Yorkshire Post

‘Soft’ approach to Iran under fire

- GRACE HAMMOND NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

DIPLOMACY: The husband of jailed British woman Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe urged the Foreign Secretary to escalate the Government’s support for her as the “softly-softly” approach was not working.

THE HUSBAND of jailed British woman Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe urged the Foreign Secretary to escalate the Government’s support for her as the “softlysoft­ly” approach was not working.

Richard Ratcliffe said his hourlong meeting with Boris Johnson about his wife, who is being held in Iran, had been “positive and constructi­ve” and he hoped she would return home by Christmas.

He said his wife was “on the verge of a nervous breakdown” and her mental state had suffered since a gaffe by Mr Johnson about her activities in Iran led to the threat of further charges.

The Foreign Secretary has apologised for the “distress” and “suffering” he caused by his suggestion that Mrs Zaghari-Ratcliffe was training journalist­s in Iran, which has exposed her to the threat of her five-year jail sentence being doubled. Mr Ratcliffe said the situation was “deeply upsetting for her”.

He said: “That’s the one point she wanted to make to the Foreign Secretary – what it’s like to watch yourself being called a spy on television every night which has happened only in the last two weeks, and just wanting him to do what he can to bring her home.”

He suggested Mrs Zaghari-Ratcliffe was being used as a “bargaining chip” in a wider diplomatic dispute between London and Tehran. Mr Ratcliffe has said her detention is being used by the Tehran government in an attempt to get the British authoritie­s to pay for a £400m arms deal with Iran struck in the 1970s.

He said: “It is important that the UK honours its internatio­nal legal obligation­s so that Iran can honour its legal obligation­s. They are separate things but it is good for the atmosphere if they are all solved.”

The Foreign Secretary is due to travel to Iran and Mr Ratcliffe said Mr Johnson was “keen” for him to be in the travelling party.

Mr Ratcliffe called for his wife to be granted diplomatic protection, which would escalate her case to the level of a state-to-state dispute rather than a simple consular case, but the Foreign Office has “reservatio­ns” about such a move.

He said: “Diplomatic protection is in essence when a state like Britain decides that Nazanin was being treated badly because she is British and she is entitled to be protected as an extension of the British state. It is not unpreceden­ted, but it is a big step.”

He added: “I appreciate it’s an escalation, but I think ... it’s important that where softly-softly doesn’t work, where it has been escalated by the past couple of weeks’ events and the Foreign Secretary’s words being used, I think it is appropriat­e.”

Mr Ratcliffe said he was “hopeful” that Mr Johnson “will do everything he can to bring her home by Christmas”.

“She talks about being on the verge of a nervous breakdown.

“I absolutely believe that’s true. I think it’s important I don’t exaggerate anything in the media and I’m not melodramat­ic, but she is in a difficult place.”

He described himself as “muddling through” after 19 months trying to get his wife and daughter Gabriella home. Hampstead and Kilburn MP Tulip Siddiq, who represents the family, said the meeting as “encouragin­g”. She said: “Gabriella has lost the ability to speak English now, so it is very difficult for Richard.”

It is important that the UK honours its legal obligation­s Richard Ratcliffe, husband of jailed British woman Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe

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