IranConcerns Over British Couple Detained in Iran

Concerns Over British Couple Detained in Iran

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As tensions between Iran’s regime and Western countries have peaked following Israeli airstrikes on Tehran, the family of a British couple imprisoned in Iran since January 2025 on espionage charges has reported one month of complete uncertainty regarding their whereabouts or even whether they are still alive.

According to The Guardian, Lindsay Foreman and Craig Foreman, both 52 years old, were arrested on January 3 while traveling overland from Armenia to Pakistan, in route to immigrating to Australia. They were detained in the southern Iranian city of Kerman.

Officials of Iran’s regime claim the couple “entered the country under the guise of tourists and collected information in several provinces.”

However, Joe Bennett, 31-year-old son of Lindsay, said his family did not know where his parents were being held for over a month. In the past two weeks, they feared the couple may have been killed in the Israeli airstrike on Evin Prison on June 23, which left more than 70 dead.

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British officials eventually informed the Foreman family on Tuesday that the parents are still being held in Kerman and have not been transferred to Tehran.

In an interview with The Guardian, Bennett emphasized: “Every day not knowing brought a deeper kind of dread. Every night, the same questions with no answers. You go to sleep, afraid. You wake up still afraid. And the silence – the not knowing – is just unbearable. So many of our fears remain. How are they doing? Are they being looked after? How are they coping psychologically?

He added that the family believes the best way to protect their lives is for their names to remain visible and present in the media.

According to The Guardian, British diplomats have visited the couple in prison three times so far. During the first visit, Craig had lost a significant amount of weight, though Lindsay was reportedly in relatively good spirits. The second visit lasted only nine minutes and was described as highly chaotic. In the third visit, they were allowed to be together and had access to the prison shop. However, their cell was only three meters by three meters, and they were allowed outside into the yard for just 15 minutes per day.

Bennett said his parents had been granted access to legal representation, but their lawyer does not speak English, which has made communication difficult.

Iran’s regime has a long history of hostage-taking and extortion of the West. Unfortunately, the West’s policy of appeasement has allowed the regime to achieve its goals through such means. Recently, Hamid Nouri, a former prison guard of the regime, and Assadollah Assadi, a regime diplomat who had been imprisoned for a 2018 bombing plot targeting a National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) gathering, were released as a result of the regime’s hostage diplomacy. The West must end its policy of giving concessions to Iran’s regime.

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