Iran Human RightsUK Aid Worker Returned to Prison in Iran From...

UK Aid Worker Returned to Prison in Iran From Mental Ward

-

Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe

By Pooya Stone

A British charity worker falsely imprisoned in Iran has been returned to prison on Saturday after spending nearly a week on the mental ward of a public hospital, according to her husband.

Richard Ratcliffe said Monday that his wife Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe reported to him that she was “broken” after spending six days chained and under heavy guard in a psychiatric institution.

She told him: “I am all right, broken, but I survived. I wasn’t allowed to leave the room, as I was chained to the bed. It was proper torture. I am relieved I am back to prison.”

Ratcliffe relayed these comments in a lengthy statement detailing her detention in the mental ward.

She is being held in Tehran’s notorious Evin prison, which is used to hold political prisoners.

Ratcliffe, who has been campaigning for her release for over three years, said that he hoped Iranian medical officials would consider releasing her on health grounds because of the “deeply traumatising” transfer to the mental unit.

He said: “Her lawyer will be pressing the Health Commission to finally rule that Nazanin is not fit to stay in prison and can be granted unconditional release.”

Zaghari-Ratcliffe, 40, was reportedly allowed to see her mother and five-year-old daughter Gabriella on Sunday; something that she was denied during her hospital stay and at various times during her imprisonment.

Zaghari-Ratcliffe is serving five years in prison for the charge of attempting to overthrow the Iranian clerical establishment during her visit to the country in March 2016, which was in actual fact to spend Iranian New Year with her family and introduce her then-baby daughter to her mother’s family. She was arrested at Tehran Airport in April 2016 as she tried to return home and the authorities confiscated the passport of Gabriella, who is a solely British citizen, so she is forced to reside in Iran, but luckily her maternal grandparents can care for her.

The charges are denied by Zaghari-Ratcliffe and the Thomson Reuters Foundation, for which she works.

The real reason for her imprisonment is that Iran needed a bargaining chip with the UK, which is why they often seize foreign nationals, according to Iran watchers.

Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s time on the mental ward coincided with Iran’s seizure of a British-flagged tanker in the strategic Strait of Hormuz on Friday, which was an apparent retaliation for British authorities detaining an Iranian vessel for shipping oil to Syria in violation of EU sanctions.

Latest news

Free Iran 2026 Summit in Paris Draws International Support for Democratic Change in Iran

PARIS, June 20, 2026 — Political leaders, former government officials, parliamentarians, and human rights advocates from Europe and North...

Iran’s Water Crisis: Women on the Front Lines of a Silent Disaster

Iran’s water crisis is no longer merely an environmental or economic challenge; it has become one of the country’s...

Child Laborers: The Silent Victims of Poverty and Inflation in Iran

On June 15, the state-run Shargh newspaper published a report on child labor titled "Childhood on a Work Shift,"...

Iran’s Regime Executes Political Prisoners Javad Zamani and Abolfazl Saedi

Iran's regime hanged two young men, Javad Zamani and Abolfazl Saedi, in the early hours of Tuesday, June 16,...

Iran’s Healthcare System on Verge of Crisis as Nurses Migrate En Masse

The crisis of nursing staff shortages in Iran, driven by the migration of nurses, has once again come into...

Volker Türk: At Least 40 People Executed on Security-Related Charges in Iran

Recent remarks by Volker Türk, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, have once again drawn international attention...

Must read

Iranian Society Becomes More Restive Amidst Worsening Poverty and Inequality

On December 19, the Iranian regime made an announcement...

Five Iranian agents arrested in Iraq – TV report

Iran Focus: Baghdad, Apr. 03 – Five Iranian agents...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you