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Sun News Network TV – The Arena with Michael Coren

Saturday, April 7th, 2012

Sun News Network TV – The Arena with Michael Coren

Former CIA agent Reza Kahlili discusses why Iran remains the biggest threat to world peace.

April 06, 2012

‘COUNTERTERRORISM CZAR’ SAYS EVERY U.S. COMPANY HAS BEEN INFILTRATED BY CHINA

Friday, March 30th, 2012

TheBlaze

March 30, 2012

By: Liz Klimas

The April issue of Smithsonian Magazine focuses on Richard Clarke, a man who has served as the “counterterrorism czar” under three presidential administrations. In the feature, Clarke makes some strong claims, the most notable of which are that every U.S. company has been penetrated by China through cyberspace and remains vulnerable to attack, and that the United States made and launched the infamous Stuxnet worm.

Clarke, who is famously known for warning the White House to expect a “spectacular attack on American soil” from Al Qaeda and after 9/11 said “Your government failed you,” is now issuing another warning. Ron Rosenbaum for Smithsonian writes:

Clarke now wants to warn us, urgently, that we are being failed again, being left defenseless against a cyberattack that could bring down our nation’s entire electronic infrastructure, including the power grid, banking and telecommunications, and even our military command system.

“Are we as a nation living in denial about the danger we’re in?” I asked Clarke as we sat across a conference table in his office suite.

“I think we’re living in the world of non-response. Where you know that there’s a problem, but you don’t do anything about it. If that’s denial, then that’s denial.”

Who is it we should be most afraid of when it comes to cyber attacks? According to Clarke: China. He said that the countless amount of electronic material imported by the U.S. from China could be implanted with “‘logic bombs,‘ trapdoors and ’Trojan horses’”:

“I’m about to say something that people think is an exaggeration, but I think the evidence is pretty strong,” he tells me. “Every major company in the United States has already been penetrated by China.”

Clarke’s greatest fear is not a virtual takedown but that the U.S. will lose its competitiveness through these bugs:

“[...] rather than having a cyber-Pearl Harbor event, we will instead have this death of a thousand cuts. Where we lose our competitiveness by having all of our research and development stolen by the Chinese. And we never really see the single event that makes us do something about it. That it’s always just below our pain threshold. That company after company in the United States spends millions, hundreds of millions, in some cases billions of dollars on R&D and that information goes free to China….After a while you can’t compete.”

Smithsonian also reports Clarke as attributing the creation and deployment of the Stuxnet worm, which foiled some of Iran’s nuclear program, to U.S. officials with some minor role played by Israel. When Rosenbaum asked the White House for a comment on this accusation, it said “[...] we don’t comment on classified intelligence matters.” Rosenbaum takes this as not a denial. But what is some of Clarke’s reasoning for pointing a finger at the U.S. for the worm? Smithsonian has more:

One reason to believe the Stuxnet attack was made in the USA, Clarke says, “was that it very much had the feel to it of having been written by or governed by a team of Washington lawyers.”

“What makes you say that?” I asked.

“Well, first of all, I’ve sat through a lot of meetings with Washington [government/Pentagon/CIA/NSA-type] lawyers going over covert action proposals. And I know what lawyers do.

“The lawyers want to make sure that they very much limit the effects of the action. So that there’s no collateral damage.” He is referring to legal concerns about the Law of Armed Conflict, an international code designed to minimize civilian casualties that U.S. government lawyers seek to follow in most cases.

Gizmodo states that Clarke could very well be exaggerating some of his claims. Clarke did recently publish a book called “Cyber War”, which covers much of what is included in the Smithsonian interview in more detail. Business Insider also points out that Clarke, who served in government intelligence for more than 30 years before starting his own security firm in Virginia, could be trying to boost his business with some of these accusations, but it states “why wouldn’t China do this to give itself the advantage in a face-off with the U.S. military?” Good question. It also shouldn’t be forgotten that Clarke correctly predicted the attacks that occurred on 9/11.

Rosenbaum’s interview with Clarke was lengthy and there are even more details in the magazine. Read more here.

