Iran TV shows female navy captive
Royal Navy sailor Faye Turney shown in a video eating a meal with her captured colleagues on British TV tonight. The Iranians say they will release her.
Iranian state television has broadcast an interview with captured British female sailor Faye Turney and footage of 14 male captured colleagues.
Leading Seaman Turney, 26, said she and her colleagues had been seized in the Gulf because "obviously we trespassed" in Iranian waters (she was probably forced into saying).
She said her captors were "friendly", "thoughtful" people and she and her colleagues were unharmed.
Earlier Iran said it would release Leading Seaman Turney "very soon".
Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said she would be released on Wednesday or Thursday.
Earlier the UK said it was suspending bilateral contacts with Iran amid the dispute over Friday's incident in the Gulf.
Eight sailors and seven marines were taken at gunpoint by Iranian Revolutionary Guards.
They were seized after they had searched a merchant vessel.
'Issue under consideration'
Iran has insisted the group, based on HMS Cornwall, which has its home port in Plymouth, were in its waters when they were taken.
Speaking on the sidelines of an Arab summit he was attending in Saudi Arabia Mr Mottaki said:
"Today or tomorrow, the lady will be released."
He later told reporters: "The issue is under consideration. I think it will be solved soon based on rules and regulations. I think I have informed you that the lady will be released very soon."
His comments came shortly after Tony Blair said it was time to "ratchet up" pressure on Iran.
Earlier, the Ministry of Defence issued data it said proved the group had been 1.7 nautical miles inside Iraqi waters when they were seized.
Deputy Chief of the Defence Staff, Vice Admiral Charles Style, gave detailed co-ordinates which he said proved that.
The co-ordinates were 29 degrees 50.36 minutes north, 048 degrees 43.08 minutes east.
The MoD backed up its assertion by releasing a photograph of a handheld global positioning satellite device in HMS Cornwall's Lynx helicopter as it overflew the searched merchant vessel, confirming its position.
Vice Admiral Style said the sailors had been "ambushed" and their detention was "unjustified and wrong".
The UK government said the Iranians initially said the merchant vessel had been at a point within Iraqi waters, before later providing a second, alternative position, within Iranian waters.
Iran's embassy in London issued a statement in response to the UK data, in which it said the sailors and marines had been 0.5 km inside Iranian waters at the time they were seized.
The statement, quoted by the official IRNA news agency, said "the governments of Iran and Britain have the ability to solve the incident through contacts and close co-operation". The BBC has been told the group are being held at an Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps base in Tehran.
1 Crew boards merchant ship 1.7NM inside Iraqi waters
2 HMS Cornwall was south-east of this, and inside Iraqi waters
3 Iran tells UK that merchant ship was at a different point, still within Iraqi waters
4 After UK points this out, Iran provides alternative position, now within Iranian waters
news.bbc.co.uk

Royal Navy sailor Faye Turney shown in a video eating a meal with her captured colleagues on British TV tonight. The Iranians say they will release her.
Iranian state television has broadcast an interview with captured British female sailor Faye Turney and footage of 14 male captured colleagues.
Leading Seaman Turney, 26, said she and her colleagues had been seized in the Gulf because "obviously we trespassed" in Iranian waters (she was probably forced into saying).
She said her captors were "friendly", "thoughtful" people and she and her colleagues were unharmed.
Earlier Iran said it would release Leading Seaman Turney "very soon".
Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said she would be released on Wednesday or Thursday.
Earlier the UK said it was suspending bilateral contacts with Iran amid the dispute over Friday's incident in the Gulf.
Eight sailors and seven marines were taken at gunpoint by Iranian Revolutionary Guards.
They were seized after they had searched a merchant vessel.
'Issue under consideration'
Iran has insisted the group, based on HMS Cornwall, which has its home port in Plymouth, were in its waters when they were taken.
Speaking on the sidelines of an Arab summit he was attending in Saudi Arabia Mr Mottaki said:
"Today or tomorrow, the lady will be released."
He later told reporters: "The issue is under consideration. I think it will be solved soon based on rules and regulations. I think I have informed you that the lady will be released very soon."
His comments came shortly after Tony Blair said it was time to "ratchet up" pressure on Iran.
Earlier, the Ministry of Defence issued data it said proved the group had been 1.7 nautical miles inside Iraqi waters when they were seized.
Deputy Chief of the Defence Staff, Vice Admiral Charles Style, gave detailed co-ordinates which he said proved that.
The co-ordinates were 29 degrees 50.36 minutes north, 048 degrees 43.08 minutes east.
The MoD backed up its assertion by releasing a photograph of a handheld global positioning satellite device in HMS Cornwall's Lynx helicopter as it overflew the searched merchant vessel, confirming its position.
Vice Admiral Style said the sailors had been "ambushed" and their detention was "unjustified and wrong".
The UK government said the Iranians initially said the merchant vessel had been at a point within Iraqi waters, before later providing a second, alternative position, within Iranian waters.

Iran's embassy in London issued a statement in response to the UK data, in which it said the sailors and marines had been 0.5 km inside Iranian waters at the time they were seized.
The statement, quoted by the official IRNA news agency, said "the governments of Iran and Britain have the ability to solve the incident through contacts and close co-operation". The BBC has been told the group are being held at an Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps base in Tehran.

1 Crew boards merchant ship 1.7NM inside Iraqi waters
2 HMS Cornwall was south-east of this, and inside Iraqi waters
3 Iran tells UK that merchant ship was at a different point, still within Iraqi waters
4 After UK points this out, Iran provides alternative position, now within Iranian waters
news.bbc.co.uk