March 7, 2021
This Week in Human Rights News
Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe freed in Iran
Sources: Al Jazeera, BBC, The Guardian, Reuters
Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe was freed today from her electronic monitoring bracelet after being moved from prison into house arrest in March 2020 due to Covid-19.
The year Nazanin spent in house arrest completed her five-year sentence; of which she spent more than four years in prison, including nearly nine months in windowless solitary confinement in two separate prisons.
Nazanin, a British-Iranian aid worker, was arrested in April 2016 with her young daughter at Tehran Airport and was convicted of plotting to overthrow the clerical establishment.
Since her arrest, Nazanin has gone twice on hunger strike in protest of her conditions and has been denied consular access since Iran does not recognise her dual citizenship status.
However, she may still face new charges and it is unclear whether she will be able to leave Iran, as she is still under a travel ban.
Nazanin’s lawyer, Hojjat Kermani, said that a court date was set on March 14 for her second case where is accused of propaganda against the Islamic Republic’s system for participating in a rally in front of the Iranian Embassy in London in 2009.
Nazanin’s husband, Richard Ratcliffe is said to have had a mixed reaction to the news, as she still has to appear in front of a court in a few days.
Despite welcoming the removal of her ankle tag, Dominic Raab, the British foreign minister said that Iran continued to put her and her family through a “cruel and an intolerable ordeal”.
The decision on a possible second set of charges is thought to rest on the broader complicated state of UK-Iranian diplomatic relations.
Nazanin and her husband have long contended she is being held as a bargaining chip to secure the release of more than £400m debt that the UK acknowledges it owes to Iran but says it cannot pay due to sanctions against Iran.
In a statement, the UK Foreign Ministry said that “We do not accept Iran detaining dual British nationals as diplomatic leverage. The regime must end its arbitrary detention of all dual British nationals.”