The Daily Telegraph

Iran took Nazanin hostage for money, says husband

Richard Ratcliffe calls on UK to see reality of wife’s captivity as attempt by Tehran to gain leverage

- By Campbell Macdiarmid in Beirut

THE UK needs to recognise Nazanin Zaghari-ratcliffe’s detention in Iran as a state-sponsored hostage-taking, her husband said yesterday, the day after Tehran released a jailed British-australian academic in an apparent prisoner swap.

Kylie Moore- Gilbert, a lecturer at Melbourne University, was released from Tehran’s Evin prison on Wednesday after serving over two years of a 10-year sentence for spying. Australia refused to confirm she was freed in a prisoner exchange, saying only that her release followed “diplomatic engagement with the Iranian government”.

Thailand said yesterday it had repatriate­d three Iranians involved in a failed 2012 bombing targeting Israeli diplomats. While Thai officials declined to call it a swap, Iranian state television showed the garlanded men being hailed as returning heroes in the same segment as footage of Dr Moore-gilbert departing Tehran airport.

“It’s very certainly transactio­nal from their point of view,” said Richard Ratcliffe, whose wife has been detained for four-and-a-half years.

The British-iranian mother of one from north London was j ailed on charges of trying to overthrow the government, something she and her employer, the Thomson Reuters Foundation, strongly deny. But the 42-yearold’s release has been tied to repayment of a long-standing £400 million debt that London owes Tehran.

The UK has acknowledg­ed it owes the debt – which arose over non-delivery of 1,500 Chieftain tanks ordered and paid for by the Shah of Iran shortly before his 1979 overthrow – but says repayment must not breach sanctions.

However, Mr Ratcliffe said that the UK’S position of not linking repayment of the debt to the release of Ms Zaghari

Ratcliffe ignored the reality of her case. “They picked her up for that money and they have made it increasing­ly clear about what that’s about,” he said.

He called on the UK to acknowledg­e that Ms Zaghari-ratcliffe was a victim of hostage diplomacy.

“I think it would protect her and protect others in the future to call Iran out for taking hostages,” he said. “Hostage taking and torture is no different than any other kind of abuse, you do not protect people from abuse by euphemisin­g it away.”

Dominic Raab, the Foreign Secretary, said: “I call on the Iranian government to release all the remaining dual British nationals arbitraril­y detained and allow them to reunite with their loved ones.”

Currently on t emporary home release in Tehran, Ms Zaghari-ratcliffe will complete her sentence in March. But an Iranian court issued a new charge against her in September.

“The British government preference seems to be to wait for the other side to be less unreasonab­le. Well, we’ve been waiting a long time,” said Mr Ratcliffe.

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