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No Legal Obstacles For EU To Sanction IRGC - Iran’s Prince

Iran International Newsroom
Jun 11, 2023, 23:58 GMT+1Updated: 18:05 GMT+1
A parade by IRGC forces
A parade by IRGC forces

Iran’s exiled prince Reza Pahlavi citing a group of French-Iranian lawyers says there are no legal obstacles for the EU to sanction the Revolutionary Guard.

In a tweet on Sunday, Reza Pahlavi urged the European authorities to reconsider their current position and proscribe the IRGC as a terrorist group, based on a report the lawyers have presented to his office and heads of governments.

“Listing this entity, which is dedicated not to protecting Iran or Iranians but instead the power of the dictatorship, would be a strong and long-awaited recognition of reality and a show of support to my compatriots who are fighting for freedom and democracy in our country.”

Unlike the United States which in 2019 under former President Donald Trump put the IRGC on its Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTO) list, European countries avoided the designation in the past few years and prioritized diplomacy with the Islamic Republic in the hope of concluding a nuclear deal.

Many politicians in France, Germany, and other European countries have been keen to pursue the IRGC’s designation by the EU and say that it has been long overdue. In January, the European Parliament approved a resolution with absolute majority to designate Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a terrorist organization. However, the EU refused to do so, with its Foreign Policy Chief Josep Borrell saying the move needs a ruling by a European court.

The document cited by Pahlavi refers to the Common Position adopted by the EU following the 9/11 attack, saying that the same definitions used to describe persons, groups and entities involved in that terrorist acts apply for the IRGC.

Iran’s exiled prince Reza Pahlavi during a rally against the Islamic Republic   (undated)
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Iran’s exiled prince Reza Pahlavi during a rally against the Islamic Republic

The legal report says a "terrorist act" shall mean any intentional act that may seriously damage a country or an international organization, seriously intimidating a population, or unduly compelling a government and seriously destabilizing or destroying the fundamental political, constitutional, economic or social structures of a country.

Having stated the statutes that provide the legal basis for listing an entity on the European list of terrorist organizations, the group of lawyers went on to provide examples of such acts by the IRGC to prove that the entity deserves to be designated, like all the other groups that the EU has blacklisted.

“The study of the IRGC confirms that it constitutes a structured organization which has carried out terrorist attacks and which has been the subject of decisions by competent authorities which the Council of the European Union could take into account in order to proceed with its inclusion on the European list of terrorist organizations,” read part of the document.

A noteworthy point in the document is the often-ignored duty of the IRGC according to the Islamic Republic’s Constitution: Exporting the revolution.

“The Constitution distinguishes the mission assigned to the IRGC to continue the Islamic Revolution, considering ultimately that the fall of the regime of the Shah of Iran and the establishment of the regime of the Islamic Republic do not constitute the end of the Islamic Revolution,” it reads, arguing that IRGC's mission to pursue the Islamic Revolution ideologically, beyond the borders of Iran may be among the main reasons behind its extra-territorial destabilizing activities.

Among the reasons that legally justifies the designation of the outfit, the document points out that the IRGC has planned and executed numerous operations aimed at assassinating Iranian opposition figures. “It also carried out attacks against foreign personalities and institutions that the Islamic Republic considered at the time as enemies or contrary to its interests,” added the document.

The documents also provided a long list of assassinations and terrorist acts tracing back to the IRGC as the cases that the EU can use to proscribe the group.

The cases include the assassination of Shapour Bakhtiar, the last prime minister of the Shah in 1991; assassination of Shahriar Shafiq, the nephew of the Shah of Iran, in 1979; the kidnapping of David Stuart Dodge, the president of the American University of Beirut, in 1982; attacks on the US Embassy and US Marines in Beirut in 1983; wave of attacks in Paris, 1985 and 1986; the Mykonos restaurant assassinations in 1992; and attack on AMIA in Argentina in 1994; as well as recent plots, such as the attempted assassination of John Bolton in 2022 and attempted assassination of opposition figure Masih Alinejad.