For U.S. Analysts, Rethinking The Terror Threat

Thursday, March 29th, 2012

03/29/2012

NPR

by DINA TEMPLE-RASTON

March 27, 2012

There has been a subtle shift taking place in the intelligence community in recent months.

Intelligence and law enforcement officials say analysts and experts who have been tracking al-Qaida for more than a decade have been quietly reassigned. Some are being moved completely out of al-Qaida units. Others are being asked to spend less time watching al-Qaida and more time tracking more traditional foes — like state-sponsored terrorists.

U.S. officials declined to provide specific numbers or detail which intelligence units have changed priorities, but they did say that a goodly portion of the analysts who have been reassigned from their al-Qaida duties are being asked to focus on one country: Iran.

Officials said that with the relative threat from al-Qaida declining, it made sense to reallocate resources, and with the increase in terrorism-related activity linked to Iran, it also made sense to focus on it.

The concern tore into public consciousness last fall, when FBI Director Robert Mueller, Attorney General Eric Holder and a roster of high-level Justice Department officials announced that the U.S. had uncovered a plot to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to the United States.

U.S. officials didn’t mince words. They said the scheme could be traced — through money transfers — to the top ranks of the Iranian government.

“As a career intelligence analyst, I always look at problems from two perspectives, that is capability and intent,” said Philip Mudd, a former top counterterrorism official in both the CIA and the FBI. “Clearly the Iranians have had the capability since the revolution in 1979 to assassinate members of the opposition in Europe, which they did in the 1980s. The question now is intent. … Do they want to do this?”

Iran denied that it had anything to do with the plot and demanded an apology. But just months later, there were other suspicious episodes that suggested that the intelligence community’s concern about Iran was well placed.

New Evidence

In February, two bombs exploded in India and the country of Georgia, and they appeared to be targeting Israeli diplomats. It is unclear who was responsible, but India issued warrants for three Iranian citizens. They stood accused of helping several men attach a magnetic bomb to the back of an Israeli diplomatic vehicle in New Delhi. The same day, a similar attack was launched against an Israeli diplomat in Georgia. Again, the Iranians denied any involvement.

Mudd says he’s suspicious.

“When I saw those attacks, to me the light that went on in my head was the intent light. Iran’s intent is back,” he says.

Now a senior adviser at the consulting group Oxford Analytica, Mudd says that after years of relatively low-level operations by Iranian-backed terrorists, Teheran appears to be back on the offensive.

“There is no way you conduct that number of attacks without having senior leadership saying this is what we want to do,” he says. “So, that’s a problem.” And that goes a long way toward explaining why Iran is fast becoming such a priority in the U.S. intelligence community.

Not A New Problem

To be sure, this is a problem with some history. Iran assassinated political opponents in Europe in the 1980s. Closer to home, the Justice Department has long suspected that Iran was behind the 1996 truck bombing of a U.S. military dormitory in Saudi Arabia known as the Khobar Towers.

The U.S. government handed down more than a dozen indictments in that case in June 2001, and specifically said it would continue the investigation to track down just how the Iranian government was involved. But just months later, the Sept. 11 attacks happened, priorities changed overnight, and al-Qaida became the focus. U.S. officials say the pendulum is starting to swing back again in the direction of state-sponsored terrorism.

“There is no question in the current environment, with a diminished al-Qaida core, that state sponsorship and in particular Iranian state sponsorship grows in relevance and importance for counterterrorism officials,” says Juan Zarate, a former deputy national security adviser and now a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

“And that will be a major focus over the next couple of years,” Zarate says. “The challenge is that going after state-sponsored terrorist organizations, especially those that are well-funded and well-organized and sponsored by Iran, is a very different proposition than chasing a metastasized nonstate network like al-Qaida. It takes a different set of skills.”

The difference is that al-Qaida, while hiding out in third-world countries, was brazen in its attacks. They were showy plots for which the group proudly took credit. Iran, on the other hand, has been known to use proxies and groups like Hezbollah to launch attacks that are difficult to trace back to their source.

