Hamburg Islamic Center took direct orders from Iran's Khamenei: Report
German police officers walk towards the Islamic Center Hamburg, during a raid, due to suspicion of members acting against a constitutional order and supporting the militant group Hezbollah in Hamburg, Germany.
The head of Hamburg Islamic Center (IZH) received direct orders from Iran's Supreme Leader, documents obtained by Germany’s Interior Ministry show, shedding more light on the extent of Tehran’s influence over Islamic centers in Europe.
As Iranian citizens grapple with rising poverty and rampant inflation, officials are attempting to address the budget deficit by raising prices on bread, fuel, and essential goods, aiming to reduce government subsidies and ease the fiscal shortfall.
Mohammad-Reza Bahonar, a member of the Expediency Discernment Council, has suggested a potential 25-fold increase in gasoline prices, while the deputy minister of Economy has urged that the price of bread needs to be raised.
Over the past three years, the Islamic Republic has sharply increased the prices of certain energy carriers and lifted price controls on flour used for non-traditional breads and pasta. Even the price of traditional bread, which is subsidized by the government, has been raised in two stages, amounting to an approximate 70% increase.
This week, the Court of Audit reported widespread government violations in subsidy allocations, specifically noting 730 trillion rials (approximately 1.2 billion USD), related to bread subsidies. Additionally, the government has forced the Central Bank to withdraw 315 trillion rials ($500 million) from the accounts of certain government agencies and illegally allocate it to partially settle the government’s debt to private wheat farmers.
Despite these extensive violations, the government still owes wheat farmers 1,160 trillion rials ($2 billion dollars) as the harvesting season has been completed and producers desperately need money.
Iran’s wheat market
According to The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) statistics, Iran consumes 16.5 million tons of wheat annually. Iranian state statistics also show that 10 million tons of this amount is supplied to traditional bakeries, while the rest is sold at free market prices to other consumer sectors, such as free market bread and pasta production units. Farmers sell an additional 3.5-4 million tons on the free market.
In traditional bakeries, 80% of the final bread price is covered by government subsidies, with the citizens paying 20% of the actual bread price.
Last year, Iran imported 2 million tons of wheat, and FAO forecasts this figure will rise to 3 million tons this year.
Over the years, Iranian wheat farmers have preferred to sell their wheat on the free market due to low government purchase prices and delays in settling their debts. Last year, one-quarter of their wheat production was sold on the free market, especially to poultry farms.
Last year, the government paid 130,000 rials per kilogram of wheat to domestic farmers, while the average global wheat price was around 34 cents, equivalent to 160,000 rials (based on last year's dollar rate). Due to sanctions and increased costs of purchasing and transporting wheat, Iranian government also spent 250,000 rials (50 cents) per kilogram for imported wheat, the Iran Custom statistics indicate.
This year, the government has increased the wheat price purchase from domestic farmers by 34% year-on-year, but Iranian rial also has lost 20% of its value comparing to last year. On the other hand, the costs for electricity, fuel, fertilizers, labor, and services in agriculture sector have also seen significant increases.
Islamic Republic officials have accused the public of wasting bread over the years, suggesting that increasing its price is necessary to reduce consumption.
The point is that although Iran's per capita wheat consumption is 2.5 times the global average, but only 60% of this wheat is supplied to traditional bakeries that use government subsidies.
Bread has always been an important staple in the Iranian diet. For context, Iran, Turkey, and Germany have similar populations, yet Iranians consume 27% less bread than Turks and 2.5 times more than Germans. When it comes to rice, Iranians consume nearly six times more than both Turks and Germans. However, Turks and Germans have a much higher intake of meat and dairy products—Turks consume more than twice as much meat and four times as much dairy as Iranians, while Germans consume twice as much meat and 13 times as much dairy.
Therefore, it's not accurate to say that Iranians waste bread; instead, the focus should be on addressing the low consumption of protein-rich foods among Iranians. This disparity is largely due to the decline in per capita income caused by the country's struggling economy.
Gasoline shortage crisis
Over the past three years, Iran has neither launched new refineries nor started building any. Meanwhile, nearly one million domestically manufactured vehicles, known for their low quality and efficiency, are sold to citizens each year. As a result, gasoline production at Iranian refineries last year was about 97 million liters per day (ml/d), while consumption peaked at 115 ml/d.
To address this deficit, the government blended 14 ml/d of additives, including 8 ml/d of non-standard petrochemical products, into the gasoline supply—a practice harmful to human health. This increased daily gasoline production to 111 million liters, with the remaining demand met through imports.
