ayse
Casdon
Good for her for saying what she thinks. It’s great to see that her years of imprisonment haven’t knocked the stuffing out of her, and that she’s angry enough and brave enough to be honest.
I was listening this lunchtime. She was quite clear about her feelings concerning the inactivity over her release since 2016. She has every right to be angry and I’m glad she spoke out.
I’d like to know why governments since the 1970s have not paid the debt to Iran, that’s over 40 years? I presume it is everything to donwith the Islamic Revolution and the overthrow of the Shah.
I was listening to a radio news programme after the news broke that her passport had been returned to her. Apparently the debt was for military equipment Iran ordered from the UK. The country was ruled by the Shah at the time of the order but before it was filled, he was overthrown and the thinking at the time was that it was morally wrong for us to arm the Ayatollah, so the order was never filled. I don’t really understand the ins and outs of it, but apparently there was no suitable ‘mechanism’ for repaying the debt and it was kicked into the long grass, so to speak.