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Transcript
00:00If you're happy and you know it, clap your hands.
00:17If you're happy and you know it, clap your hands.
00:21If you're happy and you know it, and you really want to show it.
00:25If you're happy and you know it, clap your hands.
00:28Yay, is that good?
00:29Should we do it again?
00:30Yeah?
00:31If you're happy and you know it, clap your hands.
00:34If you're happy and you know it, clap your hands.
00:38They're definitely watching the Iranians.
00:41Yes, they'll be filming us.
00:45Shall I offer them a piece of birthday cake?
00:49Best not.
00:50As you say, as long as they know we're here, that's all that matters.
00:58Although it was forbidden, and although I fear punishment, I need to write down what
01:18is happening to me and how I feel.
01:21Today was yet another interrogation, last thing I was.
01:25Same question over and over.
01:28What is your machine?
01:31They terrorize and intimidate me.
01:34They know my weakness is my family, my child, my husband.
01:39They know myшееof.
01:49I am a person.
01:51Just are not alone.
01:52Let's do it again.
01:53I'm sorry.
01:54I'm sorry.
01:56I'm sorry.
01:58What is your machine?
02:00I can just start.
02:01I can help you.
02:02I can't help you.
02:04You're not.
02:05I can't help you.
02:06I can help you.
02:07I don't know what to do.
02:37What's going on?
02:39What's going on?
02:41What's going on?
02:43Let's go to the house.
02:45Let's go to the house.
02:53Hello?
02:55Hello, my mom is mine.
02:57You don't know?
02:59I don't know.
03:01Where are we going?
03:03We're going to go.
03:05Let's go.
03:07Let's go.
03:09Let's go to the house.
03:11I can't wait.
03:13I'm going to go to the house.
03:15I'll put it on the house.
03:17Oh, my God.
03:19What is it?
03:21I'm going to go to the house.
03:23My daughter.
03:35What do you think?
04:05When you look at your face, you will not be able to face your face.
04:18Let's go.
04:23Hello.
04:25Hello.
04:35Keep it, keep it you can't buy.
04:38I can't buy it.
04:40Why do you buy it?
04:46It's okay.
04:49Can I buy it?
04:51Yes.
05:05What's wrong?
05:15It's okay.
05:18Let's go.
05:22Let's go.
05:23Let's go.
05:24Let's go.
05:35Let's go.
06:05Let's go.
06:35Let's go.
07:05Let's go.
07:35Let's go.
08:05Let's go.
08:35Let's go.
09:05Let's go.
09:35Let's go.
10:05Let's go.
10:06Let's go.
10:07Let's go.
10:09Let's go.
10:11Let's go.
10:13Let's go.
10:15Let's go.
10:19Let's go.
10:21Let's go.
10:27Let's go.
10:29Let's go.
10:31Let's go.
10:41Let's go.
10:43Let's go.
10:53Let's go.
10:55Let's go.
10:57Let's go.
11:07Let's go.
11:09Let's go.
11:19Let's go.
11:21Let's go.
11:23Let's go.
11:24Let's go.
11:25Let's go.
11:26Let's go.
11:27Let's go.
11:28Let's go.
11:29Let's go.
11:30Let's go.
11:31Let's go.
11:32Let's go.
11:33Let's go.
11:34I don't know.
12:04I'm going to go to the house.
12:08I'm going to go to the house.
12:11I know that little boy is a little.
12:14Because...
12:17I'm going to think of that.
12:19And if you are going to be a good person.
12:21I'm not going to go to the house.
12:23I'm going to go to the house.
12:25I'm only going to go to the house who is going to go to the house.
12:28Listen. The rules are very good.
12:31If I can't be a good person,
12:33If I can't do it, I can't do it.
12:36But if I can't do it, I can't do it.
12:38I'm not sure.
12:40I need my child to see.
12:43I'm my mother.
12:45I've never been able to do it before.
12:47I've never been able to do it.
12:48I've never been able to do it.
12:49I can only tell you that.
12:52I want you to be able to do it.
12:57I know that you are your own.
13:01I'm a mother.
13:03I'm a family of my mother.
13:20My wife, I'll tell you.
13:23I'll tell you.
13:24It's a good thing.
13:30What happened to you when you see the judge?
13:35You tell me why you're sitting here?
13:41It's possible that I'm safe.
13:43If you feel that I'm a foreigner, I'm a foreigner.
