No 10 urges people to stop sending Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe abuse on social media

No 10 urges people to stop sending Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe abuse on social media
21 Nazanin 2 Foreign Secretaries
Jamie  Micklethwaite

By Jamie Micklethwaite


Published: 22/03/2022

- 13:08

The mum has been bombarded with abuse since she criticised the Government for taking six years to get her home

No 10 said Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe should not face any abuse on “social media or otherwise”.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said: “She has been through an unimaginable ordeal and we are extremely pleased that she’s now reunited with her family.


“And as a UK citizen, someone in a free and democratic country, she is rightly able to voice her opinion on any topic she wishes.”

People criticising Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe for hitting out at the Government have got it “so wrong”, said one of the former foreign secretaries who failed to secure her release from Iran.

Jeremy Hunt, who was foreign secretary between July 2018 and July 2019, has jumped to the defence of British-Iranian Mrs Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who was returned to the UK last week after six years in detention in Iran.

At a press conference on Monday, Mrs Zaghari-Ratcliffe said it had taken too long for the Government to pay a £400 million debt to Iran, which helped secure her release.

Handout photo issued by Tulip Siddiq of her first meeting with Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe (right) who she campaigned for six years for her release from detention in Iran. The Labour MP for Hampstead and Kilburn and shadow economic secretary to the Treasury, said seeing the 43-year-old mum-of-one in her constituency on Sunday was %22surreal%22. Picture date: Sunday March 20, 2022.
Tulip Siddiq

She said although she could not be happier to be home, “this should have happened six years ago”.

But she has faced a backlash online with commentators suggesting she should instead be grateful or that she was somehow at fault.

Mr Hunt said on Twitter: “Those criticising Nazanin have got it so wrong. She doesn’t owe us gratitude: we owe her an explanation.

“She’s absolutely right that it took too long to bring her home. I tried my best – as did other foreign secretaries – but if trying our best took six years then we must be honest and say the problem should have been solved earlier.”

Mr Hunt said the turnover of ministers in the role and a reluctance to pay the debt, which dated back to the 1970s, may have been a factor. He said the Government did not want to appear to be paying ransom money.

Former Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt responds after Prime Minister Boris Johnson made a statement to MPs in the House of Commons on the latest situation with the coronavirus pandemic.
Former Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt responds after Prime Minister Boris Johnson made a statement to MPs in the House of Commons on the latest situation with the coronavirus pandemic.
House of Commons

Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, he said: “I think there was a lot of reluctance when I arrived as foreign secretary because of a sense that it might be seen as a ransom. We don’t pay ransoms because it encourages more hostage-taking. But this is not a ransom, it is a debt.”

Mr Hunt said: “That decision that we should pay it in principle was taken when I was foreign secretary. But then the practicalities of paying it when Iran is a sanctioned regime meant that it still took a long time to sort out.”

The MP said he did everything he could while he was foreign secretary, but added: “It took too long. That is the honest truth.”

Mr Hunt said: “Whilst it was an extraordinary achievement by Liz Truss and the Foreign Office to negotiate Nazanin and Anoosheh Ashoori’s release – and indeed Boris Johnson deserves some credit for the fact that he authorised the payment of the debt, which hadn’t happened previously and that kind of decision has to come right from the top – but it took six years and that is too long. We have to ask ourselves whether we could have done it more quickly.”

He added: “I think we do need some kind of independent inquiry into this. I would welcome the Foreign Affairs Select Committee doing it.”

On the criticism being levelled, he said on Twitter: “This kind of open scrutiny as to whether we could do things better is what happens in democratic, open societies. It may be something they don’t welcome in places like Iran and Russia but it is why, ultimately, we are wiser and stronger.”

You may like