UK Warns Zaghari-Ratcliffe Family Not to Publicize Release Plan

The husband of detained British-Iranian woman Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe has said the UK government warned her family that public comments could jeopardize her possible release date in Iran early next month.
Zaghari-Ratcliffe's family has been campaigning for her release since
she was held in Iran in April 2016 on sedition charges. She is currently under
house arrest.
Her husband Richard Ratcliffe wrote on Twitter on Sunday: "This
week the Foreign Office warned us of threats to Nazanin and her family if we
continued to publicize Nazanin's release date."
He retorted that the family believes "transparency is the best form
of protection from abuse."
Unless Iran finds new grounds to extend her detention, Nazanin's
official release date is March 7, according to Ratcliffe.
Zaghari-Ratcliffe worked for the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the media
organization’s philanthropic arm.
She denied charges of sedition but was convicted and jailed for five
years. She has spent more than four years in jail or under house arrest.
Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said last month that the March 7 date was
"based on the existing sentence," stressing that Iran had repeatedly
dashed hopes for Zaghari-Ratcliffe's release after postponing another trial in
November.
Britain is "pushing as hard as we can to get the immediate release,
not in seven weeks, but as soon as possible, of Nazanin and all of our other
dual nationals", Raab said on January 17.
According to AFP, Ratcliffe said Sunday that the British government's
role is to remind Iran that Nazanin "has the UK's protection."
Britain should not "act as a messenger for IRGC (Revolutionary
Guard Corps) mafia tactics and suppression," he added.
"If anything happens to Nazanin
or her family, or if she is not released to the UK on 7 March - there should be
consequences. We will be discussing with the Foreign Secretary his back up plan."
The Guardian on Monday reported that Ratcliffe sent the Foreign Office a
note accusing it of a "remarkable lack of judgement."
The Foreign Office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.