13:47I'm sorry.
13:49This is an issue that I'm willing to give you to.
13:52I don't know what you think about it.
13:54I'm okay.
13:56I'll tell you about the situation.
14:16The enemy is here.
14:18I'm going to have to go to the side of my head.
14:24Hello?
14:26Hello.
14:32I'm not a good guy.
14:34I'm not a bad guy.
14:36I'm not a bad guy.
14:38I'm not a bad guy.
14:40I'm not a bad guy.
14:42I'm not a bad guy.
14:44I'm not a bad guy.
14:46I'm not a bad guy.
14:48I'm not a bad guy.
14:50I'm not a bad guy.
14:52I'm not a bad guy.
14:54I'm a model.
14:56I'm a bad guy.
14:58I'm a bad guy.
15:00I'm a bad guy.
15:02I'm a bad guy.
15:04I'm a bad guy.
15:08Do you work on television?
15:10No, I don't mind.
15:12Tell me what you want.
15:14I don't have control.
15:16There's a rule.
15:18If I can give you a sign.
15:20Are these shorts?
15:26I have a call for that.
15:28Nothing new to report, Mr. Ratcliffe, which is not to say dialogue's halted.
15:37Both the ambassador and minister are involved personally.
15:40Did you see my emails?
15:42We did. We read all of your emails.
15:44She was told she was to be released.
15:46She called her family and told them her car would be taking her to Kerman Airport.
15:51Yes, I saw.
15:52Did she get inside the car? Did she travel to the airport?
15:54Where is she now?
15:58Yeah. These are my concerns. Is she alive is another.
16:04We are raising these shared concerns, Mr. Ratcliffe.
16:08Let me assure you, we are taking this matter very seriously.
16:18One question. Why are you here?
16:24When you still have other more important things to be getting on with.
16:26Yeah, um, I'm doing my best, Patrick.
16:33I'm getting some things done. I don't think I've been totally useless.
16:37Richard, I'm not suggesting anything other than paid leave of absence.
16:43So go.
16:44Get Nazanine home safely.
16:46Then come back and do your job.
16:48Take a look at this photograph.
17:07This picture was taken from my phone.
17:20It is private.
17:22Who are these people?
17:25Who do you think they are?
17:26You know who they are.
17:29They're, they're, they're, they're my family.
17:31It's, it's, it's my husband's brother, his new wife, and an elephant.
17:37Do I need to tell you which is which?
17:39I don't know.
17:57I'm telling the truth.
17:59You will stop lying!
18:00I'm telling you the truth.
18:19Do my family know where I am?
18:26Do my family know where I am?
18:28You have been trained to lie.
18:33The names you've just spoken, I don't know.
18:36I am telling you the truth.
18:38I was raised to tell the truth.
18:42Do you have to tell me why I have to tell you the truth?
18:48Yes.
18:49Do you want me to tell you?
18:50I'm a model.
18:54A model?
18:56I have to tell you what I have told you.
18:58She says that you have encouraged her to flee from Iran.
19:02That is not true.
19:03And cross the Kurdish border.
19:05That is not true.
19:07Are you saying she's lying to me?
19:09No, I'm saying it is you who's not telling the truth.
19:12But your cell is bugged.
19:13We've heard every word spoken.
19:14Then you will know what I'm saying is true.
19:17Stop it with your lies and your tricks.
19:20Stop it.
19:20Stop it.
19:20This will not end until you cooperate.
19:29We are very patient.
19:31I want to see my daughter.
19:33I want to speak to my husband, my family.
19:35Why are you doing this to me?
19:37Why?
19:38Why?
19:38Why?
19:39Why?
19:39Why?
19:44Why?
19:51Day 20.
19:51Day 20.
19:51Day 20.
19:52Day 22.
19:59Day 24.
20:04Day 25.
20:06Day 24.
20:08my darling little child
20:15my body is aching
20:18for you
20:18it knows you're gone and I miss you
20:26where have you been
20:32all this time
20:33what have you been doing
20:35what have you been thinking each day
20:39when I'm not there
20:40Ghisul
21:03Ghisul
21:04Ghisul
21:05Ghisul
21:06Richard
21:07Richard
21:08Richard
21:09Richard
21:10Richard
21:11Richard
21:12Richard
21:13Richard
21:14Richard
21:15Richard
21:16Richard
21:17Richard
21:18Richard
21:19Richard
21:20Richard
21:21Richard
21:22Richard
21:23Richard
21:24Richard
21:25Richard
21:26Richard
21:27Richard
21:28Richard
21:29Richard
21:30Richard
21:31Richard
21:32Richard
21:33Richard
21:34What did you say?
