Iranian TV says Boris Johnson is proof mum was ‘plotting’

There have been a growing number of calls for Prime Minister Theresa May to sack Boris Johnson after his comments about a British mother held in Iran.

Mr Johnson said Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe was ‘teaching people journalism’ in the country, which the Islamic theocracy’s state TV channel claimed was an ‘admission’ she was ‘spying’ last night. 

Stella Creasy, Labour MP for Walthamstow, branded the Iranian video ‘sickening’ and demanded Mr Johnson quit. 

Fellow Labour MP Tulip Siddiq – who is Nazanin’s MP in the constituency of Hampstead and Kilburn – said matters are now ‘life and death’.

Her family has been campaigning for her release since Mrs Zaghari-Ratcliffe (pictured with daughter Gabriella), who worked for the Thomson Reuters Foundation, was arrested in Tehran last year as she tried to return to London

Former Tory minister Anna Soubry, meanwhile, said: ‘His words were wholly inaccurate. If they are continuing to damage this woman’s well-being and putting her in more peril of continuing unlawful incarceration, then the Foreign Secretary must step down immediately.’      

And Lord Rickets, the onetime head of the diplomatic service, said it was ‘not the first gaffe’ made by Boris. 

He added: ‘Boris Johnson, for all his talents, has not succeeded in convincing people he’s a serious heavyweight foreign secretary with real authority. That’s a real problem,’ he told the BBC.

Lord Rickets said the country needed a ‘foreign secretary who projects authority and commands respect’.  

Former Tory minister Anna Soubry (pictured), meanwhile, said: 'His words were wholly inaccurate. If they are continuing to damage this woman's well-being and putting her in more peril of continuing unlawful incarceration, then the Foreign Secretary must step down immediately'

Former Tory minister Anna Soubry (pictured), meanwhile, said: ‘His words were wholly inaccurate. If they are continuing to damage this woman’s well-being and putting her in more peril of continuing unlawful incarceration, then the Foreign Secretary must step down immediately’

Stella Creasy (pictured), Labour MP for Walthamstow, branded the Iranian video 'sickening' and demanded Mr Johnson quit

Stella Creasy (pictured), Labour MP for Walthamstow, branded the Iranian video ‘sickening’ and demanded Mr Johnson quit

Nazanin has always maintained she was on holiday when she was arrested and accused of ‘espionage’.

But the row flared again yesterday when Iranian state TV reported – under a segment entitled ‘confession’ – that Mr Johnson’s comments revealed ‘the real plot’ behind Mrs Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s trip.

Last night, her husband Richard said the Foreign Secretary must come to the 38-year-old’s defence.

Mr Ratcliffe said Iranian state TV, whose programmes are sanctioned by senior officials, had clearly ‘latched on to’ Mr Johnson’s error to ‘discredit’ her.

The Channel 2 report said his suggestion that Mrs Zaghari-Ratcliffe was ‘training journalists’ when arrested had ‘dealt a blow’ to her claim of being on holiday. Mrs Zaghari-Ratcliffe has been threatened with fresh charges of ‘propaganda against the regime’ that could see her five-year sentence doubled in the wake of the Foreign Secretary’s remarks.

Mr Johnson admitted this week that his comments ‘could have been clearer’, and told MPs on Tuesday that the Government ‘has no doubt she was on holiday’.

He said he had received assurances from Iran’s foreign minister Javad Zarif that his remarks would not be used against her.

But Mr Ratcliffe said the broadcast showed Mr Johnson’s actions ‘do not look sufficient’ and more must be done.

Mr Johnson (pictured) has faced calls to resign over his error, in which he said Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe was ‘teaching people journalism’ in the country

Mr Johnson (pictured) has faced calls to resign over his error, in which he said Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe was ‘teaching people journalism’ in the country

The family has been campaigning for her release since Mrs Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who worked for the Thomson Reuters Foundation, was arrested in Tehran last year as she tried to return to London with 18-month-old daughter Gabriella.

Mr Ratcliffe said: ‘The Government has been dragging its heels and my concern is what we do from here. It is spiralling out of control. The state TV has latched on to this error and are using the Foreign Secretary’s words to discredit Nazanin.

‘The stakes are very high for us. I think it is important that the Foreign Secretary now stands up for Nazanin and visits her on his upcoming trip to Iran. If that means going to knock on the prison door then so be it.’

Mr Ratcliffe said he had not heard from the Foreign Office about an offer to meet with Mr Johnson or received any personal apology. He hopes he will have a meeting on Mr Johnson’s return from the US when he intends to ask the Foreign Secretary to take him to Iran.

Last night, her husband Richard (pictured) said the Foreign Secretary must come to the 38-year-old’s defence

Last night, her husband Richard (pictured) said the Foreign Secretary must come to the 38-year-old’s defence

‘I haven’t been able to get an Iranian visa since, so I haven’t seen Nazanin or Gabriella so I would like to be on that plane with him,’ he said. Mr Ratcliffe urged Mr Johnson to ensure a Farsi translation of his ‘clarification’ was issued to Iranian media and the website of Britain’s embassy in Tehran.

He said his wife’s parents, who live in Iran and care for the couple’s daughter, now three, were left ‘horrified’ by the TV broadcast, adding that his wife would be ‘traumatised’ by it.

The broadcast said: ‘The unintended admission of Boris Johnson … was a gaffe that the British Government could not find a cover for … It appears the statement was an antidote to all the statements of various media and UK authorities who had been claiming in the past year-and-a-half that Nazanin had come to Iran for humanitarian reasons.’

Asked about the case, Mr Johnson said: ‘We have some difficult consular cases in Iran and we are working on all of them.’ 

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