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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
World
Steven Rae & Hannah Rodger & Graeme Murray

Brit dad jailed in Iraq stuck in rat-infested cell with 40 men including Taliban killers

A British dad jailed in Iraq for debt last month has lost two stone and is living in a rat-infested cell with 40 other men, including killers and members of the Taliban.

Brian Glendinning was detained by authorities on September 4 over an outstanding loan he took out in 2016.

His desperate wife Kimberley has begged for Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon to intervene as the chaotic UK government appears to have done very little.

The 39-year-old told the Daily Record : “Brian’s the kind of person who never gets emotional, he doesn’t cry or show anything like that.

"But he’s been breaking down on the phone saying he doesn’t know if he’s going to survive this.

“He’s living on basically bread, he’s sharing a tiny cell with 40 other men. One of them openly admits to killing his own relative, and there’s Taliban fighters in the same cell, terrorists.

Brian with daughters Lexi and Heidi (John Glendinning / SWNS)

“Now he’s stuck in a prison with terrorists and he’s had to join up with a gang for protection. It’s terrifying and it could happen to anyone if it’s happened to him.

"He’s just a normal guy who works hard and wants to provide for his family. I just want the government to help us. Please, help us.”

Brian, from Kincardine in Fife, had travelled to Iraq to start a “dream job” on an oil refinery, but it quickly turned into a nightmare when he was arrested on September 12 – hours after he arrived.

Six years ago he had been working in Qatar and took out a £20,000 loan from the Qatari National Bank to fund an extension on their home.

He had made regular payments before he suffered mental health problems and returned to Scotland. But he fell behind on his repayments and owes a few thousand pounds.

Iraq was granted an international arrest warrant by Interpol for the debt and it was used when he touched down in Iraq. Debt is a civil matter in the UK, but in Qatar it is treated as a crime.

Kimberley said: “Brian’s always worked away, usually for four weeks at a time. For some reason, this time I just didn’t want him to go.

“I asked him if he could just stay at home but he’s never had a job at this level before. This was the most senior position he has had and he was really wanting to do it.

Brian with his brothers John and Lee and his mum Meta (John Glendinning / SWNS)

“When we found out he had been arrested, I was in shock but I thought he’d be out soon and it would all be sorted.

“There’s a guy in there who’s like Brian, he’s been arrested for unpaid loans or something, and he’s been there for 21 months.

“There is no way he can stay in there for that long – he needs out and we need to get him home.”

He has been detained in a prison in Basra, since his arrest, but has now been moved to another jail at the Bab al-Sheikh police station in Baghdad.

Kimberley said: “This is breaking my heart and our whole family just want him home. I feel guilty when I’m doing anything.

“We had a chippie a few weeks ago and I felt bad eating that, not knowing what Brian was eating or if he had any food in that place he’s in.

“I spoke to him and he apologised to me because it’s my 40th birthday next week and he won’t be here. That’s the kind of guy he is – he’s always thinking about other people.

She added: “My kids miss their dad, our granddaughter Frankie is only one, and she spends so much time with Brian. She’s missing him too.

“All of this is over a few thousand pounds. He shouldn’t be in prison and being treated like this.”

Kimberley and her children Heidi, 16, Lexi, 12 and Bailey, 20, and Brian’s younger brother John have been campaigning for his release and will hold a protest outside the Scottish Parliament on Thursday.

Beautician Kimberley met Brian 21 years ago and the couple have been inseparable ever since.

She said: “He’s my best friend. We’ve been together forever, and I miss him so much. Every time the phone rings I’m anxious in case it’s Brian and I miss the call, or just not knowing what I’m going to find out when I answer the phone.

“There isn’t anything we can do by sitting at home, we have to just keep hoping. The longer this goes on, the more I worry. We just feel frustrated with what’s happened but we’re never going to stop fighting until we get him home.”

Brian’s Iraq-based lawyer, Tahseen Alchaabawi, said there are no grounds to hold him in prison and is trying to get him freed on bail.

The oil worker's brother, John said: “We are trying to ask the Scottish Government to help us and why we’re doing a protest next week.

“More needs to be done to get this moving. The UK Government is in total chaos right now in London, we know that, but they need to stop it and focus on things that people need help with.

“Brian needs out of there and, even if he is released on bail at this point, we’ll take it because it means he can get out of this prison.

He would have to stay in Iraq but at least he wouldn’t be locked up with all these other people, not able to wash properly, living on disgusting food. He needs home, now.”

The family have been supported by their local MP Douglas Chapman and have called for Foreign Secretary James Cleverly to meet them to urgently discuss the case.

The Foreign Office said: “We are providing support to a British man who has been arrested in Iraq and are in touch with the local authorities.”

The Scottish Government said it called on the UK Government to do all it can to support Brian and his family.

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