So the blunt instruments that worked so well in dismantling al-Qaida — like drone strikes — won’t work on this kind of terrorism, says Brian Fishman, a terrorism fellow at the New America Foundation.

“If you’re going to deal with state-sponsored terrorism, what you need is not just those drones but very skilled operators,” says Fishman. “You need people who can insert themselves into a wide range of societies and wide range of organizations and networks to gather intelligence and in some cases operate offensively against these kinds of groups.”

Put simply, analysts say the U.S. will have to go back to basics. They will need to find ways to collect better human intelligence, recruit more spies inside Iran, and use the carrots and brickbats of diplomacy and sanctions. The trick, they say, will be adding those methods to the tools the U.S. has developed fighting al-Qaida.

“The way the U.S. government chases people now is light years different than it was a decade ago,” says Mudd. “The capabilities we have now to look at data and understand an adversary, the kind of data that let us break foreign fighter networks in Iraq, I think some of those skills will really come into play if we have to deal with the Iran problem.”

Daybreak USA

Monday, March 5th, 2012

IRN USA Radio’s “Daybreak USA”

Discussion on my activities as a CIA spy in Iran, the Iranian nuclear bomb program and the deceit by the Islamic regime in Iran.

March 05, 2012

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Iran’s Supreme Court orders retrial of ex-Marine sentenced to death

Monday, March 5th, 2012

Published March 05, 2012

Associated Press

TEHRAN, Iran –  Iran’s Supreme Court has ordered the retrial of an ex-U.S. Marine who was sentenced to death on charges of working for the CIA, a news agency reported Monday.

The case has added even more tension to U.S.-Iran relations, as Washington and its allies press ahead with sanctions over Iran’s contentious nuclear development program, and Iran threatens punishing retaliation if it is attacked.

Amir Hekmati, 28, was sentenced to death in January, the first American to receive a death penalty since the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran. Hekmati was born in Arizona. His parents are of Iranian origin.

Iran accuses Hekmati of receiving special training while serving at U.S. military bases in Iraq and Afghanistan before heading to Iran for an intelligence mission.

In December, Iran broadcast a video on state television in which Hekmati was shown delivering a purported confession, in which he said he was part of a plot to infiltrate Iran’s intelligence agency.

The U.S. government has denied the charges against Hekmati.

On Monday, the semiofficial Isna news agency said the case would be retried.

The report quoted state prosecutor Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejehei as saying, “There was an appeal on his verdict. The Supreme Court found shortcomings in the case and sent it for review by an equivalent branch” of in the court system.

The report did not elaborate.

Last month Hekmati’s mother visited him in prison and met with Iranian officials. Some saw this as a sign that Iran might show moderation in the case.

A previous incident involving Americans in Iran was resolved, but only after two years.

In 2009, three U.S. citizens were detained along the Iraq border. The three said they crossed the border unintentionally during a hike. They, too, were charged with espionage, but there were no specific allegations of CIA ties and training as in the case of Hekmati.

The three were sent to prison. One was released for medical reasons and the other two were freed last September, in deals involving bail payments brokered by Oman, which has good relations with both Iran and the U.S.

 

Fmr. CIA head calls Stuxnet virus “good idea”

Thursday, March 1st, 2012

(CBS News) Could the Stuxnet virus that sabotaged the Iranian nuclear program be used against the U.S. infrastructure or other high profile targets? A retired American general who was the head of the Central Intelligence Agency when Stuxnet would have been created calls the cyber weapon a “good idea,” but warns it is out there now for others to exploit. Steve Kroft reports on Stuxnet and the potential consequences of its use in a “60 Minutes” story to be broadcast Sunday, March 4 at 7 p.m. ET/PT.

