Is Boris about to pay £400m 'debt' to Iran to free Nazanin and ease UK's oil crisis? Zaghari-Ratcliffe 'could be released in days' as British passport is RETURNED - amid claims West will do nuclear deal and lift sanctions to end reliance on Russia
- Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe's lawyer said 'we will have good news soon' on release
- Reports today said Britain may be ready to pay £400m debt tied to her detention
- Zaghari-Ratcliffe was arrested at Tehran Airport in April 2016 and later convicted
- She was released in March 2021 but a month later sentenced to another jail term
- The sentence has not started but Zaghari-Ratcliffe was banned from leaving Iran
Hopes are rising that Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe is on the verge of being freed amid rising speculation of a strategic deal with Iran to ease dependence on Russian oil and gas.
A wider pact could trigger the end of sanctions and allow Tehran's massive oil and gas stocks to start flowing on to international markets, potentially easing the impact of the standoff with Russia that has sent prices spiralling.
Asked about the development this afternoon, Boris Johnson said he did not want to 'tempt fate' by commenting while 'delicate discussions' are still taking place.
'Negotiations about all our difficult consular cases have been going on for a long time,' he told reporters.
Iran has long insisted Britain owes the money for 1,750 Chieftain tanks and other vehicles which were paid for but not delivered after the 1979 revolution toppled the Western-backed Shah.
Both Tehran and London have denied there is a link with the fate of Zaghari-Ratcliffe.
But in December, Foreign Secretary Liz Truss confirmed the £400million is a 'legitimate debt' that the Government wants to pay.
And experts said it is part of a much broader push to restore relations with the Gulf state, which went into the deep freeze over fears nuclear fuel it claimed was being enriched for power stations could be used for weapons.
In relation to the debt, the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office said: 'We continue to explore options to resolve this case and will not comment further as discussions are ongoing.'
On the cases of Britons detained, a Foreign Office spokesperson said: 'We have long called for the release of unfairly detained British nationals in Iran. We don't comment on speculation.'
Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe's (pictured in March 2020) lawyer has said 'we will have good news soon' on the British mother's release as reports today emerged that Britain may have paid a £400million debt to Iran that has been tied with her detention
Lawyer Hojjat Kermani said he was hopeful for Zaghari-Racliffe's (pictured with her daughter Gabriella) release 'in the next few days' but that he had not been given an exact day as Tehran and London pressed on with talks about the long-standing debt
Zaghari-Ratcliffe, a project manager with the Thomson Reuters Foundation, as arrested at a Tehran airport in April 2016 and later convicted of plotting to overthrow the clerical establishment (pictured, her husband Richard Ratcliffe hunger strikes outside the Foreign Office in London in November 2021)
The Shah of Iran paid Britain £650million for 1,750 Chieftain tanks (pictured) in the 1970s but only 185 had been delivered when he was toppled in 1979 and the new government cancelled the order
Asked about the development this afternoon, Boris Johnson said he did not want to 'tempt fate' by commenting while 'delicate discussions' are still taking place
Zaghari-Ratcliffe, from London, was arrested at Tehran's Imam Khomeini airport while travelling to introduce her daughter Gabriella - then not even two years old - to her parents in April 2016.
She was sentenced to five years in prison over spurious allegations of plotting against the Tehran government and served out most of her first sentence in Tehran's Evin prison.
She was released in March 2020 during the coronavirus pandemic and kept under house arrest.
In March 2021, she was released from house arrest but she was summoned to court again on the new charge of 'propaganda against Iran'.
In April 2021, she was then sentenced to a new one-year term in jail. However that sentence has not yet started and she is banned from leaving the country.
Her MP Tulip Siddiq confirmed today that Zaghari-Ratcliffe's British passport has been returned. with a British negotiating team believed to be in Tehran.
Local reports said she would likely return to London via Muscat following a phone call between Iran's foreign minister and his Omani counterpart.
Iranian officials did not comment when asked whether the amount has been paid by Britain as reported by some Iranian outlets.
There are also claims fellow British-Iranian prisoner Anoosheh Ashoori could be released in the coming days.
Ms Siddiq said: 'I am very pleased to say that Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe has been given her British passport back,
'She is still at her family home in Tehran. I also understand that there is a British negotiating team in Tehran right now.'
Sacha Deshmukh, Amnesty International UK's chief executive, warned that the latest reports should be treated with caution as there had been 'false dawn after false dawn' in the long-running process.
He said: 'We sincerely hope these reports are correct.
'The detainees and their families have been suffering for years, and a resolution can't come quickly enough.
'It's been clear for a long time that the Iranian authorities have been targeting foreign nationals with spurious national security-related charges to exert diplomatic pressure.
'In the past we've had false dawn after false dawn over possible breakthroughs, so it's only right to be cautious at the moment.'
