- 8 hours ago
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00:00If you're happy and you know it, clap your hands.
00:03If you're happy and you know it, and you really want to show it.
00:07If you're happy and you know it, clap your hands.
00:09Yay, thank you.
00:10Should we do it again?
00:12Yeah.
00:12If you're happy and you know it, clap your hands.
00:15If you're happy and you know it, clap your hands.
00:19They're definitely watching, the Iranians.
00:21Yes, they'll be filming us.
00:26So I often want a piece of birthday cake.
00:27Best not.
00:30As you say, as long as they know we're here, that's all that matters.
00:50Although it was forbidden, and although I fear punishment,
00:54I need to write down what is happening to me and how I feel.
01:00Today was yet another interrogation lasting hours.
01:04Same question over and over.
01:07What is your machine?
01:10They terrorize and intimidate me.
01:13They know my weakness is my family, my child, my husband.
01:16They know my weakness is my husband.
01:46Let's go.
02:16You have to go home.
02:18We'll go home.
02:20And we'll go home.
02:28Hello?
02:29Hello, my mom, I'm mine.
02:31You can't do that.
02:33My mom, I'm going to go home.
02:35Where am I going?
02:36Go home.
02:38I'm going to go home.
02:40I'm going home.
02:42I'm going home.
02:44I'm going home.
02:46I'm going home.
02:48I'm going home.
02:50Oh my God.
02:52Oh my God.
02:54I'm going home.
02:56I'm going home.
03:08Good evening.
03:10Oh, my God.
03:12I'm watching you.
03:14What's going on?
03:16What's going on?
03:18What's going on?
03:20Something first?
03:22It's not going on.
03:24No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
03:54No, no, no, no, no.
04:24No, no, no, no, no.
04:54No, no, no, no, no.
05:24No, no, no, no.
05:54No, no, no, no.
06:24No, no, no, no, no.
06:54No, no, no, no.
07:24No, no, no, no, no, no.
07:54No, no, no, no, no.
08:24No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
08:54No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
08:58Another lie, another game, and now she's God knows where.
09:14Can we ask, have they actually officially asked the question,
09:18where is she, what the hell's going on, or is that not allowed?
09:20In fairness, the Foreign Office will say they've already asked that question.
09:23Yeah, but we've received not one satisfactory answer.
09:25At the moment, I can only follow government advice,
09:29and for the sake of Nazanin's safety, not speak out in public.
09:34Yeah, I can't rule out not going to Iran myself.
09:37I think I need to go there.
09:40But it's not safe, Richard, and the Foreign Office would never allow it.
09:43But I think that's a decision for later.
09:49How much later?
09:52How much later?
09:55What the hell?
10:14I'll give you an information on your one.
10:17They got relying on how they are drawing the one.
10:19Huh?
10:22I don't know.
10:52What's that?
10:57I am a girl.
10:58I am not a girl.
11:02Is it safe for my wife?
11:04Are you sure what your wife learned?
11:06Yes.
11:09Is it your day?
11:10Yes.
11:11This is good.
11:13I'll show you your daily daily.
11:16Let me go to the scene.
11:19I know that you are young.
11:21That's why you want to think about it.
11:26And that's why you have a problem.
11:28Mr. Kazi, I have no problem.
11:30I'm just a mother who did my children.
11:35Look, your rules will be very easy.
11:37If I'm confident that I have a problem,
11:41then I'll be free.
11:43But if I'm not confident, then I'll be free.
11:45I'm just a mother.
11:47I'll just want to see a boy.
11:49I'm the mother.
11:51My father is in a way.
11:53I'm happy with her.
11:54Why am I not doing this?
11:56I can only say that.
11:58I should tell you.
12:03I know that you are your mother.
12:07I'm a mother.
12:08I'm a married mother.
12:17She said it's not something hard to say.
12:22My son, I have to ask you so much.
12:26I'm going to ask you a question.