Statistics from the Oil Ministry for March 2024, the first month of the Iranian fiscal year, reveal that the government has increased the amount of additives in gasoline to 25 million liters per day, significantly endangering the health and safety of Iranian citizens. This measure comes in response to a 6% reduction in gasoline production at refineries and a 9% increase in gasoline consumption compared to the same month last year. The reasons for the decline in refinery production remain unclear, as does whether this trend has continued in subsequent months.
In 2022, before Iran faced gasoline shortages, only 5-6 million liters per day of additives were blended into the gasoline. Now, as the government becomes a gasoline importer for the second consecutive year, calls for price increases are growing louder. Mohammad-Reza Bahonar, a former parliament representative and member of the Expediency Discernment Council, has stated that if the gasoline imbalance continues, prices could rise to 500,000 rials (over 80 cents) per liter. Currently, subsidized gasoline in Iran is sold at 15,000 rials (2.5 cents) per liter, while non-subsidized gasoline is priced at double that amount.
On Saturday, public hospital nurses in Shiraz, southern Iran, extended their strike into a sixth day, joined by others in protest against harsh working conditions, low wages, and ongoing government neglect.
Reports from workers rights group on social media indicate that nurses at several major public hospitals in Shiraz, including Namazi, Faghihi, Chamran, Amir Oncology, Zeinabieh, Ali Asghar, and Amir al-Momenin, have initiated a strike that has now spread to cities such as Abadeh, Tabriz, Zanjan, Karaj, and Fasa.
The nurses are protesting grueling working conditions, inadequate compensation for long hours, outdated nursing service tariffs, insufficient overtime pay, and the non-payment of welfare benefits. They are also decrying the Ministry of Health's lack of accountability.
In Shiraz, the strike has brought public hospitals to the brink of paralysis, with surgeries at Namazi Hospital being canceled, according to reports.
In Zanjan, demonstrators voiced their discontent with chants of "Incompetent officials, resign!" and "No to mandatory overtime!" Meanwhile, nurses at Sajad Hospital in Tabriz and Khomeini Hospital in Abadeh joined the growing movement, further intensifying the nationwide unrest.
On Tuesday, Tasnim News Agency reported on the strikes, noting that after last year's end-of-year protests by nurses, promises of a half-percent salary adjustment were made. However, with these commitments left unfulfilled, a renewed wave of protests has erupted among Shiraz public hospital nurses.
Tasnim quoted a nurse at a public hospital in Shiraz expressing frustration over the lack of follow-through on a parliamentary approved meager half-percent salary adjustment for nurses, stating, "Despite assurances of payment, funds had yet to be disbursed as of July."
The nurse noted, "Even this modest adjustment was reduced to 0.4 percent, yet no payments have been made."
Despite Iran's labor law prohibiting the formation of trade unions and imposing severe penalties for peaceful protests, nurses have continued to defy these restrictions in recent weeks amid deteriorating conditions and a deepening economic crisis.
The profession is grappling with alarming rates of job turnover and escalating migration, leading to critical shortages. Yet, the government remains resolute that these protests will be quelled.
In July, Mohammad Sharifi Moghadam, Secretary-General of the House of Nurses, reported that nurses who participated in the protests across various regions had been summoned and threatened.
Around the same time, ILNA News Agency published a report titled "From Threats and Exile to Dismissal: The Response to Protesting Nurses’ Demands," emphasizing that contract nurses in the private sector are denied the freedom to participate in protests, with those who do risk termination and dismissal.
According to ILNA, even permanent contract nurses under the Ministry of Health's jurisdiction have been summoned to disciplinary boards, punished, and subjected to rights violations and intense pressure.
In March, the Ham-Mihan newspaper detailed legal actions taken against nurses who had protested and participated in gatherings over the previous year.
The summoning, threatening, exiling, and dismissal of nurses in Iran are unfolding against the backdrop of a severe nursing shortage.
Fereydoun Moradi, a member of the Supreme Council of Nursing, revealed in July that 150 to 200 nurses are emigrating from the country each month. In August 2023, Abbas Abadi, Deputy Minister of Nursing at the Ministry of Health, announced a shortfall of approximately 100,000 nurses.
Politics overshadowed the performance of female Iranian athletes at the Paris Olympics, where current world taekwondo champion Nahid Kiyani won a silver medal after defeating her former teammate and defector, Kimia Alizadeh.
