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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
Politics
Helen William

Family of British couple jailed in Iran say they have lost contact with them

Undated family handout file photo of British couple Lindsay and Craig Foreman, of East Sussex, who have been detained in Iran (Family/PA) - (PA Media)

The “terrified” family of a British couple jailed for 10 years in Iran on spying charges say they have lost all contact with them.

Lindsay and Craig Foreman, both 53, were arrested in January 2025 while travelling through Iran during an around-the-world trip by motorcycle.

The couple, from East Sussex, are being held in Tehran’s Evin prison and sentenced on espionage charges, which they deny.

Their family fears the couple’s telephone access, their only means of contact with the outside world, has been cut off as payback for speaking out about their detention.

Lindsay and Craig Foreman (Handout/PA) (PA Media)

Their son Joe Bennett said: “We simply do not know if my mum and Craig are safe.

“Craig told us that they might have to stop eating if their calls were taken away.

“I have not spoken to my mum for over a week now.

“Every day of silence makes it worse.

“We don’t know what is happening to them and we are terrified for them.”

Telephone access stopped earlier this month after they gave a media interview when they said they felt “abandoned” while in detention and felt that the channels to try and secure their release were closing, their campaign group has said.

In February, the Foreign Office said it had “temporarily” withdrawn its staff from Iran amid the threat of US strikes against the country.

It also advises against all travel to Iran warning that British and British-Iranian nationals face a “significant risk of arrest, questioning or detention”.

It adds that “having a British passport or connections to the UK can be reason enough for the Iranian authorities to detain you”.

Lindsay and Craig Foreman (Handout/PA) (PA Media)

A spokesman previously described the jail sentences the pair received as “completely appalling and totally unjustifiable”, saying their welfare is a “priority” for the Government.

Ms Foreman, in her first interview since the US and Israel launched strikes against Iran on February 28, told ITV News she could hear the “whistling noise of missiles and the hum of the drones” nearby and “people were hyperventilating, screaming”.

“The first day you could feel it, the impact of the bombs, the rockets, the missiles.”

Talking about prison conditions, Ms Foreman said: “When the buildings shake, there is nowhere to go.

“These buildings are not designed for safety.

“There’s no fire escape, there’s no access to the outside for us.

“If the building collapses, that will be the end.”

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