12:31I'm going to ask you to ask you what you're saying.
12:37Then you'll ask me what you're saying.
12:39Or what you're saying, I'm going to ask you.
12:42I'm going to ask you a few questions.
12:45I know you have to do it.
12:47I'll tell you that I'm a survivor.
12:49I'm a survivor.
12:50You're a survivor.
12:52It's a very hard problem.
12:54It's a horror topic that you think do.
12:56I think I'm okay.
12:58I'll give up.
13:00You can see the situation.
13:15I don't know what to do.
13:45I'm a man.
13:47I'm a man.
13:49I'm a man.
13:51I'm a man.
13:53I'm a man.
13:55I'm a model.
13:57I'm a man who is happy to get.
13:59He's sexy.
14:03Well, I'm happy to be.
14:07Do you work on television?
14:09No, I don't think I can.
14:11Tell me something.
14:13I don't have control.
14:15There's a problem.
14:19All these shorts.
14:23I'm happy.
14:29Nothing new to report, Mr. Ratcliffe.
14:33Which is not to say dialogues halted.
14:35Both the ambassador and minister are involved personally.
14:39Did you see my emails?
14:41She was told she was to be released.
14:43She called her family and told them her car would be taking her to Kerman Airport.
14:47Yes, I saw.
14:49Did she get inside the car?
14:50Did she travel to the airport?
14:51Where is she now?
14:57These are my concerns.
14:59Is she alive is another.
15:01We are raising these shared concerns, Mr. Ratcliffe.
15:05Let me assure you.
15:07We are taking this matter very seriously.
15:11One question.
15:15Why are you here?
15:17When you still have other more important things to be getting on with.
15:23Yeah.
15:24I'm doing my best, Patrick.
15:27I'm getting some things done.
15:31I don't think I've been totally useless.
15:33I'm not suggesting anything other than pay leave of absence.
15:37So go.
15:39Get Nazanin home safely.
15:41Then come back and do your job.
15:43Take a look at this photograph.
16:07This picture was taken from my phone.
16:13This is private.
16:15Who are these people?
16:17Who do you think they are?
16:19You know who they are.
16:21They're my family.
16:23It's my husband's brother.
16:27His new wife and an elephant.
16:29Do I need to tell you which is which?
16:37How are you?
16:39I don't know.
16:45I don't know.
16:47I'm telling the truth.
16:49You will stop lying!
16:51I'm telling you the truth.
17:05I'm telling you the truth.
17:09I was raised to tell the truth.
17:11I finally know where I am?
17:14Do my family know where I am?
17:16Do my family know where I am?
17:17I have been trying to lie.
17:19The...
17:21The names we've just spoken...
17:23I don't know.
17:24I am telling you the truth.
17:26I was raised to tell the truth.
17:27I am telling the truth.
17:28I'm telling you the truth.
17:30No one was wrong,
17:37Do you remember you?
17:39I think a model.
17:42A model?
17:44I think a god.
18:07Stop it!
18:13This will not end until you cooperate.
18:16We are very patient.
18:18I want to see my daughter.
18:20I want to speak to my husband, my family.
18:22Why are you doing this to me?
18:24Why? Why? Why? Why?
18:30Why?
18:37Why?
18:59My darling little child.
19:01My body is aching for you.
19:08It knows you're gone and I miss you.
19:15Where have you been all this time?
19:18What have you been doing?
19:21What have you been thinking each day when I'm not there?
19:37Who I spied now?
19:40Can I understand you?
19:45Dishes dropped off.
19:46Dishes, Dishes.
19:47Dishes!
19:48Richard!
19:49Richard, Richard!
19:51I'm not sure how to do that.
20:00I'm not sure how to do that.
20:07I'm not sure how to say it.
20:11I'm not sure how to do that.
20:13The job is to do that.
20:15I'm not going to do anything.
20:19Please leave me.
