ⁠They should have ​given what ⁠was very practical and easy to do sooner. They waited too long,” Trump said in the interview from his Florida residence. Trump did not specify who he would be speaking with or say whether ⁠it would occur on Sunday ‌or Monday.

Iranian ‌President Masoud Pezeshkian said a ​leadership council composed of ‌himself, the judiciary head and a ‌member of the powerful Guardians Council had temporarily assumed the duties of supreme leader following the death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Trump said some ‌of the people who were involved in recent talks with the ⁠US are ⁠no longer alive.

 

“Most of those people are gone. Some of the people we were dealing with are gone, because that was a big — that was a big hit,” he was quoted as saying in the interview with Atlantic staff writer Michael Scherer. “They should have done it sooner, Michael. They could have ​made a ​deal. They should’ve done it sooner. They played too cute.”

Offensive moving ‘ahead of schedule’

Trump also said Sunday that 48 Iranian leaders have been killed in the US-Israeli bombardments of the country and that the offensive is “very positive.”

“Nobody can believe the success we’re having, 48 leaders are gone in one shot. And it’s moving along rapidly,” Trump was quoted as saying in an interview by Fox News.

Trump claimed overall success in the war, which was launched Saturday with the goal of removing Iran’s leadership and destroying its military. Iran has confirmed the death of its supreme leader, Ali Khamenei.

“We’re doing our job not just for us but for the world. And everything is ahead of schedule,” Trump was quoted as saying in a separate interview with CNBC.

“Things are evolving in a very positive way right now, a very positive way,” he said.

The interviews were conducted before the US military for the first time announced casualties in the war: three unidentified service members killed, five seriously wounded and several others more lightly injured.

Trump announced Sunday that the US military was sinking Iran’s Navy, having destroyed nine Iranian warships so far and “going after the rest.”

Trump made the announcement in a social media post as the Pentagon intensified its bombings of Iran’s military, deploying B-2 stealth bombers from the US to strike at hardened, underground Iranian missile facilities with 2,000-lb bombs.

US strikes also pummeled Iran’s naval headquarters, largely destroying it, Trump said.