22:04I'm sorry.
22:35Oh!
22:40Oh, let me—
22:44Oh, John!
22:47...خانم!
22:48...خانم خواهش می‌کنم.
22:51خانم ما معترم, آقا!
22:53آقا!
22:55اتاق، درپین و میکروفون داره.
22:58یاد آوری می‌کنم.
22:59هر تماس...
23:00...بقل ممنوعه.
23:03...بلبته بچه استثناست.
23:04You will have to say that you will only do one night.
23:10I want you to tell me everything you've been doing.
23:13Everything you've been doing.
23:34You'll be living in a hundred years.
23:36I'll give you a discount until you're living in a hundred years.
23:59I'm going to tell you that this is a right, Simon.
24:02I want to tell you English.
24:05I want to tell you that this is a right.
24:09What is it?
24:11They tell me that this is a right.
24:15I can tell you that this is a right.
24:23I want to talk to you with your father.
24:26If you say that the government of Britannia is married,
24:29I want to tell you that this is a right.
24:33If I do this,
24:35she will be free to you.
24:42What is it?
24:45What should I say to Richard?
24:46Richard began.
24:54Mr. Radcliffe, are you still there?
24:56Yes, yes I am.
24:58As far as I've been able to establish, there is no such deal.
25:02Nothing.
25:03Well, I'm just repeating what her brother in Iran was told.
25:09I mean, if there's no such deal, then why would they say there is?
25:14The Iranians say many things.
25:16There is no deal.
25:18No agreement to be made.
25:20We have no idea why her interrogators would claim that there is.
25:22It is.
25:24Right, thank you.
25:43Who do you think is telling the truth?
25:44The Iranians saying there is an agreement to be made,
25:47or the Foreign Office saying there isn't.
25:53I want to believe the Iranians.
25:56Because that means there's a reason Nazanin's being held.
26:00But I...
26:02I also want to believe in the Foreign Office.
26:06And that maybe there's a reason they can't say anything.
26:09Don't say anything.
26:10That's right.
26:12We don't know.
26:15I desperately want to trust them.
26:18Us.
26:20The British.
26:23They will be doing something.
26:24They will be doing something.
26:54That's right.
26:55They will be doing something.
26:56They will be failing.
26:57They will be failing.
26:59edereen will be failing.
27:01The needless of the foreign forces.
27:03They will not be forced to register their resume.
27:05As soon as they reach the Russian government,
27:07it will not have time to register their resume.
27:24Not great, Turner.
27:26Not great timing from us, to be fair.
27:28All anyone's interested in is Brexit.
27:35Thank you for coming.
27:38Today marks the hundredth day of Nazanin's abduction.
27:43For a hundred days, a mother, a British citizen,
27:46has been held inside an Iranian prison,
27:49willfully separated from her child.
27:52The intelligence services are admitting
27:54that they are detaining a mother and baby,
27:56not because of any suspicious activity in Iran,
27:58but as collateral for an unknown political deal.
28:02And they have asked me to make this unknown deal
28:05known to you, the media.
28:07Now, backed by over 780,000 voices,
28:12this petition will be delivered to number 10.
28:14I'm asking the Prime Minister, David Cameron,
28:18and his Foreign Secretary, Philip Hammond,
28:20to condemn Iran's actions in Parliament,
28:24and to ask the question,
28:26what is this deal Iran is seeking?
28:30The Prime Minister, the Prime Minister,
28:40and the Prime Minister,
28:40and the Prime Minister,
28:41and the Prime Minister,
28:42and the Prime Minister,
28:42and the Prime Minister,
28:43and the Prime Minister,
28:44and the Prime Minister,
28:44and the Prime Minister,
28:45and the Prime Minister,
28:45and the Prime Minister,
28:46and the Prime Minister,
28:46and the Prime Minister,
28:47and the Prime Minister,
28:47and the Prime Minister,
28:48and the Prime Minister,
28:48and the Prime Minister,
28:49and the Prime Minister,
28:50and the Prime Minister,
28:50and the Prime Minister,
28:51and the Prime Minister,
28:51and the Prime Minister,
28:52and the Prime Minister,
28:52and the Prime Minister,
28:53and the Prime Minister,
28:53and the Prime Minister,
28:54and the Prime Minister,
28:54and the Prime Minister,
28:55and the Prime Minister,
28:55and the Prime Minister,
28:56and the Prime Minister,
28:56You're welcome.