20:21You can see your child.
20:24I have brought my child to Iran.
20:28I wanted to have a friend of mine.
20:31I wanted to have a friend of mine.
20:40Did you hear what I said?
20:45Let me go.
21:15Let me go.
21:17Let me go.
21:19Let me go.
21:20Let me go.
21:22What is it?
21:24I want you to tell me everything you've been doing, everything you've been doing, everything you've been doing.
21:51Oh
22:21We'll see you
22:23Yes
22:33We're not a person in this situation
22:37The English people will bring you
22:40And the king will take you back
22:44What is it?
22:45They tell you they are aware, it is the same
22:48I can't agree with you,
22:50I can't agree with you.
22:56I want to talk to you about your father.
22:59Do you want to talk about the government of Britannia?
23:03Yes.
23:04We can't agree with you.
23:06If you do this work,
23:08the husband of you will be free.
23:14What do you mean?
23:16I can't agree with you.
23:26Mr. Radcliffe, are you still there?
23:28Yes, yes I am.
23:29As far as I've been able to establish,
23:31there is no such deal.
23:33Nothing?
23:36Well, I'm just repeating what her brother in Iran was told.
23:40I mean, if there's no such deal,
23:42then why would they say there is?
23:44The Iranians say many things.
23:47There is no deal.
23:48No agreement to be made.
23:49We have no idea why her interrogators would claim that there is.
23:55Right, thank you.
23:56Who do you think is telling the truth?
24:13The Iranians saying there is an agreement to be made,
24:16or the Foreign Office saying there isn't?
24:19I want to believe the Iranians.
24:24Because that means there's a reason Nazanin's being held.
24:28But I...
24:30I also want to believe in the Foreign Office.
24:34And that maybe there's a reason they can't say anything.
24:38That's right.
24:40We don't know.
24:41I desperately want to trust them.
24:45Us.
24:47The British.
24:50They...
24:51They will be doing something.
24:52gang.
24:58nggak
24:59mail'in.
25:03It's all.
25:07Oh Lord.
25:10It's fine.
25:12And you are not gonna do anything.
25:13and you will have to give yourself a personal opinion.
25:17Your husband must tell you that the British government will not be able to do it.
25:22It's very easy.
25:24But if the British government will not be able to do it,
25:28the government will not be able to do it.
25:43Not great, Turner.
25:50Not great timing from us, to be fair.
25:52All anyone's interested in is Brexit.
25:58Thank you for coming.
26:01Today marks the hundredth day of Nazanin's abduction.
26:06For a hundred days, a mother, a British citizen,
26:09has been held inside an Iranian prison, willfully separated from her child.
26:15The intelligence services are admitting that they are detaining a mother and baby,
26:19not because of any suspicious activity in Iran,
26:21but as collateral for an unknown political deal.
26:25And they have asked me to make this unknown deal known to you, the media.
26:30Now, backed by over 780,000 voices, this petition will be delivered to number 10.
26:36I'm asking the Prime Minister, David Cameron, and his Foreign Secretary, Philip Hammond,
26:42to condemn Iran's actions in Parliament,
26:46and to ask the question, what is this deal Iran is seeking?
27:36I'm sorry.
28:06Well you can't wait to see me a little bit.
28:08I don't know what I'm doing.
28:10And I'm doing that to Iran.
28:12You don't have to do that to you?
28:14You will have to see me?
28:18I have to wait for you to see yourself.
28:26I'm not even too much for this job.
28:32Do you have to do this job?
28:34Yes, many years ago, I started working on my own work.
28:40Did you do the BBC work in the BBC?
28:43No, I didn't do that.
28:45I would like to give you the time.
28:47I would like to give you the rules of the law,
28:49which is the law of the law,
28:53not the law of the law.
28:59How do you do that?
29:01I'm sorry.
29:31It's the same as I said before.
29:34I have no idea what to do with this, but I don't have to do it.
