The Guardian Australia

Sanctions will not stop Iran killing and kidnapping on UK soil, officials warned

- Deepa Parent

A journalist at the centre of an Iranian plot to kill two UK-based TV presenters has said sanctions won’t stop Iran from targeting people on UK soil.

The UK and US government­s sanctioned Iranian officials with travel bans and an asset freeze yesterday over the targeting of Sima Sabet and Fardad Farahzad, who worked for the TV news station Iran Internatio­nal based in London.

The plot to kill the two presenters was just one of at least 15 credible threats to kill or kidnap British nationals and others living in the UK since the beginning of 2022, according to UK officials.

Iran is increasing­ly targeting people outside its borders in a tactic known as transnatio­nal repression, which aims to stifle debate or criticism.

BBC staff in London have told the Guardian that they fear walking outside alone after being harassed by the Iranian authoritie­s, after allegedly being warned: “We can do whatever we want in London.”

Britain’s foreign secretary, David Cameron, said the joint UK and US sanctions on members of Iran-linked criminal gangs and the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps (IRGC), a branch of the Iranian state’s armed forces, would “send a clear message – we will not tolerate this threat”.

But Sabet said more meaningful action was needed by the internatio­nal community than sanctions on individual­s.

“The Islamic Republic suppresses people inside, and also those critical of the regime outside, adding to instabilit­y and tensions in other countries. It won’t change its behaviour unless it feels the pressure,” said Sabet, who called for more support for opposition to the regime and a minimising of diplomatic relations.

Farahzad, who relocated to Washington DC before the plot could be carried out, said it had been “alarming to witness the lengths to which the Iranian government is willing to go to silence journalist­s and suppress freedom of expression. Such actions are a stark reminder of the challenges and dangers that journalist­s face, particular­ly when reporting on issues that are critical or sensitive to authoritar­ian regimes.”

Among those sanctioned by the US and UK is Naji Ibrahim Sharifi-Zindashti, named as the head of an internatio­nal drug and traffickin­g cartel, who has also been indicted in the US for plotting to assassinat­e two residents of the state of Maryland. His alleged coconspira­tors, both Canadian nationals, are in detention in Canada on unrelated offences.

Matthew G Olsen, assistant attorney general of the US Justice Department’s national security division, said: “To those in Iran who plot murders on US soil and the criminal actors who work with them, let today’s charges send a clear message: the Department of Justice will pursue you as long as it takes – and wherever you are – and deliver justice.”

Human rights activists said rather than sanctions on individual­s, the UK needed to proscribe the IRGC as a terrorist organisati­on.

“They [Iran] are aware we [the UK] are doing all this in order to not proscribe IRGC,” said British-Iranian activist and former political prisoner Vahid Beheshti. “At this point we are encouragin­g them to continue assassinat­ions and terrorist activities, brainwashi­ng our youth and creating a sleeping cell. We are somehow encouragin­g them instead of stopping them, by not holding them accountabl­e.”

 ?? Composite: handout ?? The UK and US government­s sanctioned Iranian officials over a plot to kill Sima Sabet (left) and Fardad Farahzad.
Composite: handout The UK and US government­s sanctioned Iranian officials over a plot to kill Sima Sabet (left) and Fardad Farahzad.

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