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Jailed UK-Iranian woman is ‘chess piece’— husband

By AFP - Jan 23,2020 - Last updated at Jan 23,2020

LONDON — The husband of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, a British-Iranian woman jailed in Tehran, on Thursday said his wife was being used as a "chess piece", following talks with Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

Speaking from Downing Street after his meeting, Ratcliffe said there was a "gap" between him and the government over its tactics.

"I think there remains that gap between my sense that the government needs to be tougher with Iran, alongside improving relations generally, and the Foreign Office instinct to not have things escalate," he told reporters.

"I don't think I have come away thinking Nazanin is coming out tomorrow or even next week."

Zaghari-Ratcliffe was arrested at Tehran airport in April 2016 after visiting relatives in Iran with her young daughter.

She worked for the Thomson Reuters Foundation -- the media organisation's philanthropic arm -- at the time.

Iranian authorities convicted her of sedition -- a charge Zaghari-Ratcliffe has always contested -- and she is serving a five-year jail term.

Her case has unfolded amid escalating tensions between Tehran and the West, particularly the United States and Britain.

But Ratcliffe believes it is particularly linked to London's failure to return £400 million ($500 million, 450 million euros) owed to Tehran for a 1970s tank deal.

Ratcliffe said on Thursday that his wife was "being held hostage" and used as a "chess piece".

"That wasn't disputed in there," he said. "The UK obviously is wary of that tightrope it is walking between the US and Europe in Iran relations.

"I was saying 'I think this is different'. This is a global norm, that actually we all uphold universal values where hostage-taking shouldn't be happening."

Ratcliffe had previously blamed Johnson for making his wife's case worse by mistakenly stating, when he was foreign minister, that Zaghari-Ratcliffe had been training journalists while visiting Iran.

The pair "didn't talk about the past" on Thursday, he said.

Johnson "was very clear that he was committed in what he was doing... and that if there was anything they could do almost within reason, that they were ready to do it," Ratcliffe added.

"I don't doubt his personal commitment to Nazanin."

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