28:58I'm sorry.
29:00I can't get up.
29:05I've got a good time.
29:06I'm sorry.
29:08I was here.
29:10I am here.
29:13I am.
29:14I am here.
29:16I am here.
29:18I am here.
29:21I am here.
29:23I am here.
29:25I am here.
29:26I don't know what you're doing.
29:56Do you know what you're doing?
29:58Do you know what you're doing?
30:01I've had a good job.
30:10You've done a job.
30:16Did you work for BBC?
30:19Yes.
30:20I've worked for a couple of years.
30:23I've worked for a couple of years.
30:25You've worked for a couple of years?
30:28No, I'm not. I'm always doing a job.
30:30I want to leave you.
30:31If you have a job, you're going to be a legal system
30:34that you're going to be a legal system
30:36and you're going to be a legal system.
30:38Not a legal system.
30:45You've got a legal system,
30:47and you're going to be a legal system?
30:49No, it's legal.
30:51You've got a legal system.
30:53You're going to be a legal system.
30:55You want to go there?
30:57You don't have to be a legal system.
30:59You've got to go there.
31:01You want to be a legal system?
31:03You have to remain in your cases.
31:05I'll ask you a question and you'll write your question
31:08You don't need to write it
31:10If you write it, I'll write it
31:11And then I'll write it
31:14Mr. Gazi
31:19The answer is the same as I said before
31:22I don't understand any of these questions
31:24I don't want to do this
31:26I want to ask you a question
31:27I'll ask you a question
31:28I'll ask you a question
31:29Tell me
31:42Mr. Chapson
31:44Mr. Eisor
31:50Take me
31:56ORGAN PLAYS
32:26FOR NAZANIN
32:30THEY SAY THAT STONE WILL TURN INTO RUBY BY ENDURING PATIENCE
32:35YES IT WILL
32:36BUT WITH THAT COMES SO MUCH PAIN
32:39FROM FARAH
32:40FOR FARAH
32:42THANK YOU FOR YOUR POEM
32:44I PRAY IT WILL GIVE ME THE STRENGTH I WILL NEED IN THE YEARS TO COME
32:48BIA
32:55BIA
32:57BIA
33:03BIA
33:05BIA
33:07BIA
33:09BIA
33:10BIA
33:11I got my name, I got my name, and I got my name.
33:18Please give me a message.
33:22I'll give you my name.
33:35Please, please, you have to make a decision in the Islamic government.
33:41You have been punished for 5 years
33:477 years old
33:51It's hard to do
33:59I want you to make it
34:01I want you to leave
34:11I'm going to be 7 years old.
34:16I'm going to be 2 years old.
34:36You're going to get your husband to your husband.
34:39I don't want to go to my father. I'm going to give him a hug.
34:45I'm going to give him a hug.
34:49If you want to go to your father, you can tell him to him.
34:54But I'm just telling him.
34:57I don't know what my father is.
35:00We just want to talk to him.
35:09Hello? Hello?
35:33Richard, my love.
35:35Nazelyne, darling.
35:37How are you? Where are you?
35:39Richard, they say I'm guilty.
35:46Of what?
35:48I've been sentenced to five years of prison.
35:52Guilty of what?
35:54Five years.
35:57That is the sentence, yes, but what is it they say you are convicted of?
36:01In five years, my baby won't be seven.
36:04No, no, there's an in. Now, listen to me.
36:07We will get through this, and I promise, I promise you, I'll devote every hour to bringing you home.
36:11Five years apart.
36:13We will bring you home.
36:17I promise.
36:21Naz.
36:23You're welcome.
36:24You are pleasantly doing this.
36:25You are welcome.
36:38No.
36:39No.
36:40No.
36:41No.
36:42No.
36:44No.
36:45Yes, it is.
36:47My father.
36:49My father.
36:59You're not coming again.
37:01You're not coming.
37:03You're not coming.
37:05What's wrong?
37:09I'm not going to go back.
37:11I'm not going to go back.
37:13Okay.
37:17Just try and hold myself over.
37:19Oh, you're such a good girl.