Kiyani and Alizadeh, who secured bronze for her new country, Bulgaria, shared a long, warm embrace and posed for photos after receiving their medals. Kiyani was also seen kissing her former roommate and friend on the shoulder.
However, this emotional moment was omitted from Iran's state television coverage. The state-run sports commentator referred to Alizadeh only as "she" or "the rival" and described the match as "a historic revenge."
A video of the two old friends embracing, which moved many Iranian fans to tears, has since gone viral on social media.
Many Iranian social media users have condemned the “oppressive” policies of the Islamic Republic that forced Alizadeh and two dozen other athletes sports people leave their homeland and their teams behind to live in exile in recent years. Most female athletes who defect to other countries, including Alizadeh, speak against the Islamic Government's oppression.
Another emotional scene was created in Paris Thursday when Sabah Shariati, an Iranian wrestler who competed for Azerbaijan’s team, lost against Iran's bronze medalist Amin Mirzadeh. Mirzadeh lifted him on his shoulders as a sign of respect when he found out this was Shariati’s last match.
Supporters of the state laud Kiyani for not “turning her back on the motherland” and call Alizadeh a “traitor”.
Kiyani who remained in Iran, as herInstagram posts show, is not a conformist, either. She supported the Woman, Life, Freedom movement of 2022-23 and campaigned against capital punishment on social media. “My silence doesn’t mean I’m happy,” one of her Instagram stories read.
Iran's Mirzadeh lifts Azerbaijan's Iranian wrestler Shariati on his shoulders
If not for the prospects of a medal, and consenting to wear the hijab, she would not have been allowed to compete in Paris or any other international competitions. She may even face repercussions for embracing her friend instead of turning her back on the “traitor’ in Paris Olympics.
“Iran is the home of all Iranians. I wish Kimia could return to Iran and to be a winner again,” former minister of communication Mohammad-Javad Azari-Jahromi, a close ally of the reform-oriented President Masoud Pezeshkian, posted on X Thursday.
Alizadeh was given a hero’s welcome by Iranian officials in 2016 for winning an Olympic bronze. She was showered with gifts and Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei lauded her for her victory which he said proved that hijab is no impediment to women’s success.
In 2020, however, Alizadeh defected to Germany to avoid competing for the Iranian Olympics team in protest to oppression of Iranian women and discarded her veil. She competed as a member of the refugee team in Tokyo Olympics where she and Kiyani had to face each other. Alizadeh won 3-0 but both were eventually eliminated.
“I’m one of the millions of oppressed women in Iran who they played in whatever manner they wished,” she said after her defection about being used for propaganda by the authorities when she was a member of the Iranian team such as obliging her to dedicate her 2016 medal to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and saying that wearing the hijab was created no obstacles to female athletes.
In the aftermath of the Woman, Life, Freedom protests, Alizadeh supported the leadership of Iran's exiled Prince Reza Pahlavi.
Iran's Supreme Leader has imposed a ban on Iranian athletes competing with Israelis. The ban forces athletes to forfeit matches or claim injury to avoid facing Israelis even at the cost of losing medals.
Iran’s UN representative has denied a Reuter’s report on Friday which said that Iran is planning to supply hundreds of missiles to Russia for its war in Ukraine.
"Legally, Iran has no restrictions or prohibitions on buying or selling conventional weapons. But morally, Iran will avoid transferring any weapons, including missiles, that may be used in the conflict with Ukraine until it ends," Iran’s UN representative said.
Two European sources told Reuters that dozens of Russian military personnel are being trained in Iran to use the Fath-360 close-range ballistic missile system, adding that they expected the imminent delivery of hundreds of the satellite-guided weapons to Russia for its war in Ukraine.
Some experts compare the Fath-360 truck-mounted missiles, that come in batches of six, to the US HIMARS rockets, although their overall range and accuracy is less.
Russian defense ministry representatives are believed to have signed a contract on Dec. 13, 2023 in Tehran with Iranian officials for the Fath-360 and another ballistic missile system built by Iran's government-owned Aerospace Industries Organization (AIO) called the Ababil, said the two intelligence officials, who requested anonymity in order to discuss sensitive matters.
The sources did not specify an exact timeline for the delivery of Fath-360 missiles but but said it would be soon.
The officials highlighted that Russian personnel have visited Iran to learn to operate the Fath-360 defense system. One of the sources said that "the only next possible" step after training would be actual delivery of the missiles to Russia.