29:38I'll give you my advice. I'll give you my child.
29:46Mr. Shabani,
29:48you will be able to do this and you will be able to do it.
29:54You will be able to do it.
30:31For Nazanin, they say that stone will turn into ruby by enduring patience.
30:45Yes, it will.
30:46But with that comes so much pain.
30:49From Farah.
30:50For Farah, thank you for your poem.
30:54I pray it will give me the strength I will need in the years to come.
31:01Come on.
32:01I pray it will give you the strength I will need in the years to come.
32:07I pray it will give you the strength I will need in the years to come.
32:11I pray it will give you the strength I will need in the years to come.
32:21I pray it will give you the strength I will need in the years to come.
32:23I pray it will give you the strength I will need in the years to come.
32:29I pray it will give you the strength I will need in the years to come.
32:39I pray it will give you the strength I will need in the years to come.
32:43I don't want my wife to leave. I'll make my wife a little.
32:48I'll make my wife a little.
32:52If you don't leave my wife a little, I'll tell you about it.
32:57But I'll tell you only.
33:00We don't know what's going on in English.
33:03We just want to relate to our relationship.
33:13Hello? Hello?
33:34Richard, my love.
33:36Nazelyne, darling.
33:38How are you? Where are you?
33:40Richard, they say I'm guilty.
33:47Of what?
33:48I've been sentenced to five years of prison.
33:52Guilty of what?
33:54Five years.
33:56That is the sentence, yes, but what is it they say you are convicted of?
34:01In five years, my baby will be seven.
34:03No, no, that's an end. No, no, listen to me.
34:06We will get through this and I promise, I promise you, I'll devote every hour to bringing you home.
34:11Five years apart.
34:12We will bring you home.
34:16I promise.
34:20Naz.
34:21Two years apart.
34:23Yeah, I promise.
34:24One.
34:25All right.
34:26One.
34:27One.
34:28Two.
34:29One.
34:30One.
34:31Two.
34:32One.
34:33One.
34:34One.
34:35One.
34:36Two.
34:37One.
34:38Two.
34:39Two.
34:40Two.
34:41One.
34:42One.
34:43Two.
34:44One.
34:45One.
34:46One.
34:47One.
34:48One.
34:49Two.
34:50Oh
35:20Do you want me?
35:21It's okay.
35:22Let me show you.
35:23It's okay.
35:50Hello.
35:51Is this Richard Radcliffe, husband to Nazanin Zaghari?
36:00Who is this?
36:02I can't say.
36:03Not yet.
36:04Is this Richard Radcliffe?
36:07It is.
36:08Richard, do you have a pen and paper?
36:11You are going to want to write this down.
36:14Yes, go on.
36:19Regarding your claim of an outstanding deal between the Iranian and British governments,
36:24you are not wrong.
36:25The company you should investigate is called IMS, International Military Services Limited.
36:30They are fully owned by the British Ministry of Defense.
36:34They owe money and they are currently being dragged through the British courts by MOD Iran no less.
36:39If this is all true, it would help to know who you are.
36:42It's all true, my friend.
36:43Dig deep.
36:44The information is there.
36:46Good luck.
36:492002 and we have something interesting.
37:00IMS make a payment of 400 million pounds to a UK court as a security, a bond.
37:17Why would they do that?
37:18A dispute?
37:19It has to be some kind of debt, doesn't it?
37:21It is a debt.
37:22Look.
37:23An award of damages plus interest was made against the company in connection with a contractual dispute with the government of Iran.
37:29There's a reduction in the debt from 500 to 400 million in 2006.
37:34But after that, there's no record of either a 400 million pound payment or cancellation of the debt.
37:40And the statement for the subsequent years shows that the dispute is ongoing.
37:46The latest negotiation is taking place in 2016.
37:53IMS did indeed pay a sizeable amount of money to the UK courts as security for a debt owed to Iran.
