The British Foreign Office said Johnson would meet with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif on Saturday to discuss “a number of consular cases involving dual nationals.” Johnson added that he would “press for their release where there are humanitarian grounds to do so.”
“While our relationship with Iran has improved significantly since 2011, it is not straightforward and on many issues we will not agree,” Johnson said in a statement. “But I am clear that dialogue is the key to managing our differences and, where possible, making progress on issues that really matter, even under difficult conditions.”
Johnson met first with Zarif. The state-run IRNA news agency said he would meet Iranian President Hassan Rouhani and other top officials during his visit.
Johnson is in Tehran as part of a three-nation Gulf tour, which the Foreign Office said was focused on the Iran nuclear deal and “how to bring an end to the conflict in Yemen.”
Iran supports Yemen’s Houthi rebels, who are at war with a Saudi-led coalition, but it denies arming them. That’s despite both Saudi Arabia and the US accusing Iran of supplying the Houthis with ballistic missiles, including one the rebels used to target Riyadh on Nov. 4. Efforts to free Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, a charity worker who has been held since April 2016, are believed to top Johnson’s agenda. Johnson recently complicated those efforts by saying incorrectly that she was training journalists when arrested. He has since apologized. Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s husband says she faces trial on new charges Sunday that carry the possibility of an additional 16-years imprisonment, but Iranian judiciary spokesman Gholamhosein Mohseni Ejehi said last month that her verdict has been finalized. Just ahead of Johnson’s visit, Iran’s state-run English broadcaster PressTV re-aired a documentary accusing Zaghari-Ratcliffe of planning the “soft toppling” of Iran’s government. Her family has denied the allegations.
London is considering paying Tehran some 400 million pounds from a pre-1979 arms deal. Both sides say the money isn’t related to Zaghari-Ratcliffe, though the United States made a similar payment as Iran released four US citizens in 2016.
The BBC has meanwhile asked Johnson to bring up the freezing of assets of more than 150 people associated with its Persian service, something the broadcaster complained about to the U.N. in October. The BBC’s Farsi-language service was barred from operating in Iran after its disputed 2009 presidential election, though the broadcaster says the service reaches some 18 million people weekly.
Published in Daily Times, December 10th 2017.
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