Keir Starmer refuses to exchange âUKâs worst stalkerâ for British couple jailed in Iran

Lindsay and Craig Foreman were sentenced to 10 years in an Iranian jail after being accused of espionage while on a motorcycle tour
Keir Starmer has refused to exchange a man dubbed Britainâs âworst stalkerâ for a British couple jailed in Iran.
No10 pushed back at suggestions of a prisoner exchange after the family of British couple Craig and Lindsay Foreman appealed to the Government.
Iranian authorities had proposed Richard Jan â a biochemist described as the countryâs âworst stalkerâ â in exchange for the Foremansâ in conversations with the Government and the Foremanâs family.
A Government spokesman, however, has robustly denied the claims.
He told the Telegraph there was âno truth whatsoever to the claims of a potential exchange arrangement, and giving credence to these claims is not only wrong, but risks hindering all the other efforts currently being made by this Government to secure the Foremansâ releaseâ.
Justice Secretary David Lammy also told Sky News that while prisoner swaps can be made, âthe specifics on this would not be rightâ.
âAnd Iâm not sure from what Iâve heard that this is⊠credible,â Mr Lammy added.
In January last year, Iranian authorities sentenced the couple to 10 years in jail for espionage after the Government claimed the pair had âgathered information in multiple provinces of the countryâ as they travelled through the country on a round-the-world motorcycle journey.
Lindsay and Craig Foreman were arrested in Iran after being accused of espionage during a motorcycle tour
The Foremans were not allowed to attend their own appeal hearing, which they lost in Iranian courts on Tuesday.
In 2004, Jan was sentenced to life after being found guilty of stalking and attacking 200 people.
Over 1,000 statement were taken by prosecution against him, and 109 witnesses â mostly working in health care and local government â testified against him.
Richard Ratcliffe, whose wife Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe was previously detained in Iran, has said cases such as the Foremans were used to send political signals, adding that the family was âcaught in a fight between two governmentsâ.
David Lammy claimed the âspecificsâ of the prisoner exchange âwould not be rightâ |Â GETTY
The Government has strenuously denied claims it pushed back against talks of a prisoner exchange
Mr Foreman, speaking from Evin prison in March, urged Sir Keir Starmer to help him and his wife, warning of worsening conditions.
Admitting that he was âgenuinely scaredâ, Ms Foremanâs son, Joe Bennett, previously told GB News: âWe are now genuinely worried for their lives because of whatâs going on, and the implications of the actions that are being taken by the US and Israel.
âI think theyâre bearing up, but itâs a tough gig for them mentally, physically, and spiritually because the system is made to break people, that is what it is intended to do.â
After the remarks from Mr Lammy, he told Sky News he hoped the Government would âshiftâ in the approach to his mother and stepfatherâs case.
He said: âThe question that we wanted to ask as a family is, if this isnât the solution or a proposed solution, then why not?
âAnything can be done in theory, but itâs been a long time coming where it gets the attention it warrants.
Joe Bennett, son of Lindsay Foreman, said he hoped the Government would âshiftâ its approach to his mother and stepfatherâs case
âAnd the conversation to be had, at least we can either get a proposed path to their release or closure that this isnât a solution.â
Yvette Cooper, the Foreign Secretary, said the pairâs arrest was âunjustifiableâ and said the Government was continuing to press Tehran ârelentlesslyâ for the coupleâs release.
Sir Jeremy Hunt â who served as Foreign Secretary while Ms Zaghari-Ratcliffe was imprisoned in Iran â told the Government to â with caution -do âeverything it possibly canâ to free the Foremans.
He said: âObviously, what you donât want to do is something that leads to the next person being illegally detained by the Iranians.
âSo you have to be careful that you donât reward the kind of absolutely despicable behaviour that weâre seeing from Iran, one of the very few governments in the world that will arbitrarily detain an innocent person as a tool of diplomatic leverage.â


