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Mothers march in support of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who is jailed in Iran

Actress Emma Thompson led a protest Saturday in London in support of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, a dual British-Iranian citizen who has been in jail in Iran for the past 19 months.

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By
Gul Tuysuz
and
Laura Smith-Spark (CNN)
LONDON (CNN) — Actress Emma Thompson led a protest Saturday in London in support of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, a dual British-Iranian citizen who has been in jail in Iran for the past 19 months.

Thompson was joined by Zaghari-Ratcliffe's husband, Richard, other family members and mothers from the couple's London neighborhood in a march intended to keep international attention focused on her plight.

Protesters, among them mothers carrying babies, chanted "Free Nazanin now" as they walked to the Shia Islamic Center of England, in northwest London. They also collected donations for those affected by a deadly earthquake that struck earlier this month in a remote border area between Iran and Iraq.

Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who was given a five-year sentence on espionage charges that she and her family vehemently deny, has found herself at the center of an international dispute between the UK and Iran following a mistake by British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson.

Johnson erroneously told a British parliamentary committee on November 1 that Zaghari-Ratcliffe was in Iran teaching journalists when she was detained in April 2016. Her family and employer have always insisted she was visiting relatives on vacation. Her young daughter, Gabriella, remains with Zaghari-Ratcliffe's parents in Iran.

'We want you home'

The demonstrators carried two letters to the Islamic center, one an open letter written by a group of local mothers and the second written by Zaghari-Ratcliffe's own mother.

Zaghari-Ratcliffe's sister-in-law, Rebecca Ratcliffe, said it was important to show local support.

"When you're a mom, it's all about your community, isn't it?" she said. "It's her community reaching out to her and saying, 'We care about you. We want you home.'"

Fears have grown that Zaghari-Ratcliffe's five-year sentence could be lengthened in the wake of Johnson's mistake. She is due to appear in an Iranian court on December 10 to face charges of "spreading propaganda," her husband told CNN on Thursday.

"My Christmas wish is for everyone to come back and we can be a family again," Rosie Ratcliffe, Gabriella's 10-year-old cousin, told CNN. "I remember when she was little, all of our cousins would be together. ... She was very little then, she was 1, and now she's 3. She's been there for quite a long time. It's very sad."

One local mother taking part in the protest, Charlotte Samuels, 36, said she did not know Zaghari-Ratcliffe personally but was appalled that her case had still not been resolved. The UK government should do more, she said.

"We are not related to Nazanin, we are not friends with Nazanin, we've never met, but we think that it is absolutely essential that we stand up for someone who is bullied or is being treated unfairly," Samuels said. "That is what we teach our children, and it's what we should practice ourselves."

Speaking after a meeting last week with Richard Ratcliffe, Johnson insisted the British government was doing everything in its power to free Zaghari-Ratcliffe. He is set to travel to Iran before the end of the year to meet with her.

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