The United Nations has formally demanded Iran release the British-Iranian dual nationals known as the Foremans, held since their arrest in Tehran last month. The move comes as the Foreign Office issued a stark warning: time is running out for a diplomatic resolution.
I've been making calls. The word from Whitehall is that this is a 'red line' moment. The family's plight has become a live grenade in the Prime Minister's inbox. No one is saying it publicly, but the mood in the Lobby is shifting. Quiet diplomacy is giving way to public pressure.
Behind the scenes, I'm hearing the Foreign Secretary is furious. Briefings are being carefully parsed. The warning is not just for Iran. It's a message to the UN's corridors: act or be bypassed. There is a real sense of threat here. The sort that rarely makes the papers unless something gives.
Analysts are pointing to the timing. Iran is struggling. Sanctions bite. This is leverage. But so too is the lives of three people. The back channels are humming. Expect a 48-hour window. After that? The language gets sharper. The options get starker.
The Foremans, a father and two adult children, were seized during a visit. No official charges have been levelled. This is a classic hostage play. The UN resolution, passed late last night, calls for their 'immediate and unconditional release.' But wording is one thing. Enforcement is another.
The Foreign Office statement, released an hour ago, is tough. It speaks of 'consequences' and 'serious repercussions.' It does not rule out new sanctions or a full diplomatic downgrade. Some in the Cabinet are pushing for a harder line. Others are cautious. This is a split that could blow up if not managed.
What happens next? The Prime Minister is expected to make a statement this afternoon. I'm told the tone will be 'grave but resolute.' No fireworks. But the subtext is clear: this government can no longer ignore the issue. Polling shows the public is watching. And the opposition is sharpening its knives.
I've been here before. Trevors, Nazanins. Each time the pattern repeats. The family pleads. The diplomats work. Then a breakthrough or a breakdown. The Foremans are now the face of this cycle. The UN has put Iran on notice. The Foreign Office has put its stamp on that notice. Now we wait.
But don't mistake waiting for inaction. Under the surface, deals are being weighed. A prisoner swap? A concession on nuclear talks? The chessboard is crowded. Every move is being watched.
Stay tuned. This is developing fast.