The Fath-360 defense system launches missiles with a maximum range of 120 km (75 miles) and a warhead of 150 kg, while the Russian-manufactured Iskander-M ballistic missiles have a a range of 500km, but harder to operate. Iskander is also truck mounted but comes in one or two salvos.
A Russian Iskander ballistic missile often used against Ukrainian civilian targets
The supply of Fath-360s could allow Russia to use more of its own arsenal for targets beyond the front line, while employing Iranian warheads for closer-range targets, a military expert told Reuters.
A spokesperson for the US National Security Council told Reuters that US and its NATO allies and G7 partners "are prepared to deliver a swift and severe response if Iran were to move forward with such transfers."
It "would represent a dramatic escalation in Iran's support for Russia's war of aggression against Ukraine," the spokesman said. "The White House has repeatedly warned of the deepening security partnership between Russia and Iran since the outset of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine."
A senior Iranian official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters that while Iran has not supplied Fath-360 missiles, they have sold other missiles and drones to Russia. The official emphasized, "How each country uses this equipment is entirely their decision," stressing that Iran did not sell weapons to Russia for use in the Ukraine war.
Iran's semi-official Tasnim news agency said in July 2023 the system had been successfully tested by the country's Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) Ground Force.
Iran has supplied hundreds of Shahed drones to Russia since mid-2022, which have been extensively utilized for targeting civilian infrastructure and urban areas in Ukraine with NATO calling on Tehran to stop its military cooperation with Moscow.
The Shahed drones, however, carry a fraction of the explosives in comparison to the Fath-360 missiles and are easier to shoot down as they are slower than ballistic missiles.
The US, UK, and Canada imposed new sanctions on Iran’s drone industry in April this year, targeting Iranian drones, including their use by Russia in the war in Ukraine.
Data from Iran's customs organization, analyzed by Iran International, showed that several items listed under a US advisory guide were imported in the first two months of the current Iranian year, which began on March 20.
In July this year, NATO leaders accused Iran of "fueling Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine by providing direct military support to Russia, such as munitions and uncrewed aerial vehicles (UAVs), which seriously impacts Euro-Atlantic security and undermines the global non-proliferation regime."
In the early hours of Friday morning, the town of Dahla in Deir Ezzor, eastern Syria, witnessed a sudden and bloody attack by Assad's forces and Iranian-backed militias against civilians.
Assad's forces and Iran-backed militias conducted a rocket attack on the town of Al-Dahla in eastern Deir ez-Zor around 2:30 AM on August 9th. The shelling resulted in a horrific massacre of the local population, killing 11 people, including five children. (See details of victims at the end of report)
The area of conflict is not far from US bases in Syria that have also been the target of frequent attacks by Iran-controlled armed groups.
This strike on the civilians occurred less than a day after an attack by "tribal" forces led by Ibrahim Al-Heflon areas east of the Euphrates River, specifically targeting positions of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). SDF managed to drive them out of the eastern Euphrates areas within a few hours, forcing them to retreat beyond the river to the west of the Euphrates. The bombardment of civilians could have been a revenge attack by Syrian and Iranian-backed forces.
Details of the shelling and its aftermath
The recent shelling in Deir Ezzor underscores the ongoing violence and its indiscriminate impact on civilians, including women and children. The incident highlights the challenges faced by residents in regions experiencing heightened military conflict. Despite repeated calls to protect civilians in conflict zones, the shelling continues, putting the lives of those in Deir Ezzor and other parts of Syria at constant risk.
The tragedy extended to the funeral of the victims, where mourners in Dahla were subjected to further shelling by Damascus government forces and its Iran-backed allies This attack forced the community to hastily bury the victims under difficult conditions, amid fear and uncertainty.
This incident indicates that the targeting of civilians extends to entire communities, affecting their ability to carry out basic humanitarian and social duties such as burying the dead.
The Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) reported that Damascus government forces and allies launched rockets at the towns of Dahla and Jadida Bakara after midnight on Friday, at around 2:30 AM. The shelling, which reportedly originated from regime bases in the village of Bou Lail on the western bank of the Euphrates River.
The ongoing escalation in Deir Ezzor reflects the tense situation in the region, where the Syrian regime and its allies are attempting to regain control over areas under SDF control and close to US forces.