37:21It's been so good for you.
37:23Thanks for your indication.
37:25And this is so helpful, thank you.
37:27It's been so beautiful for you.
37:32Hello.
37:35And weled us a much closer to you.
37:40Hello?
38:02Is this Richard Radcliffe?
38:04Husband to Nazanin Zegari?
38:07Who is this?
38:08I can't say.
38:09Not yet.
38:12Is this Richard Radcliffe?
38:14It is.
38:15Richard, do you have a pen and paper?
38:19You are going to want to write this down.
38:25Yes, go on.
38:27Regarding your claim of an outstanding deal between the Iranian and British governments,
38:31you are not wrong.
38:33The company you should investigate is called IMS, International Military Services Limited.
38:38They are fully owned by the British Ministry of Defense.
38:43They owe money and are currently being dragged through the British courts by M.O.D. Iran, no less.
38:48If this is all true, it would help to know who you are.
38:50It's all true, my friend.
38:52Dig deep.
38:53The information is there.
38:55Good luck.
38:552002, and we have something interesting.
39:22IMS make a payment of 400 million pounds to a U.K. court as a security, a bond.
39:28Why would they do that?
39:29A dispute.
39:30It has to be some kind of debt, doesn't it?
39:32It is a debt.
39:33Look.
39:34An award of damages plus interest was made against the company in connection with a contractual dispute with the government of Iran.
39:40There's a reduction in the debt from 500 to 400 million in 2006.
39:45But after that, there's no record of either a 400 million pound payment or cancellation of the debt.
39:52And the statement for the subsequent years shows that the dispute is ongoing.
39:58The latest negotiations taking place in 2016.
40:01Just before Nazanin was taken.
40:08We'll need to see the court records from 2002 to the present.
40:12Get on to Penny Madden.
40:14IMS did indeed pay a sizable amount of money to the U.K. courts as security for a debt owed to Iran.
40:22The claimant being the Iranian Ministry of Defense.
40:28Wow.
40:29It all dates back to the 1970s, would you believe, over 40 years ago.
40:36But this argument is still very much alive.
40:40In fact, closed-door negotiations between the U.K. and Iranian governments last took place in March and May of this year, 2016.
40:51The outcome of these negotiations was what, Penny?
40:55Well, as far as I can see, no agreement was reached.
40:59We were told they were holding on to her in May.
41:03Coincidence or were the Iranians trying to force an agreement?
41:06Penny, can you talk us through everything you found, please, beginning in the 1970s?
41:10It's 1971, and the oil-rich Shah of Iran signs a £650 million contract with the British government
41:26for weaponry and military vehicles, including tanks.
41:31The contract is made with the commercial arm of the MOD, International Military Services, a limited company, IMS.
41:43Fast forward to 1978, 1979, and we have the Iranian Revolution.
41:49Yeah, I remember it. I remember it being on the news.
41:57The Shah is overthrown, and he flees the country.
42:05At this point, the Shah has already paid £100 million to IMS for tanks,
42:12which, bar the odd few, have yet to be delivered and now will never be delivered.
42:16So Iran wants its money back, with interest.
42:20And why not?
42:22They're demanding their money back.
42:23This is when?
42:25Early 1980s. It becomes a legal dispute early 1990s.
42:29Iran takes IMS to the European Court of Arbitration in the Netherlands, and they win.
42:35IMS appeals on spurious grounds.
42:38The case goes to the Dutch Supreme Court, which rules in favour of Iran,
42:42and the arbitration becomes enforceable.
42:44So where's the problem, besides us paying the silly buggers?
42:49Well, initially, the Iran-Iraq war.
42:59The Saddam Hussein was our man in the Middle East.
43:02Iraq actually received some of the tanks Iran had paid for.
43:06Oh, dear God.
43:06The war lasts between 1980 and 1988.
43:11Legal arguments begin early 90s all the way through to the noughties.
43:16Then EU sanctions against Iran kick in around about 2008.
43:20But everything changed in January this year, 2016.
43:25The nuclear deal.
43:28JCPOA?
43:28Yes.
43:31What's that?
43:32Joint comprehensive plan of action between Iran, the US, and the EU.
43:39Very good, Jeff.
43:41Common knowledge.
43:42The plan of action allowed EU sanctions to be lifted.
43:46That is, most sanctions.