About two years ago, the all-important centrifuges at Iran’s nuclear fuel enrichment facility at Natanz began failing at a suspicious rate. Iran eventually admitted that computer code created problems for their centrifuges, but downplayed any lasting damage. Computer security experts now agree that code was a sophisticated computer worm dubbed Stuxnet, and that it destroyed more than 1,000 centrifuges. Many believe the U.S., in conjunction with Israel, sabotaged the system. Retired Gen. Mike Hayden, once head of the NSA and CIA, who was no longer in office when the attack occurred, denies knowing who was behind it, but said, “This was a good idea, alright? But I also admit this was a big idea, too. The rest of the world is looking at this and saying, ‘Clearly, someone has legitimated this kind of activity as acceptable.’”

Not only that, says Hayden, but the weapon, unlike a conventional bomb that is obliterated on contact, remains intact. “So there are those out there who can take a look at this…and maybe even attempt to turn it to their own purposes,” he tells Kroft.

In fact, says Sean McGurk, who once led the Department of Homeland Security’s efforts to secure U.S. systems from cyberattack , “You can download the actual source code of Stuxnet now and you can repackage it…point it back to wherever it came from.” McGurk worries terrorists or a rogue country could refashion it to attack U.S. infrastructure like the power grid or water treatment facilities, even nuclear power plants. He tells Kroft he would never have advised anyone to unleash such a weapon. “They opened the box. They demonstrated the capability…it’s not something that can put back.”

The creators of Stuxnet never intended their worm to be discovered says one of the people most responsible for deconstructing its code. Liam O Murchu, an operations manager for computer virus security company Symantec, thinks whoever launched it partially failed because the virus was discovered. “You don’t want the code uncovered, you want it kept secret,” says O Murchu. “You want it to just keep working, stay undercover, do its damage and disappear.”

Creating such a cyberweapon, so sophisticated it could be hiding in any number of computers but only strikes the target it was intended to, probably cost many millions. Now, with the code out there, it can be replicated cheaply. “You just need a couple of millions,” says Ralph Langner, an expert in industrial control systems who also was instrumental in analyzing Stuxnet. And it wouldn’t take the resources of a government to find the right people he says; they are on the Internet. “If I would be tasked with assembling a cyberforce, yeah, I would know whom to approach. So that’s not a real secret,” says Langner.

American Sentenced to Death in Iran Visited by His Mother

Wednesday, February 22nd, 2012

The New York Times

By J. DAVID GOODMAN

Published: February 21, 2012

The mother of an American man sentenced to death in Iran for espionage visited her gaunt and frightened son on death row in a Tehran prison this month, as his lawyers in Iran began an appeal of his conviction, an American lawyer representing the family said on Tuesday.

Benhaz Hekmati traveled alone to Tehran on Jan. 28 to visit her son, Amir Mirzaei Hekmati, a former Marine who, according to rights activists, is the first American citizen sentenced to death in Iran since the Islamic revolution in 1979. Mrs. Hekmati stayed with close relatives, and visited her son at Evin Prison three times, spending roughly an hour with him each time, before returning to the United States last week.

“She had no restrictions on her movement — she was able to meet her son, to see her son and to hug and hold him,” said the lawyer, Pierre-Richard Prosper, a former diplomat who negotiated the release of another American of Iranian descent in 2010. “Her purpose for being there was to be the mother.”

According to his mother, Mr. Hekmati, 28, appeared to have lost weight and remained in a state of shock about his situation.

“While he is disappointed by the circumstances he finds himself in, he is hopeful that the truth will be known and he will be able to come home very soon,” Mrs. Hekmati said in a prepared statement. She described the Iranian officials she met as “hospitable” and “respectful.”

Shortly before her trip to Tehran, a court-appointed lawyer in Iran filed an appeal of Mr. Hekmati’s sentence, which under Iranian law can be done only within 20 days of sentencing. The family has since hired a private lawyer in Tehran to represent him.

Mr. Prosper and a public relations company representing Mr. Hekmati’s interests have largely remained tight-lipped about their efforts, rather than mount the kind of public campaign that has often followed the imprisonment of other Americans.

A Web site calling for Mr. Hekmati’s release, FreeAmir.org, has not been updated since January, shortly after the death sentence from the Islamic Revolution Court Branch 15 in Tehran.