Iran’s quest to enlist local tribes
Iran has long recognized the importance of local tribes in Syria as a means of expanding its influence. It recruited the Ibrahim Al-Hefl group through financial support and advanced military training. Through the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, Al-Hefl's elements were trained in unconventional warfare tactics and the use of advanced weapons in secret bases inside Syria and sometimes in Iran, making them an effective fighting force serving Tehran's regional goals.
This Iranian support for the Al-Hefl group is part of a broader strategy aimed at strengthening its regional influence and putting pressure on US forces in Syria. The coordinated attack carried out by the group against the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in areas like Abu Hamam and Dhiban, using advanced tactics and weapons, reflects Iran's ability to carry out painful strikes and confirms its determination to use force to achieve its political and military goals in the region.
On August 7 and 8, 2023, northern Syria witnessed a dangerous escalation with a coordinated attack by an Iranian-backed tribal group on Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) positions in areas like Abu Hamam in Al-Shaitat and Dhiban.
Victims of the bombardment by Syrian and Iran-backed forces:
Rahaf Ismail Al-Aboud, 12 years old; Nadia Kader Al-Mohammed, 18 years old; Hind Farhan Al-Aboud, 30 years old; Aya Ismail Al-Aboud, 8 years old; Nadine Thalej Al-Obaid, 22 years old; Yasser Yassin Al-Zu'ar, 37 years old; Maria Yassin Al-Zu'ar, 12 years old; Salwa Yasser Al-Zu'ar, 5 years old; Raghd Mohammed Al-Zughayr, 22 years old; Sham Bashar Al-Zughayr, 4 months old; Ilaf Bashar Al-Zughayr, 1.5 years old. Injuries were also reported among the children Ali Hassan Al-Daman, 12 years old; Malak Aboud Al-Hussein, 25 years old; Syria Al-Aboud, 50 years old; Fahd Ismail Al-Aboud, 15 years old; and Malak Ismail Al-Aboud, 6 years old.
The documents, which were part of a 220-page closure and activity ban order issued by Germany’s Federal Ministry of the Interior, show that Mohammad Hadi Mofatteh, the head of the Islamic Center of Hamburg, was in continuous contact with Mehdi Mostafavi, a senior official in Khamenei’s office, Der Spiegel reported Friday.
Through WhatsApp, these two exchanged over 650 messages between late 2021 and late 2023, discussing everything from ideological messaging to the center’s future activities.
The instructions from Khamenei’s office included detailed directives on how to shape the narrative around significant events, such as Hamas’ attack on Israel in October 2023, which claimed around 1,200 lives.
Just days after the brutal Hamas attack, Mofatteh was told to frame the incident as a necessary act of resistance against Israel’s alleged crimes. The messaging was clear: portray the attack as an act of bravery by Palestinian youth and as a turning point.
“The Islamic Resistance had no other means to stop Israel’s crimes… Thanks to the courage of Palestinian youth, the Zionist regime will never be the same,” read a message seen by Der Spigel.
The revelations are not limited to ideological influence; they also expose financial links between the Islamic Center of Hamburg and Hezbollah, the Lebanese organization that has been classified as terrorist by both Germany and the European Union.
Inspectors discovered documents bearing Khamenei’s personal stamp and signature, indicating financial endorsements for operations in Yemen. These documents suggest that the center was not only spreading Tehran’s ideology but also acting as a financial conduit for Iran’s militant proxies.
Further evidence of the center’s deep ties to Hezbollah includes reports of visits by a senior Hezbollah cleric responsible for foreign relations. This cleric, who visited the center multiple times, expressed gratitude for the "financial, spiritual, and advisory support" provided by the center’s leadership.
Last week, the German government deported Nasir Niknejad, the Iran-linked Imam of the Islamic Center in Berlin, as revealed by Iran International's correspondent in Berlin. Reports indicate that Niknejad and his wife were detained at Berlin airport upon returning from a month-long leave, just three weeks after the closure of Islamic centers affiliated with the Islamic Republic across Germany. They were subsequently deported back to Iran.
In July, Germany shut down the Khamenei-controlled Islamic Center of Hamburg and the Blue Mosque for their role in promoting terrorist ideology, antisemitism, and anti-democratic threats to the Federal Republic's constitutional order, according to the interior ministry.
In November 2023, Germany's federal police raided the Islamic Center of Hamburg on suspicions of supporting the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, which has been accused of engaging in terrorism. Germany banned Hezbollah's activities in 2020, stating that the Islamic Center's actions sought to spread the revolutionary ideology of Iran’s Supreme Leader and undermine Germany’s "constitutional order."