Nelson Mail

Family claims man abandoned

- Iraq

A retired British geologist who could face the death penalty after being accused of attempting to smuggle ancient artefacts out of Iraq is being abandoned to his fate by the Foreign Office, his family has claimed.

Jim Fitton, 66, was arrested at Baghdad airport on March 20 after customs officials found 12 shards of broken pottery in his luggage. The father of two, who lives in Kuala Lumpur, in Malaysia, was in Iraq for a geology and archaeolog­y tour. He is being held in a cell at the airport ahead of his trial, which is expected to take place in May.

Sam Tasker, Fitton’s son-in-law, said he had picked up the fragments while visiting Iraq’s historical sites, which had no signs warning against their removal.

Tasker, 27, said that Fitton would not have attempted to take the shards back to Malaysia had he been aware of the ‘‘perceived severity’’ of the act.

The family say they have been subjected to ‘‘total radio silence’’ from the Foreign, Commonweal­th and Developmen­t Office. ‘‘The response from the FCDO after three weeks of deliberati­ons effectivel­y [was] ‘We don’t want to help because we don’t want to be seen to be interferin­g with the Iraqi judiciary process’,’’ Tasker said.

Tasker alleges he was told that Britain would lobby the Iraqi government to reduce Fitton’s punishment if the retired geologist were sentenced to death but ‘‘aside from that they will not offer any assistance’’.

‘‘The FCDO is effectivel­y abandoning Jim to his fate because it’s less complicate­d than having a diplomatic ding-dong with the Iraqis ... there’s a man’s life involved here,’’ he said.

The family is asking the Foreign Office to arrange a meeting with Iraq’s director of public prosecutio­ns so their lawyer in the country can explain the circumstan­ces. This is an attempt to get the case before the court of cassation, which the family says would then close it without a sentence being passed. – The Times

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