“By remaining discreet,” Mr. Prosper said, “you are not ruling out the option to be more public later. A more visible campaign has not been ruled out.”

The arc of Mr. Hekmati’s case has closely tracked the international war of words overIran’s nuclear program, which the West believes is aimed at developing weapons but which Tehran insists is peaceful.

Mr. Prosper, a Los Angeles-based partner in the firm Arent Fox, said the Hekmati family wanted to avoid having Mr. Hekmati’s situation get caught up in the broader back-and-forth between Iran and the United States or in the speculation over a pre-emptive military strike by Israel.

“We’re interested in making this about Amir, and not about geopolitical issues,” he said.

The next step for the family and its lawyers would be to gain access to the case file to learn exactly which facts underpin the Iranian conviction.

The details have remained murky since Mr. Hekmati was detained in August, when, according to his family, he had been visiting his grandparents in Iran.

Iran did not even confirm that he was in custody until December, when he was put in front of Iranian state television cameras for a national broadcast. In the interview, shown on Dec. 18, Mr. Hekmati was heard to say that he had enlisted in the military out of high school in 2001, had received language and espionage training and had been sent to Iran by the Central Intelligence Agency.

The C.I.A. has declined to comment on the case. The White House and the State Department have denied that Mr. Hekmati, who was born in Flagstaff, Ariz., was a spy and have called for his immediate release.

Iran has a history of arresting Americans and convicting them of spying, and then freeing them once bail money is paid.

“Experience shows that the Iranian officials are very concerned about public relations and how they are reflected in global media,” said Hamid Dabashi, a professor of Iranian studies at Columbia University. “The more public this becomes, the more political it becomes.”

Haleh Esfandiari, who was jailed in Iran for more than three months in 2007, said that public attention helped secure her freedom. “Everywhere the Iranian diplomats went, they were asked about me,” she said.

But Ms. Esfandiari, director of the Middle East program at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, said that though Mr. Hekmati’s sentence might never be carried out, negotiations over his fate were unlikely to be swift.

“I don’t want to sound pessimistic,” she said, “but this might stretch on for years.”

 

 

Defector: Regime change the answer to a nuclear Iran

Thursday, February 16th, 2012

Chad Groening – OneNewsNow – 2/16/2012

A former member of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard who spied on the regime for the CIA says any Israeli strike on Iran’s nuclear sites would be problematical, if there is no effort to assist the Iranian people in overthrowing the regime.

Last week the U.S. cranked up its sanctions on Iran to try to force it to stop its uranium enrichment. Iran responded with defiance.

Earlier this month, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta told the Washington Post that he believes there is a strong likelihood that Israel will launch pre-emptive strikes against Iran’s nuclear facilities in April, May, or June.

Under an assumed name — Reza Kahlili — a member of the Iran’s Revolutionary Guard who became a spy for the CIA says if Israel takes action on its own, there will be a severe response from Iran.

“There would be hundreds of missiles raining down on Tel Aviv and other major cities in Israel,” says Kahlili. “The consequences are going to be great — but nevertheless, nuclear-armed radicals in Iran would be much worse so they might have to do this on their own as the Obama administration clearly does not understand this threat.”

Kahlili does not think an attack on the Iranian nuclear facilities can be successful without the cooperation of the Iranian people.

“If they communicate with the Iranian people and have them ready … in a coordinated effort, they could bring about regime change,” says the former Guard member. “And that is the only solution to the problem in Iran.”

Kahlili, who has become a Christian, is the author of the new book A Time To Betray, which chronicles his life in the Revolutionary Guard and as a CIA spy.

 

 

 

 

The Arena with Michael Coren

Wednesday, February 15th, 2012

Sun News Network TV – The Arena with Michael Coren

Reza Kahlili led a harrowing double life as a CIA operative inside Iran’s Revolutionary Guard. He tells us his story; Iranian people and their aspirations for freedom; Sean Stone converting to Islam and the threat by radicals ruling Iran.

