3 hours ago
Caroline HawleyDiplomatic correspondent
Watch: Craig and Lindsay Foreman speak to the BBC's Caroline Hawley via their son, Joe
Lindsay Foreman says she is keeping sane by reading, doing laps of the prison yard and, when she can, practising yoga.
Exercise, she says, has always been her "salvation". But after 16 months in jail in Iran, she admits she is struggling.
"I'm dealing with the realisation that we're likely to be here for a long time," she tells me over the phone from Iran's notorious Evin jail.
Lindsay, a 53-year-old life coach, and her husband Craig, 52, were on a round-the-world motorcycle trip when they were arrested on suspicion of espionage in January 2025 - charges they adamantly deny.
'We're wasting our lives in here'
After living through the recent war in Iran, the pair, from East Sussex, are now facing the painful reality of a 10-year prison sentence handed down against them in February.
"I just feel that we're wasting our lives in here and rotting away," Craig says. "We are innocent people. We have committed no offence."
He makes a plea to the government: "Just take action. Speak out. Get us out. It seems to me we're sitting here like sitting ducks."
The pair are speaking to the media together, via separate phones, for the first time since their incarceration.
They are being kept in different cells within the same prison. After months of being unable to communicate with others, their son, Joe Bennett, now gets regular phone calls from his mother and step-father.
They are patched through to them from payphones in Evin prison via the Foreign Office, which has described their incarceration as "appalling" and "unjustifiable".

Getty Images
Joe Bennett now gets regular phone calls from his mother Lindsay and step-father Craig
Conversations are not easy. The lines drop out regularly and calls are monitored. Every couple of minutes a recording in Farsi interrupts, saying: "This call is from Evin prison and the caller is a prisoner."
"It's very frustrating, but these phone calls are a lifeline for them and for us," says Joe, who allowed us to speak to his parents when they called in.
The couple say prison life has returned to its normal monotony after the intense fear they experienced during the Israel-US war with Iran. A fragile ceasefire is holding for now.
Lindsay is currently reading The Road Less Travelled, by Scott Peck - a book about personal growth in difficult times. She worries she will soon run out of books to borrow from the prison library.
Consular visits are no longer taking place - the British embassy closed temporarily when the war began and is yet to reopen.
Lindsay still feels sensitive to any sudden noises, after recent bombings close to the jail. "I was on the phone to Joe when there was one that came so close that the windows popped out," she tells me.

Fatemeh Bahrami/Anadolu via Getty Images
The couple say they experienced a tense fear during the war. Repeated attacks were launched by the US and Israel on Tehran
While Craig is being held with other foreigners – an Ecuadorian, a German and a Romanian man – and feels a sense of camaraderie, Lindsay is more isolated. She says there are no English-speakers in her cell, in which she sleeps on a metal bunk.
Despite her doctorate in positive psychology, which she says has given her tools to help her handle the ongoing ordeal, there are days of dark despair.
She breaks down in tears as she tells me: "There are people who have been here for years, and it's just so unfair."
Craig, who can hear what she is saying on speaker phone from another of Joe's phones, quickly jumps in to comfort her.
"We can do this," he tells her. "We will do this. We'll get through it together and, sometime, I hope soon, we will be on the other side of these walls. So stay strong, my love."
The couple say they were on a motorbike journey from Europe to Australia when they crossed from Armenia into Iran, intending to stay only for a few days. Lindsay was asking people along the route what constitutes a "good life" and was due to present her findings at a conference in Brisbane.
It was this line of questioning that appears to have got the pair into trouble with the Iranian authorities.


The pair were on a motorbike journey from Europe to Australia when they crossed from Armenia into Iran
The couple had been aware of Foreign Office advice that British nationals should not travel to Iran.
"Craig and I had assessed the risk and did not think that innocent tourists would end up in prison for this long with no evidence," Lindsay says. "I take responsibility for the choice I made to come here, and I have to live with the consequences."
She says it would be hard for anyone who has not been through jail in Iran to truly understand those consequences.
'There will be an end for us at some point'
Lindsay spent an initial 57 days of detention in solitary confinement in the city of Kerman. Craig was interrogated while blindfolded during his time in solitary confinement, something he describes as "horrific".
They were moved to the Iranian capital Tehran last July, and told they were being freed, only to find themselves in the capital's notorious Evin prison.
The prison is where Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, the British-Iranian mother, was also held during her six years in jail in Iran.
Lindsay and Craig say that conditions in Evin prison are better than solitary confinement, but are still tough.
"It's not very hygienic. There's no health care, no dental care," Craig says. "And there are lots of fights between inmates. You have to try and stay clear because there are homemade weapons and things."
Both say they are well aware that many Iranians are suffering more than they are.
One of Linsday's cellmates was sentenced to death for her role in nationwide protests in January, which the regime crushed with lethal force, killing thousands.
"It's frightening," she says. "When I look at my position, I think 'well, thank God I didn't grow up here'. There will be an end for us at some point. But for some of these people, there won't be an end."
Since he was moved to Evin prison last summer, Craig says four of his cellmates have been taken away for execution.
"I know they've been executed because they publicise it on TV the next day," he tells me.
"We're in a horrible position right now, but we have met some fabulous people along the way," he says. "We have seen both sides of this country firsthand."
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