CNN I Hilary Clarke and James Masters: Hopes that a British woman jailed in Iran will soon be freed rose Sunday following a visit to Tehran by UK Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson.
He said Johnson met with Nazanin’s parents in Tehran on Saturday night to reassure them that their daughter was a top concern, and that her case had been discussed in every meeting he held.
“Of course who knows what lies ahead, the past 20 months have had plenty of false turns — but my hope is that the ripple in the days ahead might become a full change of tide. My hope today is as Nazanin once wrote: Freedom feels one day closer, that Christmas dream remains.”
Johnson, ended his trip to Iran on Sunday with no announcement on the fate of Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who has duel British/Iranian nationality, has been in in jail in Iran since April 2016 on spying charges.
A statement from the British Foreign Office said the two sides had discussed “concerns about the consular cases of dual nationals.”
A month ago Johnson caused a furore in the UK after he told a parliamentary committee that Zaghari-Ratcliffe was in Iran to teach journalism.
“When you look at what Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe was doing, she was simply teaching people journalism as I understand it,” Johnson told the committee, adding that he found the situation “deeply depressing.”
Both Zaghari-Ratcliffe and her employer have always maintained she was simply visiting family while on vacation.
Her family fears the five-year sentence she was given on espionage charges could be lengthened.
Zaghari-Ratcliffe was detained at the airport in Tehran in April 2016 on her way back to the UK from visiting family with her daughter Gabriella, then 22 months old. The child has since been looked after by her maternal grandparents.
Last September, in an interview with CNN’s Christiane Amanpour, Rouhani said he had his own “sensitivities” regarding the case, but underlined the separation of the judiciary and executive in the Iranian constitution.
Nuclear agreement
“During nearly an hour of talks with President Rouhani, both spoke forthrightly about the obstacles in the relationship and agreed on the need to make progress in all areas,” the Foreign Office statement said.
“It has been a worthwhile visit and we leave with a sense that both sides want to keep up the momentum to resolve the difficult issues in the bilateral relationship and preserve the nuclear deal,” the Foreign Office said.
The UK stands with the rest of the European Union in wanting to preserve a 2015 nuclear agreement with Iran that US President Donald Trump has walked away from.
‘We are committed to our deals, we are Muslim, we are Iranians, we have a great culture,’ President Rouhani told the Iranian Parliament on Sunday, according to the state news agency IRNA.
‘However, if they want to violate it, Iran will not be worried, as it has envisaged other plans,’ Rouhani was reported as saying.
Under the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) Iran agreed to curb its nuclear activities in exchange for economic sanctions relief.
UK stance on nuclear deal criticized
However, according to IRNA, the Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council Ali Shamkhani, who also met with Johnson, criticized the UK’s adherence to the agreement.
“The post-JCPOA economic cooperation between Iran and the UK is not satisfactory at the moment,’ IRNA reported Shamkhani as telling Johnson.
“Facilitating banking ties can be a prelude to developing cooperation,’ IRNA quoted Boris as saying.
In his meeting with Shamkhani on Saturday, Johnson reiterated the UK’s opposition to Trump’s decision to move the US Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.