February 15, 2012

Tom and Todd on WRKO Boston

Friday, February 10th, 2012

Tom and Todd on WRKO Boston

Discussion on Iran, its leaders and the threat they pose on America, Israel and the free world. What needs to be done on the Iranian nuclear impasse and how we can help Iranians with their aspirations for freedom.

February 10, 2012

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Ex-Marine sentenced to death in Iran needs U.S. intervention, lawyer pleads

Thursday, February 9th, 2012

02/09/2012

The Washington Post

Reuters TV/Reuters - Amir Mirzaei Hekmati, 28, who was sentenced to be hanged in January on a charge of spying for the CIA, could face execution immediately after an appeals court has reviewed his sentence.

By Thomas Erdbrink,

TEHRAN — A former U.S. Marine sentenced to death in Iran for allegedly spying for the CIA could be saved if the Obama administration would consider a prisoner swap, his Iranian attorney said Wednesday.

Amir Mirzaei Hekmati, 28, who was sentenced in January to be hanged, could face execution immediately after an appeals court has reviewed his sentence, said lawyer Mohammad Hossein Aghassi. The court’s decision was expected Jan. 25; the reason for the delay is unclear, he said.

Aghassi stressed that it was essential for the Obama administration to do anything within its means to reach out to Iran — including offering a possible prisoner exchange — to save Hekmati, a U.S. citizen of Iranian descent.

Iran has repeatedly asked for the release ofShahrzad Mir Golikhani, an Iranian American sentenced for involvement in an attempt to export night-vision equipment to Iran, who is imprisoned in Florida. In total,Iran has a list of 11 people in U.S. captivity it says are illegally detained.

“His mother says Hekmati is in bad shape,” said Aghassi, whom Hekmati’s family asked Wednesday to represent their son.

U.S. officials confirmed that U.S. diplomats have had no access to Hekmati in prison, either directly or through the Swiss Embassy in Tehran, which represents U.S. interests there. A State Department official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the diplomatically sensitive case, said Iranian authorities do not recognize Hekmati’s dual citizenship.

“The Iranians claim that he is an Iranian citizen and thus there is no access requirement,” the official said. He added that the Obama administration is continuing to press Iran to release Hekmati, but he offered no details.

“We remain very concerned about the welfare of Mr. Hekmati,” he said.

U.S. officials have denied that Hekmati is a spy.

The United States has never officially reacted to Iranian suggestions of prisoner swaps, but Iran has in the past released Europeans in moves closely followed by the release of Iranians or high-profile visits to Iran by European diplomats. Iran has also unilaterally released dual nationals in the past, often after media pressure or interventions by religious leaders.

Hekmati’s case is made more sensitive by the fact that it coincides with a string of mysterious explosions and assassinations in Iran, which many here say are the work of a covert U.S. or Israeli sabotage program.

Precisely when and where Hekmati was arrested is unclear. Iranian news reports have said Hekmati was detained in late August or early September upon arrival in the country. His family members, who live in Michigan, have reportedly said he was in Iran to visit his grandmothers.

The former Marine appeared on Iranian state television in December and purportedly confessed to working for the CIA and being sent to Iran to act as a counterintelligence agent.

Hekmati’s mother traveled to Iran two weeks ago and has since met him three times in the visitors’ section of Evin prison, the last time Wednesday. Hekmati is being held in solitary confinement in a ward that is under the control of the Islamic republic’s intelligence service.

Hekmati’s mother, who declined to be interviewed out of fear of not being able to leave the country, told Aghassi that her son looked “unbelievably thin, feeble and depressed.” Aghassi said he has not been allowed to meet with his client, who until Wednesday was defended by a state-appointed lawyer.

“He is telling her, ‘Don’t worry about me, Mom,’ because he fears for her safety. He kept on repeating this line, his mother told me,” said Aghassi, a well-known lawyer in Iran who has won several prominent cases.

Hekmati told his mother that his two interrogators were sitting next to him when he appeared on Iranian television. “How could he do anything else than admit crimes under such circumstances?” Aghassi asked.

