NEWSLETTER SUBSCRIPTION


click to dowload our latest edition

CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

World

Four men arrested in London for allegedly spying on Jewish community for Iran

Published

on

JTA – Police in London have arrested four men they say were spying for Iran on Jewish community sites, with the likely goal of facilitating attacks against them. 

The arrests come as the US-Israel war on Iran ignites concerns about Iran’s sleeper cells abroad, which have long targeted Jewish and Israeli sites as part of the Islamic Republic’s war against the West and Israel. 

The head of the Metropolitan Police’s counter-terrorism unit, Helen Flanagan, said in a statement that the arrests emerged from “a long-running investigation and part of our ongoing work to disrupt malign activity where we suspect it”. 

The men range in age from 22 to 55 and all have Iranian citizenship; three were also British citizens. The police did not offer details about which sites the men surveilled or whether they were believed to have any imminent plans to stage an attack. 

The Community Service Trust, a British Jewish security agency, thanked the police and said, “Security is strong across the Jewish community.” 

Iran is seen as being behind some of the biggest attacks on Jewish sites abroad, including the AMIA Jewish community centre bombing in Buenos Aires in 1994. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ Quds Force is the Iranian military division charged with staging attacks abroad. 

Following the launch of the war, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said Iran was active in Great Britain. 

“Even in the United Kingdom, the Iranian regime poses a direct threat to dissidents and to the Jewish community,” he said. “Over the past year alone, they have backed more than 20 potentially lethal attacks on UK soil.” 

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Comments received without a full name will not be considered.
Email addresses are not published. All comments are moderated. The SA Jewish Report will publish considered comments by people who provide a real name and email address. Comments that are abusive, rude, defamatory or which contain offensive language will not be published.