38:10The claimant being the Iranian Ministry of Defence.
38:14Wow.
38:15It all dates back to the 1970s, would you believe, over 40 years ago.
38:23But this argument is still very much alive.
38:26In fact, closed door negotiations between the UK and Iranian governments last took place in March and May of this year, 2016.
38:37The outcome of these negotiations was what, Penny?
38:40Well, as far as I can see, no agreement was reached.
38:44We were told they were holding on to her in May.
38:47Coincidence or were the Iranians trying to force an agreement?
38:50Penny, can you talk us through everything you found, please, beginning in the 1970s?
38:55It's 1971, and the oil-rich Shah of Iran signs a £650 million contract with the British government for weaponry and military vehicles, including tanks.
39:14The contract is made with the commercial arm of the MOD, International Military Services, a limited company, IMS.
39:23Fast forward to 1978, 1979, and we have the Iranian Revolution.
39:31Yeah, I remember it.
39:32I remember it being on the news.
39:34The Shah is overthrown and he flees the country.
39:42At this point, the Shah has already paid £100 million to IMS for tanks which, bar the odd few, have yet to be delivered and now will never be delivered.
39:58So Iran wants its money back. With interest. And why not?
40:03They're demanding their money back.
40:05This it is when?
40:06Early 1980s. It becomes a legal dispute early 1990s.
40:10Iran takes IMS to the European Court of Arbitration in the Netherlands and they win.
40:16IMS appeals on spurious grounds. The case goes to the Dutch Supreme Court which rules in favour of Iran and the arbitration becomes enforceable.
40:25So where's the problem, besides us paying the silly buggers?
40:28Well, initially the Iran-Iraq war.
40:30The Saddam Hussein was our man in the Middle East. Iraq actually received some of the tanks Iran had paid for.
40:44Oh dear God.
40:46The war lasts between 1980 and 1988. Legal arguments begin early 90s all the way through to the noughties.
40:54Then EU sanctions against Iran kick in around about 2008.
40:58But everything changed in January this year, 2016.
41:03The nuclear deal. JCPOA?
41:07Yes.
41:09What's that?
41:10Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.
41:13Between Iran, the US and the EU.
41:17Very good, Jeff.
41:19Common knowledge.
41:21The Plan of Action allowed EU sanctions to be lifted. That is, most sanctions.
41:26Meaning that we, the UK, could pay 400 million to the Iranian Ministry of Health, for instance.
41:32But they can't pay, won't pay, the now 400 million to the Iranian Ministry of Defence.
41:38Even though it's their money? Even though we'd just be giving it back?
41:42Exactly. So it's not a payment, it's a refund.
41:46What we have to do, is show that this debt is the reason Nazanim was taken.
41:52Oh, it's children.
41:53Oh.
41:54It's children.
41:55Oh.
41:56Oh.
41:57Oh.
41:58Oh.
41:59Oh.
42:00Oh.
42:01Oh.
42:02Oh.
42:05Oh, oh.
42:10Mom?
42:13Mom?
42:26What's this?
42:30I don't know, Mom.
42:36What are you doing?
42:40I want to tell you what you are.
42:46I don't know where you are.
42:49Mom?
42:50Mom?
42:51What's this?
43:10Mom?
43:12Mom?
43:14Mom?
43:15Mom?
43:16Mom?
43:17Mom?
43:18Mom?
43:19Mom?
43:20Oh my god.
43:21I don't know.
43:51I don't know.
43:53I don't know.
43:55I don't know.
43:57I don't know.
43:59It's necessary to get a job.
44:01This job is not going to be done.
44:03This job is not going to be done.
44:05It's been a year since 5 years.
44:07I'm going to be 7 years old.
44:09No.
44:11It's not going to be done.
44:13Why do I have to give you a little bit of a word?
44:21Would you like to contact me?
44:23Don't let me know.
44:25Don't let me know.
