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Zaghari-Ratcliffe calls for end to indefinite jail terms
The Independent
|September 30, 2025
Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe has called for new justice secretary David Lammy to “end arbitrary detention” in Britain as she voices support for the thousands trapped in abolished indefinite jail terms.
The dual British-Iranian national, who made worldwide headlines after she spent almost six years detained in Iran, has described imprisonment for public protection (IPP) jail terms as “fundamentally wrong”.
The open-ended punishments - which have been branded inhumane by the UN – were abolished in 2012, but not retrospectively. Almost 2,500 people are still languishing in British jails without a release date.
Victims of the scandal, whose tragic cases have been highlighted by The Independent, include: Leroy Douglas, who has served almost 20 years for robbing a mobile phone; Thomas White, 42, who set himself alight in his cell and has served 13 years for stealing a phone; and Abdullahi Suleman, 41, who is still inside 19 years after he was jailed for a laptop robbery.
Ms Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who was finally freed in 2022 following years of diplomatic negotiations and the British payment of a £400m debt to Iran, said Mr Lammy promised to help those arbitrarily detained overseas when he was foreign secretary.
“Now he is justice secretary, I hope he will take that commitment to ending arbitrary detention at home,” she told The Independent ahead of a panel event on the jail terms at the Labour conference.
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