A presupposition prevailing throughout the text is that the European Union seeks to designate the IRGC and only lacks the proper legal bases, as proclaimed by Borrell. However, it seems that the reluctance to blacklist the IRGC is based on political reasons.

Talks in Vienna to revive the 2015 JCPOA nuclear deal came to an abrupt stop in 2022, reportedly for Iran’s insistence that the IRGC be removed from the US FTO list.

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Opposition Group Accuses Iran Of Act Of Terror In France

Jun 11, 2023, 21:02 GMT+1

The Albania-based opposition group Mojahedin-e-Khalq (MEK) has accused the Islamic Republic of a terror attack on its building north of Paris.

In a statement the group claimed a building belonging to its supporters in the city of Saint-Ouen-l'Aumône was attacked by “terrorists and mercenaries of the IRGC Quds Force and the ministry of intelligence” who were speaking Farsi.

“Two terrorists threw incendiary devices towards the entrance of the building, but as soon as they were chased by the residents, they quickly fled the area in a car that was ready on the street,” read the statement.

The MEK further added that the fire at the entrance was extinguished quickly, and no one was injured, but police started investigations.

Earlier on May 31, the same place was targeted by six bullets, but no one was hit, according to the statement.

The group added that the recent release of Asadollah Asadi, an Iranian agent disguised as a diplomat in Europe who was convicted in a Belgian court for a terror plot in France in 2018, has made the regime more “audacious” to stage terrorist acts.

It also called on the French government, police, and judiciary to arrest the perpetrators of such criminal acts of terrorism and prosecute them and publish all the details to inform the public opinion.

A week ago, Olivier Vandecasteele, a Belgian aid worker detained in Iran, returned to his country in exchange for the release of Assadollah Asadi.

Iran-Made Drones Kill At Least Three People In Ukraine

Jun 11, 2023, 19:20 GMT+1

Twenty Iran-made drones attacked Ukraine Saturday night killing at least three people and causing massive destruction.

Reports on social media say the victims were a woman from Kherson and a married couple from Bakhmut who had fled from their homes hoping to find safety in Odessa.

Meanwhile, the Ukrainian Air Force announced that Iranian-made drones are still a “headache” for Ukraine.

“Iranian-made Shahed kamikaze drones largely used by Russia are still difficult to shoot down,” Air Force spokesperson Yurii Ihnat said in an interview with Ukrainska Pravda on Sunday.

Since last October, Moscow, which launched its full-scale invasion in February last year, has regularly sent waves of Iranian drones to attack targets in Ukraine. Although they are slow, drones are cheaper and more expendable than advanced missiles.

Some experts say that Russia's use of the Shahed drones, costing around $20,000 each, either is meant to confuse Ukrainian air defenses during missile attacks, or to force Kyiv to spend its expensive Western-supplied anti-air missiles.

Iran has denied sending armed drones to Russia after Moscow launched its invasion in February 2022, claiming that any shipments occurred before the war.

However, Russia has used hundreds of Iranian-made drones to attack Ukrainian infrastructure and civilian targets, with Kyiv reporting more supplies in December as Moscow’s stocks were used up.

Western powers have strongly objected to Iran's decision to arm Russia with the Kamikaze drones, and possibly other weapons and ammunition.


Iran’s Rial Makes Further Gains After US Allows Iraq To Release Funds

Jun 11, 2023, 18:35 GMT+1

Iran’s currency has risen by 8 percent since June 5, when reports multiplied about possible secret talks with the US and the news about Iranian funds being freed in Iraq.

The rial on Sunday alone rose nearly 4 percent against the US dollar and other currencies after media reported that the Biden administration gave a waiver to Iraq to release about $2.7 billion of frozen Iranian funds.