Aghassi said he hoped that the case, which he said was being reviewed by Iran’s highest judicial council, would be referred back to a lower court, which usually means a reduction in the initial sentence.

Hekmati’s case is very different from that of three Americans known as “the hikers,” who were held in Iran for more than two years, the lawyer said. Shane Bauer, Sarah Shourd and Josh Fattal held American nationality, while Hekmati, born in Arizona, traveled to Iran using his Iranian passport.

As Iran does not recognize dual nationality, the United States’ protecting power in Iran, Switzerland, will not be able to intervene. Additionally, mediation by the Persian Gulf state of Oman, which led to the release of the hikers, would be complicated.Bauer and Fattalwere released in September 2011Shourd in 2010. Aghassi said his client needed direct action from the U.S. government. In 2011, an Iranian Dutch woman was hanged almost immediately after losing her appeal, taking the Dutch Foreign Ministry and the European Union by surprise.

“This is something only the Obama administration can solve,” Aghassi said. “We can only pray that we will be successful in rescuing Hekmati.”

Staff writer Joby Warrick in Washington contributed to this report.

 

 

Iran ‘detains alleged BBC Persian journalists’

Tuesday, February 7th, 2012

BBC

7 February 2012 Last updated at 06:39 ET

Mehr news agency said they were involved in newsgathering, recruiting and training for Iranian journalists and had arranged trips abroad for them.

A BBC statement said no BBC Persian staff members were working inside Iran.

It said the reports “should be of deep concern to all those who believe in a free and independent media”.

Last week, the BBC accused the Iranian authorities of a campaign of bullying and harassment against those working for its Persian service.

‘Anti-security crimes’

On Monday evening, a report by the semi-official Mehr agency cited an unnamed “knowledgeable source” as saying that “a number of people deceived by the lie-spreading BBC Persian network” had been arrested.

The source said they had “the mission of gathering news and information, producing content in various formats, recruiting, training and preparing for the departure of Iran’s elite media workers from the country”.

They had committed “many anti-security crimes as part of their co-operation with this network” since 2009, when mass protests erupted after the disputed re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the source added.

“The case of the detained people will be handed over to the judiciary department for the issuance of a verdict after the final compilation and preparation of the charges,” the source stated, without naming them.

“As has been previously said, any kind of co-operation with the BBC Persian channel is illegal and will be prosecuted.”

In a statement, the corporation reiterated that there were “no BBC Persian staff members or stringers working inside Iran”.

“These latest reports appear to confirm our recent statements and should be of deep concern to all those who believe in a free and independent media,” a spokesperson said.

“They admit that the Iranian authorities are engaged in a persistent campaign, intimidating and arresting people who they claim have connections with the BBC Persian service.”

‘New tactics’

In a blog published on Friday, the BBC’s Director General Mark Thompson wrote that he had seen “disturbing new tactics”, including the targeting of family members of Persian service staff working outside Iran.

Mr Thompson revealed that the sister of one man had been arrested the previous week and held in solitary confinement on unspecified charges at Evin Prison in the capital, Tehran.

“Although she has now been released on bail, her treatment was utterly deplorable and we condemn it in the strongest possible terms.”

Mr Thompson also said some staff had had their Facebook and email accounts hacked, and been subjected to a “consistent stream of false and slanderous accusations… ranging from allegations of serious sexual assault, drug trafficking, and criminal financial behaviour”.

In September, Iran arrested six film-makers, accusing them of working for BBC Persian. The corporation said they were independent, and that it had merely bought the rights to broadcast their documentaries.

Human Rights Watch said the harassment of BBC Persian staff was part of a wider campaign to stifle freedom of information in Iran ahead of parliamentary elections scheduled for next month.

It also comes amid mounting tensions over Iran’s nuclear programme.

On Tuesday, Iranian media said MPs were considering a bill to prohibit the export of oil to the European Union, which approved a ban on Iranian oil imports last month in reaction to Tehran’s continued refusal to halt uranium enrichment. The EU buys about 20% of Iran’s oil exports.

 

 

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