The Scotsman

Iran says UK paid £400m for Nazanin’s release

- By SAM BLEWETT

Reports from Iran claim that Britain has paid a £400 million debt in order to free Nazanin Zaghari-ratcliffe – but they have been downplayed by UK officials.

Richard Ratcliffe, the husband of the British-iranian charity worker, welcomed the signals from Tehran over the longrunnin­g dispute as "a good sign". However, It was said that the UK Government's position had not changed over the weekend and that Iran had made the claim before without the mother of one being released.

The Foreign Office said "legal discussion­s are ongoing" over the debt.

UK officials have played down the prospect of Nazanin Zaghari-ratcliffe's imminent release from Iran after state TV suggested Britain would pay a £400 million debt to secure her release.

Richard Ratcliffe, the husband of the British-iranian charity worker, said the family had not been updated but welcomed the signals from Tehran over the long-running dispute as "a good sign".

The Foreign Office said "legal discussion­s are ongoing" over the debt despite the claim made on Iranian state TV, which cited an anonymous official.

It was said that the UK Government's position had not changed over the weekend and that Iran had made the claim before without the mother of one being released.

Mr Ratcliffe, who has campaigned for the release of his wife after her detention in 2016, told the PA news agency: "We haven't heard anything.

"It's probably a good sign that it's being signalled, just as last week's sentence was a bad sign.

"But it feels part of the negotiatio­ns rather than the end of them."

Earlier in the day, Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said the debt "is not actually the thing that is holding us up at the moment".

The dispute dates back to the 1970s when the then-shah of Iran paid the UK £400 million for 1,500 Chieftain tanks.

Britain refused to deliver the tanks to the new Islamic Republic when the shah was toppled in 1979, but kept the cash despite British courts accepting it should be repaid.

Hopes were raised when Iranian state TV reported that the UK had agreed to pay the £400 million to see the release of the 42-year-old.

The anonymous official was also quoted saying a deal had been made between the us and Tehran for a prisoner swap in exchange for the release of £5 billion of frozen Iranian funds, but Washington did not immediatel­y acknowledg­e any deal.

A Foreign Office spokesman said: "We continue to explore options to resolve this 40-yearold case and will not comment further as legal discussion­s are ongoing."

Speaking to the BBC on Sunday morning, Mr Raab said the debt was not the issue holding up Mrs Zaghari-ratcliffe's release. "that is not actually the thing that's holding us up at the moment, it's the wider context as we come up to the Iranian presidenti­al elections and the wider elections on the JCPOA which inevitably, from the Iranian perspectiv­e, the two are considered in tandem," he told The Andrew Marr Show.

Mr Raab said it was clear the Iranians were using Mrs Zaghari-ratcliffe as "leverage" and suggested authoritie­s were holding her "hostage" in treatment amounting to "torture".

The report in Iran raised the prospect that there was coordinate­d action between Tehran, London and Washington.

Last Monday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson acknowledg­ed "we are working with our American friends on this issue".

Mrs Zaghari-ratcliffe, of north London, was detained in Tehran in 2016 while taking daughter Gabriella to see her family, as authoritie­s made widely refuted allegation­s of spying.

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