Iranian news agency IRNA reported that the Ministry of Intelligence and National Security of the Islamic Republic arrested 12 followers of the Baha’i faith on suspicion of spying for Israel.
Iranian news agency IRNA reported this evening that the Ministry of Intelligence and National Security of the Islamic Republic had arrested 12 members of the Bahá’í faith in Mazandaran Province, in northern Iran, on suspicion of spying for Israel.
According to the report, two of the heads of the organization were trained at the World House of Justice, located in the Bahá’í Center in Haifa, and set up a spy cell with other members of the organization throughout the northern district.
The Iranian Ministry of Intelligence said that “the members of the organization communicated in secret, relying on the basis of messages sent from Haifa and the Zionist regime. These messages were used by the organization’s members in the country.”
The Director of General Intelligence for Mazandaran Province stated that “any activity of espionage networks linked to the Zionist regime for anti-revolutionary activity is closely monitored by the intelligence, and their agents will be dealt with decisively.”
Previous arrests by Iran
This is the second time that Iranian intelligence reports arrests made on suspicion of spying for Israel from the Bahá’í faith.
In early August, it was reported that the “key figures in the Bahá’í faith” had been arrested on espionage charges.
The Iranian Defense Ministry said that they were “members of the central leadership of the religion” and that they were “directly connected to the World House of Justice Center, based in the city of Haifa in occupied Palestine.”
Iran reported that intelligence documents indicated that the center was linked to a “Zionist espionage network.” It was also reported that “the network has been tasked with various tasks, including the widespread dissemination of the Bahá’í religion and the infiltration of educational groups in Iran.”
In July, Iran reported another espionage squad for Israel, they claimed. According to the report, the country’s security forces detained a network of Israeli agents who, according to the Iranian information ministry, “were sent to carry out terrorist activities and were identified by undercover forces before they were able to carry out sabotage.”
According to the information ministry’s announcement, “the network members, who were in contact with Mossad agents through a neighboring country, entered Iran through Kurdistan using up-to-date technological means. The agents were detained with weapons and explosives intended for unprecedented sabotage purposes in sensitive areas. They also carried in their possession technical equipment and communications equipment that were discovered and confiscated.”
As reported by The Jerusalem Post