43:49Meaning that we, the UK, could pay 400 million to the Iranian Ministry of Health, for instance.
43:55But they can't pay, won't pay, the now 400 million to the Iranian Ministry of Defence.
44:02Even though it's their money.
44:04Even though we'd just be giving it back.
44:06Exactly.
44:07So it's not a payment, it's a refund.
44:10What we have to do is show that this debt is the reason Nazanim was taken.
44:16Well, it's true, though.
44:19Hmm.
44:32Come on.
44:37Come on.
44:43Come on.
44:56Come on.
44:58Come on.
45:00I want you to tell me who you are.
45:07I want you to tell me who you are.
45:13I know where you are.
45:16Mama?
45:17What is it?
45:30I want you to tell me who you are.
45:45I want you to tell me who you are.
45:51I want you to tell me who you are.
46:10I need to tell you how to make the room.
46:14I want you to tell me who you are.
46:16I cannot tell you who you are.
46:18Let's get it.
46:20Let's get it.
46:22Let's get it.
46:24Let's get it.
46:26Let's get it.
46:28It's necessary to buy food.
46:32This is not a way to buy food.
46:34It's not a way to buy food.
46:36It's been a year since 5 years.
46:38It's been 7 years.
46:40No.
46:42It's not a way to buy food.
46:44Why would you say it?
46:48You'd like to sell it.
46:50No.
46:52I'm going to sell it on my way.
46:54Let's get it.
46:56It's easy to sell.
47:00That's true.
47:02It will come.
47:18Richard, it's me.
47:28My darling, can you hear me? I'm here.
47:31Can you hear me?
47:33I can't do this.
47:35What do you mean?
47:37I want you to care for Gabriela, like I know you will.
47:41Yes, ma'am. What are you saying?
47:43It would be easier for you to forget me.
47:45You must move on with your lives without me.
47:51No, Nathanae, no, I do not accept that.
47:54I need you. Gabriela needs you.
47:57We love you. That isn't going to change.
48:00Ever.
48:03Nathanae.
48:08Hello?
48:10I, I, the man,
48:12looking,
48:14looking
48:14after your, uh,
48:17wife.
48:20I hope
48:21you,
48:23will
48:25collect her
48:28soon.
48:29then.
48:36I, the man,
48:39I, the man.
48:42The man who, the woman,
48:43can you care?
48:44What do you think about your husband?
48:51What do you think about your child?
48:54What do you think about your child?
48:57If you don't know what you're thinking about,
49:00what's your situation?
49:01Do you think about it?
49:03Do you think about it?
49:10I want to say it out loud.
49:12I want the public to know that my wife is being held
49:16in solitary confinement in an Iranian prison
49:20for the non-payment of a 40-year-old tank debt.
49:26I feel the Foreign Office know that too, but they won't admit it.
49:35So, how best do we do that?
49:39I know a journalist at the Sunday Times I might help.
49:42Is he good? Do we know him?
49:43No, you wouldn't know him, but he's well thought of.
49:45Yeah, Sunday Times is good.
49:47I'm in a splash of the Times. May well lead to more publicity.
49:50We could try for the Today programme. It is a political story.
49:53I think we should inform the Foreign Office of our intentions.
49:57I'll write to Tobias Elwood, tell him we have all the details
50:00of the tank debt and request a meeting.
50:02All right?
50:18My dear darling husband.
50:20I've loved you so much.
50:27Forgive me.
50:29I cannot be apart from you.
50:32I cannot be apart from Gisu.
50:36And I cannot bear for you to be apart from your daughter
50:39whom you love so dearly.
50:41I release you, my love.
50:45I forgive myself.
50:46That is my daughter.
50:47No.
51:11You pay me records without getting angry.
51:13But it doesn't have a power, meaning...
51:16...and it doesn't have a soul.
51:18She doesn't buy it.
51:20Why don't you buy it?
51:22What do you think is she doesn't buy it?
51:24Then you will ask me to ask her.
51:25She is this.
51:26She is here.
51:27Let's go.
51:28Please.
51:29Please.
51:30Please.
51:31Please.
51:32Please.
51:33Please.
51:34Please.
51:37Please.
51:38Please.
51:39Please.
51:40Please.
51:41Please.
51:42Please.
51:48I release you, my love.
51:55She must have written the note when she was refusing food.
52:03Is that all?
52:08But now things have changed.
52:10They brought her food when we were there.
52:13She is a prize to them.