Mr Ratcliffe, pictured, has spent 21 days camped outside the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office without food
Mr Ratcliffe, the husband of Iranian detainee Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, ended his hunger strike because he said the pair's daughter 'needs two parents'
Mr Ratcliffe said he was starting to get pains in his feet overnight, and after a chat with a doctor the decision was made to end the hunger strike
Efforts to strike a nuclear agreement with Iran have been going on for many years.
The so-called 'P5 plus one' group of powers, including the US, Britain and Russia, have been engaging with Tehran.
A deal was sealed when Barack Obama was president, but collapsed when Donald Trump took over in the White House.
Another pact has seemed close for several weeks, but Russia has been holding up the process by insisting its relations with Iran are not subject to the international sanctions over the invasion of Ukraine.
Tory MP Bob Seely, a member of the Foreign Affairs Committee, told MailOnline: 'I'm not sure exactly where it is going to lead but I do think one of the fallouts from Russia is that there will be a renewed emphasis on getting some kind of deal and understanding with Iran.
'This war clearly is reshaping the world and if you look at what is happening, with Boris off to Saudi, I think there are lots of things that are going to be playing out in the months to come.'
'For sure if you can get a lot of it back up and running and in, potentially very important.
'We are going to need to find a substitute in the short to medium term. Longer term is not so much of an issue with renewables and all that sort of stuff.
'But it is effectively the next two years.
'Assuming that Putin is going to stay in power there is going to need to be an answer about where we are going to get our supplies from.'
He added: 'Maybe the Iranians will see this as an opportunity themselves. They have got more leverage, but maybe there is a correlation of interests now to do something that everyone can live with and will take the situation forward.'
Former foreign secretary Sir Malcolm Rifkind said of the Nazanin developments: 'We are very close to the nuclear deal being revived… probably behind the scenes the Americans have been saying any part of this deal requires the release of Americans. This must have been part of the British deal.
'The Iranians will want to imply one has got nothing to do with the other. So this may be why the passport issue is being dealt with now.'
He added: 'The Americans are obviously looking actively at other sources of oil. Almost anywhere is preferable to Russia at this moment in time.
'If sanctions are going to be released anyway as a result of a nuclear deal, then obviously it is not too great a concession to include Iran in that.'
'Both the American sources as well as those from the Middle East suggest an agreement is ready to be signed.'
The British government have repeatedly said they are working hard to secure Zaghari-Ractliffe's release but diplomatic efforts have so far failed to yield results.
Her husband Richard Ratcliffe held a 21-day hunger strike outside the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) late last year in a bid to kickstart diplomatic efforts once more.
He began his demonstration on October 24 after his wife lost her latest appeal in Iran, saying his family was 'caught in a dispute between two states'.
In January, the daughter of another British-Iranian detained in Iran said her father was to begin a hunger strike due to a lack of progress in securing his release.
Retired civil engineer Anoosheh Ashoori has been held at Evin Prison on charges of spying for Israel, which he denies, for more than four years.
The Thomson Reuters Foundation said that when Zaghari-Ratcliffe was arrested she had travelled to Iran a personal capacity and had not been doing work in Iran.
The Thomson Reuters Foundation is a charity organisation that is independent of Thomson Reuters and operates independently of Reuters News.
The Shah of Iran paid Britain £650million for 1,750 Chieftain tanks in the 1970s but only 185 had been delivered when he was toppled in 1979 and the new government cancelled the order.
Britain was told to pay back £450million by the International Chamber of Commerce in a 2009 ruling but sanctions on military equipment prevent payment.
Pictured: Anoosheh Ashoori with his wife, Sherry Izadi
Pictured: Anoosheh Ashoori with his wife and daughter
Left to right: Aryan Ashoori, the son of Anoosheh Ashoori, Richard Ratcliffe, Sherry Izadi, the wife of Anoosheh Ashoori, MP for Lewisham East Janet Daby and Elika Ashoori, the daughter of Anoosheh Ashoori
Most watched News videos
- Furious Putin is told Ukrainian soldiers have crossed Russian border
- Bodies of dead Russian soldiers on destroyed military column
- Radio station and shopping mall shake during Japan earthquake
- Moment CTSFO police use flashbangs to raid in West Kensington
- Thousands gather for counter-protest against far-right in Belfast
- Moment police arrest Britain's oldest rioter William Morgan
- Moment golden retriever crushes three-year-old girl to death
- 'Drunk' rioter lobs metal sheeting at cops in Hartlepool
- Huge container ship erupts into fireball while docked in China port
- Moment police arrest Facebook user for inciting violence in a first
- Woman caught poisoning opponent's chess board before tournament
- Rioters torch Spellow library in Liverpool destroying hundred of books