44:27Don't let me know.
44:29Richard, it's me.
44:39My darling, can you hear me?
44:43I'm here.
44:45Can you hear me?
44:47I can't do this.
44:49What do you mean?
44:51I want you to care for Gabriella.
44:53Like I know you will.
44:55What are you saying?
44:57It would be easier for you to forget me.
44:59You must move on with your lives without me.
45:01No, that's it.
45:03No, I do not accept that.
45:05I need you. Gabriella needs you.
45:07We love you.
45:09That isn't going to change.
45:11Ever.
45:13That's it.
45:15That's it.
45:17No, I do not accept that.
45:19I need you. Gabriella needs you.
45:21We love you.
45:23That isn't going to change.
45:25Ever.
45:27What?
45:33Hello.
45:35I am the man looking after your wife.
45:45I hope you will collect her soon.
45:57That is what is going on with you.
45:59I don't know.
46:01You'll be careful.
46:03What did you care about?
46:05What's your see?
46:07That is what you like?
46:09You think that is what you are?
46:11That is
46:13What is she like?
46:15manufacturer?
46:17That is what you do.
46:19If you can stage your voice you can tell?
46:21What behavior
46:27I want to say it out loud.
46:34I want the public to know that my wife is being held in solitary confinement in an Iranian prison for the non-payment of a 40-year-old tank debt.
46:48I feel the Foreign Office know that too, but they won't admit it.
46:51So, how best do we do that?
47:01I know a journalist at the Sunday Times, I might help.
47:03Is he good? Do we know him?
47:05No, you wouldn't know him, but he's well thought of.
47:06Yeah, Sunday Times is good.
47:08I'm in a splash of the Times. May well lead to more publicity.
47:11We could try for the Today programme. It is a political story.
47:14I think we should inform the Foreign Office of our intentions.
47:17I'll write to Tobias Elwood, tell him we have all the details of the tank debt and request a meeting.
47:22Alright?
47:36My dear, darling husband.
47:41I've loved you so much.
47:44Forgive me.
47:47I cannot be apart from you.
47:50I cannot be apart from Gisu.
47:54And I cannot bear for you to be apart from your daughter whom you love so dearly.
48:01I release you, my love.
48:02I miss you, my love.
48:03I don't have anything.
48:05I have to make sure the Monique has needed to be apart from you.
48:11Well, I know.
48:13The Chief of the Man who never has to be apart from you.
48:15My brother is a slave.
48:16My brother is not enough to speak to you.
48:18My brother is a slave.
48:19By the way, she is not a slave.
48:21My brother is worth waiting on me.
48:22You guys have to be apart from you.
48:24I want a man who has to be apart from you.
48:25My brother is a slave.
48:26I am not a slave.
48:27My brother doesn't buy it.
48:28He doesn't buy it.
48:30He doesn't buy it.
48:34He doesn't buy it.
48:36Why are you doing that?
48:38Let's ask them to ask them.
48:40They are these.
48:41We will get them.
48:43Come on.
48:48God!
48:49What the hell?
48:53Come here! Come here!
49:03I release you, my love.
49:09She must have written the note when she was refusing food.
49:17Is that all?
49:20But now things have changed.
49:24They brought her food when we were there.
49:27She is a prize to them.
49:29She has value.
49:32She needs to know that she has not forgotten.
49:36She needs to know that we are here. I am here.
49:39Always.
49:41Do you hear me, Mohammed? Always.
49:43And I always will be. Always.
49:47She needs to know I will keep my promise.
49:49I promise.
49:55The husband of a woman who is in jail in Iran has accused the Foreign Office of dragging its feet on seeking her release.
50:00Mrs. Zagali Ratcliffe's husband, Richard Ratcliffe, says the Foreign Office has not done all it could do.
50:06And he thinks he knows why.
50:07She says she's been used as a bargaining chip.