52:15She has value.
52:19She needs to know that she has not forgotten.
52:22She needs to know that we are here.
52:24Here.
52:25I am here.
52:26Always.
52:27Do you hear me, Mohammed?
52:28Always.
52:29And I always will be.
52:30Always.
52:34She needs to know I will keep my promise.
52:37I promise.
52:38The husband of a woman who is in jail in Iran has accused the Foreign Office of dragging its
52:47feet on seeking her release.
52:48Mrs. Zagari Ratcliffe's husband, Richard Ratcliffe, says the Foreign Office has not done all it could do.
52:54Could do.
52:55And he thinks he knows why.
52:56She says she's been used as a bargaining chip.
52:58Iran says that Britain owes it 400 million pounds as part of an arms deal dating back 40 years or so.
53:06The Foreign Office won't tell us anything about that particular situation.
53:09You've seen it?
53:14Yeah, I've seen it.
53:17What the fuck has happened?
53:18Were we not promised a splash?
53:20With only one source, it's you claiming one thing and the Foreign Office saying another.
53:25And I think we may well have been briefed against.
53:29Meaning what?
53:30Meaning that one or two people in the media will have been told, quite sympathetically, that
53:38Richard Ratcliffe is understandably emotional and going through a very difficult and traumatic time.
53:49So what now?
53:51You answer your phone. We'll go for a pint.
53:54It's Penny.
53:57Penny, yes, I've seen it.
53:58Forget that. That's old news. We've been offered a meeting with Tobias Elwood.
54:03When?
54:04Day after tomorrow. It's unheard of.
54:08Is he rattled, do you think?
54:11Well, we certainly have his attention.
54:14Both we at the Foreign Office and the Iranian Minister are aware of your most recent press appearance,
54:21the BBC's Today programme and the piece in the Sunday Times.
54:25Yes.
54:27The Iranians are concerned that you're trying to politicise the agenda.
54:30No. All I want to do is to bring Naslin home safely and soon.
54:36Which is what I told them.
54:38But it does not help that you appear to be, if not misinformed, then misguided.
54:44Your emotional response is, of course, natural and understandable.
54:48Perhaps some form of therapy might help.
54:57Thank you for your concern.
55:01And perhaps if I clarified the position in relation to the tanks.
55:04Please.
55:05The tanks were due to be sold to the Iranians in the 1970s.
55:08The British government took the money but did not supply the tanks.
55:13Instead, those tanks went to Iraq.
55:16All the money received from Iran then sat in an account.
55:20However, due to the sanctions now in place, it's not possible to deliver this money to Iran.
55:23There's no way around this? By using the Amanis, for example?
55:28No. The Iranians are aware of this.
55:31So what did the Revolutionary Guard mean when they said,
55:35tell your government to do a deal?
55:37Well, they are part of a hard-line government who are encouraging you to highlight quite falsely
55:42that the West does not play fair. Pure propaganda.
55:46Nazanin being taken and the tank deal are very much two separate issues.
55:51Then why have they taken her? If not for leverage?
55:56Paranoia.
55:58You would agree there are thousands of Iranians in exactly the same position as Nazanin.
56:03Anyone who appears suspicious will be on their radar.
56:07This is a mother and baby. The only thing that could identify Nazanin as being suspicious is her dual nationality.
56:14Her passport is why she was taken and her passport gives them leverage.
56:18It's not us or our campaign that has politicized her kidnapping.
56:25You are emotional and under enormous pressure of that, I am certain.
56:29And pressure leads to misunderstandings.
56:33Make no mistake. The Iranians watch for every word spoken, be it Prime Minister's questions in the press or the Today programme.
56:45Your approach and your campaign are, to put it bluntly, damaging.
56:50You have people around you who are saying, well done, but they are wrong.
56:56We must be seen by the Iranians, Richard, to be as one.
57:00You could tweet that you've just met with Tobias Elwood, for example.
57:04You mean, well, of course you do, but...
57:07Well, perhaps a more useful outlet for both you and Nazanin would be to keep a diary.
57:17THE MOODIS REGULATIONS
57:32THE MOODIS REGULATIONS
57:39I'm going to give you my heart
57:42If I have you
57:46I'm going to give you my heart
57:54I'm going to give you my heart
57:57Can you give me my heart?
58:09My name is my father.
58:14My name is Alina.
58:39My name is Alina.
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