British police have charged a 39-year-old man with allegedly assisting Iran’s intelligence service, the latest in a series of investigations into suspected Tehran-linked activities under the United Kingdom’s national security legislation.
The suspect, identified as Vahid Aberi from Liverpool in northern England, was arrested and taken to a police station in central England. Officers also searched properties in Liverpool and the nearby city of Birmingham as part of the investigation.
British security agencies have repeatedly warned that Iran has sought to use criminal proxies to carry out hostile activities in the UK. Security officials have also linked several antisemitic attacks reported since the outbreak of the US-Iran conflict to Tehran.
Earlier this week, Britain banned support for Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps under new national security powers designed to combat state-backed proxy activities.
While police said they have found no evidence of an immediate threat to any individual or community, they warned that counterterrorism officers are increasingly being called upon to disrupt suspected operations linked to foreign intelligence services.
“In recent years, we have experienced a significant and sustained rise in the pace of our national security investigations,” said Helen Flanagan, Head of Counter Terrorism Policing in London.
The charges come a week after Britain summoned Iran’s most senior diplomat following the stabbing of an Iranian journalist in London, an attack for which two Romanian nationals were convicted.
Iran’s embassy in London has dismissed the allegations as “unfounded, politically motivated and hostile.”
Aberi is scheduled to appear before a London court later on Friday to face the charges.
Goodness Anunobi
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