50:09Iran says that Britain owes it 400 million pounds as part of an arms deal dating back 40 years or so.
50:16The Foreign Office won't tell us anything about that particular situation.
50:19You've seen it?
50:26Yeah, I've seen it.
50:27What the fuck has happened?
50:29Were we not promised a splash?
50:31With only one source, it's you claiming one thing and the Foreign Office saying another.
50:35And I think we may well have been briefed against.
50:39Meaning what?
50:40Meaning that one or two people in the media will have been told, quite sympathetically, that Richard Ratcliffe is understandably emotional and going through a very difficult and traumatic time.
50:58So what now?
51:00You answer your phone, we'll go for a pint.
51:03It's Penny.
51:05Penny, yes, I've seen it.
51:06Forget that, that's old news. We've been offered a meeting with Tobias Elwood.
51:11When?
51:12Day after tomorrow. It's unheard of.
51:16Is he rattled, do you think?
51:18Well, we certainly have his attention.
51:22Both we at the Foreign Office and the Iranian Minister are aware of your most recent press appearance, the BBC's Today programme and the piece in the Sunday Times.
51:32Yes.
51:34The Iranians are concerned that you're trying to politicise the agenda.
51:38No. All I want to do is to bring Nazanin home safely and soon.
51:42Which is what I told them.
51:44But it does not help that you appear to be, if not misinformed, then misguided.
51:50Your emotional response is, of course, natural and understandable.
51:55Perhaps some form of therapy might help.
52:00Thank you for your concern.
52:03And perhaps if I clarified the position in relation to the tanks.
52:09Please.
52:11The tanks were due to be sold to the Iranians in the 1970s.
52:14The British government took the money but did not supply the tanks.
52:18Instead, those tanks went to Iraq.
52:19All the money received from Iran then sat in an account.
52:24However, due to the sanctions now in place, it's not possible to deliver this money to Iran.
52:28There's no way around this? By using the Amanis, for example?
52:32No. The Iranians are aware of this.
52:34So what did the Revolutionary Guard mean when they said, tell your government to do a deal?
52:41Well, they are part of a hard-line government who are encouraging you to highlight quite falsely that the West does not play fair.
52:48Pure propaganda.
52:50Nazanin being taken and the tank deal are very much two separate issues.
52:54Then why have they taken her? If not for leverage?
52:59Paranoia.
53:01You would agree there are thousands of Iranians in exactly the same position as Nazanin.
53:06Anyone who appears suspicious will be on their radar.
53:09This is a mother and baby. The only thing that could identify Nazanin as being suspicious is her dual nationality.
53:16Her passport is why she was taken and her passport gives them leverage.
53:20It's not us or our campaign that has politicized her kidnapping.
53:26You are emotional and under enormous pressure of that, I am certain.
53:30And pressure leads to misunderstandings.
53:35Make no mistake, the Iranians watch for every word spoken, be it Prime Minister's questions in the press or the Today programme.
53:44Your approach and your campaign are, to put it bluntly, damaging.
53:51You have people around you who are saying well done, but they are wrong.
53:56We must be seen by the Iranians, Richard, to be as one.
54:00You could tweet that you've just met with Tobias Ellwood, for example.
54:03You mean, well, of course you do, but perhaps a more useful outlet for both you and Nazanin would be to keep a diary.
54:14U.S. Marianas in thecrumbs
54:19In thecrumbs
54:21I am sorry.
54:22It is a sign of the name of my Lord.
54:25I notice that I know I am.
54:27I know I am sorry.
54:29It is a sign of the name of my heart.
54:31I am sorry.
54:34The name of my Lord is the name of my Lord.
54:37I am sorry I am sorry.
54:39اگه تو رو داشته باشم
54:45یه هم صحبتم برا تو بردم
54:54می تونین با هم غذا بخارید
54:56Man, he's my father.
55:10Yeah, no, Serena.
55:26Yeah, no, Serena.
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