Iran Charges Dozens With Helping Western Plot

Tehran, August 09: An Iranian court on Saturday charged a French woman, two Iranians working for the British and French embassies in Tehran and dozens of others with spying and aiding a Western plot to overthrow the system of clerical rule. Britain said the trial of its embassy employee was an “outrage”.

“We deplore these trials and the so-called confessions of prisoners who have been denied their basic human rights,” a British Foreign Office spokeswoman said. “This is completely unacceptable and directly contradicts assurances we have repeatedly been given by senior Iranian officials.”

It was the second mass trial in a week aimed at uprooting the moderate opposition and ending protests that erupted after the disputed June 12 presidential election. At least 26 people have been killed and hundreds arrested in post-election violence. Moderates say the poll was rigged for President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to win, but officials say it was the “healthiest” vote since the 1979 Islamic revolution.

The protests have exposed deep rifts within the clerical establishment in Iran, the world’s fifth biggest oil producer. French citizen Clotilde Reiss was charged with “acting against national security by taking part in unrest … collecting news and information and sending pictures of the unrest abroad”, state news agency IRNA said.

Espionage and acting against national security are punishable by death under Iran’s Islamic law. Reiss confessed her “mistakes” and asked for clemency, IRNA said. Nazak Afshar, an Iranian working for the French embassy, was also charged with “providing information over the vote unrest to foreigners”. “We were not authorised by the embassy to go to rallies but we were told to shelter protesters if necessary,” Afshar said.

The British embassy employee, Hossein Rassam, was charged with espionage and confessed to handing information about the unrest to Washington, IRNA said. “The local staff were asked by their superiors at the British embassy to attend the riots,” IRNA quoted Rassam as telling the court. Rassam was freed on $100,000 bail on July 19.

“Several British diplomats attended rallies … The British ambassador and the charge d’affaires also went to a rally.” The trial was a further sign that Iran’s hard-line leadership was not interested in reconciliation with the moderate opposition or repairing ties with the West, analysts said. “This is not calculated to heal the divide,” said Ali Ansari, an Iran expert at Britain’s St. Andrews University.

“It’s an attempt by the hard-liners to impose their narrative,” he said. “You can’t kill that many people on the street and not try to prove that you were right. But the problems facing the Islamic Republic are far more serious than can be solved by simply putting on a show trial.” Riot police used force to break up a protest by relatives of the accused outside the courtroom.

“Relatives of the defendants and a large group of people gathered in front of the court building on Saturday. When they chanted ‘Allahu Akbar’ (God is greatest), the riot police attacked them,” the reformist Mosharekat website said.

Reiss has been held in Tehran’s Evin Prison since she was arrested at a Tehran airport on July 1 as she tried to leave Iran after spending five months in the central city of Isfahan. Television showed Reiss, wearing a black Islamic gown and a white-brown headscarf, sitting in the front row in the court. It was not clear whether she had a translator when the indictment was read.
–Agencies