The rial was trading at 555.000 against the US dollar on May 1, but on June 11 it rose to 470,000, a 17-percent gain.

Western and Israeli media, as well as Iran International have quoted well-informed sources as saying that direct and indirect talks have been taking place between Washington and Tehran, possibly for a limited nuclear deal or an exchange of Iran’s frozen funds with American dual nationals held hostage by the regime.

South Korean banks hold $7 billion that Seoul owes Tehran for oil imports prior to full US sanctions imposed in May 2019. South Korea was allowed to import a limited quantity of oil from May 2018 to May 2019 despite initial sanctions imposed by the Trump administration.

These funds have been cited as a possible ransom for freeing three US citizens imprisoned in Iran on manufactured charges.

Iraq also owes Iran at least $7 billion, but the $2.7 said to have been waivered by the US will not reach Iran as cash. Tehran can use the money to import food and pay for the expenses of pilgrims going to Iraq.

Macron Warns Iran's President On Drone Deliveries To Russia

Jun 11, 2023, 08:59 GMT+1

French President Emmanuel Macron warned Iranian counterpart Ebrahim Raisi on Saturday about the consequences of delivering drones to Russia, Macron's office announced.

In a phone call, Macron urged Iran to "immediately cease" the support it is giving Russia in the war against Ukraine.

Iran has supplied hundreds of its kamikaze Shahed drones to Russia that have been used against military and civilian targets since October last year. The United States and its main NATO allies have repeatedly warned Tehran to stop its close military cooperation with Moscow.

Macron also expressed concerns about the trajectory of the Iranian nuclear program, the statement said.

Britain, France, Germany, the United States and Ukraine say the supply of Iranian-made drones to Russia violates a 2015 UN Security Council resolution enshrining the Iran nuclear deal.

Washington has also said that the resumption of nuclear talks with Tehran that can lead to lifting of economic sanctions partly depends on Iran seizing its weapons supplies to Russia.

The White House said on Friday that Russia appeared to be deepening its defense cooperation with Iran and had received hundreds of one-way attack drones that it is using to strike Ukraine.

The drones serve to supplement Russia’s missile inventory that has been reduced as it attacked civilian infrastructure for months. The cheap drones also are a weapon that can exhaust Ukraine’s air defense missiles, as they are often launched in dozens.

With reporting by Reuters

Iranian Diaspora Marks Birthday Of Child Murdered By Regime Forces

Jun 11, 2023, 07:44 GMT+1

On the birthday of Kian Pirfalak, a 9-year-old child killed during anti-regime protests, and a symbol of regime brutality, Iranians abroad held rallies in several countries.

Kian would have turned 10 on June 11 this year, but on the evening of November 16 last year, the family car carrying Kian, his parents, and three-year-old brother Radin was targeted by plainclothesmen in Izeh, a town of around 100,000 in the southwestern oil-rich Khuzestan Province.

Kian’s father was also seriously wounded in the shooting and paralyzed. Authorities claim the family car was attacked by “terrorists”.

The videos received by Iran International show Iranians living in Austria celebrating Kian's birthday by holding a program in Graz on Saturday.

In Sweden, the Iranian diaspora held rallies in Stockholm and Gothenburg to celebrate the birthday of the murdered child.

Similar events were also staged in Copenhagen, Hamburg, Washington, Montreal, Brisbane and several other cities.

On Friday, a group of Iranians living in the UK also marked Kian's birthday by gathering outside the Foreign Office. They urged the British government to fully sanction Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, the IRGC, that leads all repressive military and paramilitary forces in Iran.

Earlier, activists had issued several calls to hold global gatherings on the anniversary of Kian Pirfalak's birthday.

Social media users welcomed Kian’s birthday with the hashtag "rememberingkian" and publishing his photos.

Mahmonir Molaei-Rad, Kian's mother, previously wrote on her Instagram that the security forces raided the house of one of their friends taking away "all the items they had prepared to celebrate Kian's birthday."