Sunday, June 30, 2019

British-Iranian woman jailed in Iran ends hunger strike

Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, imprisoned since 2016 on sedition charges she denies, began refusing food over two weeks ago.
Ratcliffe also ended his own hunger strike outside the Iranian Embassy in London [File: Peter Nicholls/Reuters]Ratcliffe also ended his own hunger strike outside the Iranian Embassy in London [File: Peter Nicholls/Reuters]

 29 June 2019

Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, a British-Iranian woman jailed in Iran since 2016 on sedition charges she denies, has ended a hunger strike aimed at pushing for her release, according to her husband.
Zaghari-Ratcliffe, a 41-year-old charity worker with the Thomson Reuters Foundation, began the hunger strike more than two weeks ago, on her daughter Gabriella's fifth birthday.
Richard Ratcliffe, her husband, told BBC radio that he had spoken to his wife on Saturday and she was ending the action.
"She's decided to stop her hunger strike," he said. "She said that in fact she'd had some breakfast this morning," added Ratcliffe.

"I'm relieved because I wouldn't have wanted her to push it much longer."
 
Ratcliffe, who has leading a campaign to try to win his wife's release from prison, also ended his own hunger strike in solidarity with Zaghari-Ratcliffe outside the Iranian Embassy in London.
1/2 Richard got a phone call from Nazanin from Evin prison this morning - to announce that she has broken her hunger strike. She had broken her strike with banana and apple and a small bit of porridge. Richard’s strike will also end today and we will be packing down our camp.
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Zaghari-Ratcliffe was arrested at Tehran airport in April 2016 as she headed back to Britain with her daughter after a family visit. She was sentenced to five years in jail after being convicted of plotting to overthrow Iran's clerical establishment.

Her family and the Foundation, a charity organisation that operates independently of Thomson Reuters and Reuters News, deny the charge.

Richard Ratcliffe urged the next British prime minister to make her case a priority.

"My job would be, whoever the prime minister is, to push very hard for Nazanin's case," Ratcliffe told AFP news agency.

"It is not my job to play politics between who should be prime minister or not ... but to make sure that Nazanin's case is top priority."

Boris Johnson, a former UK foreign secretary who is seen as the favourite to become Britain's prime minister when the ruling Conservative Party elects its new leader next month, attracted criticism in 2017 for appearing to jeopardise Zaghari-Ratcliffe's case when he suggested at a parliamentary hearing that she had been training journalists in Iran prior to her arrest. Johnson later apologised for his comments.