Iran International journalists face escalating threats from Tehran - Forbes
Iranian authorities have threatened dozens of journalists at London-based broadcaster Iran International, along with hundreds of their relatives, in a bid to force them to resign, Forbes reported.
The lawyers representing the reporters from UK-based Doughty Street Chambers and Howard Kennedy said 45 journalists and 315 family members had been targeted in the past six weeks in what they described as a campaign of intimidation.
The journalists were told they would be killed unless they resigned by specific deadlines, all of which have now passed, the lawyers said.
Iran International, which reports on events in Iran and the wider region, said its staff had faced sustained harassment since the channel was founded in 2017, including threats of assassination and kidnapping, physical assaults, online abuse, and hacking.
British lawmakers have warned that Iran is among several foreign governments engaged in transnational repression on UK soil.
A July report from parliament’s Joint Committee on Human Rights said Tehran’s tactics include “assassination plots, physical attacks, intimidation of family members, asset freezing, judicial proceedings, smear campaigns, online abuse, surveillance and digital attacks such as hacking, doxing and impersonation."
Iran International filed an urgent appeal with United Nations experts last week, urging them to take action against Tehran over serious risks to the lives and safety of their journalists worldwide and relatives inside Iran.
On Thursday, US-based advocacy group United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) called on Washington and its European allies to confront Iran’s transnational repression by issuing a credible military threat, a week after they accused Tehran of plotting to kill individuals in Europe and the US.
Since its formation in 2017, Iran International journalists have been targeted by the Iranian authorities for their reporting. However, since the start of a 12-day war between Iran and Israel in mid-June, the situation has deteriorated rapidly and there is now a real risk to the lives of multiple Iran International staff and to their family members.
The Islamic Republic's threats to critics in Canada could grow in 2025, with Iran using organized crime networks to intimidate and harm them, Canada’s intelligence agency warned on Saturday.
“Iranian threat-related activities directed at Canada and its allies are likely to continue in 2025 and may increase depending on developments in the Middle East and the Iranian regime’s own threat perceptions,” the Canadian Security Intelligence Service said in a statement.
The CSIS told The Globe and Mail on Saturday it is actively investigating death threats in Canada linked to the Islamic Republic.
“Given the need to protect our sources, tradecraft and methods, however, we cannot confirm or deny specific investigative details,” said CSIS spokesperson Magali Hébert.
The agency’s warning follows an announcement by Iran International that two of its Canada-based journalists were targeted by the Islamic Republic in recent weeks.
"It's very, very intense and very threatening," Adam Baillie, spokesman for Iran International, told The Canadian Press.
"People get all sorts of messages of, 'We know where you live, remember we watch you, remember we know all about you, we know where your family lives.' It's that kind of thing," Baillie said.
UN appeal over threats to journalists
On Tuesday, Iran International filed an urgent appeal with United Nations experts urging them to take action against Iran over serious risks to the lives and safety of their journalists worldwide and relatives inside Iran.
Over the past six weeks, the Iranian authorities have intimidated and threatened 45 journalists and 315 of their family members with death unless they stop working for Iran International by specific deadlines, Iran International said in a statement.
Carlos Nagore Diaz, spokesperson for UN special rapporteur on freedom of expression Irene Khan, said “several UN Special Rapporteurs are considering taking urgent action on the renewed credible threats to life,” but confirmed that “any communications with the Iranian regime are currently confidential.”
In its reply to the UN, Iran’s permanent mission rejected “allegations made about the threats or kidnapping plans” and described Iran International as “an anti-Iranian network” whose operatives “will be dealt with according to the relevant laws.”
UN rapporteurs wrote in May 2024 that intimidation of the channel’s staff “may amount to violations of the sovereignty” of the countries in which they operate.
In March 2023, Iran International presenter Pouria Zeraati was stabbed in London. Two Romanian nationals were later charged.
In late June, IRGC forces in Tehran detained the family of another Iran International presenter to pressure them into ending their cooperation with the network.
CSIS’s warning also comes after an alleged Iranian plot to assassinate former Canadian justice minister Irwin Cotler, which the Royal Canadian Mounted Police says it foiled last year. Cotler remains under 24-hour police protection.
Last week, Canada joined Britain, the US, France, Germany, the Netherlands, and Denmark in condemning what they called “a growing number of threats from Iranian intelligence services on their soil,” including collaboration with organized crime networks to target dissidents.
More than one million migrants were returned from Iran to Afghanistan over the past 100 days, including 450,000 from Tehran province, Tehran’s governor said on Saturday.
“Those without legal documents were identified and transferred to border crossings shared with Afghanistan and returned to their own country,” Mohammad Sadegh Motamedian told reporters on Saturday.
“Managing foreign nationals was one of the priorities of the government,” he said, adding that half of all foreign nationals in the country reside in Tehran province, prompting a province-wide identification effort.
Last year, more than 6,000 classrooms in the province were used by over 220,000 foreign national students, according to the governor.
“This year, families can register their children in those schools, which means existing educational capacity without building new schools will be available to our own students.”
In late July, Amnesty International called on Iran’s interior minister to take urgent action to halt the expulsions of Afghans.
The group said more than one million Afghans, including Iran-born individuals and long-term residents, had been forcibly returned to Afghanistan in recent months. Amnesty linked the mass returns to the escalation of hostilities between Israel and Iran, saying over half a million Afghans had been expelled since June 1, including thousands of unaccompanied children.
The organization said millions more remain at risk, particularly women and girls, who “must be treated as prima facie refugees and not returned to Afghanistan, where the Taliban are committing the crime against humanity of gender persecution against them.”
In previous remarks, Iranian officials have framed deportations as part of efforts to regulate residency and ease pressure on public services in areas with high concentrations of foreign nationals.
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) on Friday condemned threats by the Islamic Republic against the families of journalists working for Iran International, BBC Persian and Radio Farda, calling the tactic “emotional hostage-taking”
“Families of journalists working for outlets like BBC Persian, Iran International & Radio Farda are harassed, summoned, and threatened simply because their loved ones report from abroad,” CPJ posted on X, urging Iran to “end these transnational tactics of intimidation.”
Iran International filed an urgent appeal with United Nations experts on August 4, urging them to take action against Iran over serious risks to the lives and safety of their journalists worldwide and relatives inside Iran.
“Over the past weeks, the Iranian authorities have intimidated and threatened 45 journalists and 315 of their family members with death unless they stop working for Iran International by specific deadlines,” Iran International said in a statement.
All of those deadlines given by Iran's Ministry of Intelligence and Security have now passed, it added.
Since its formation in 2017, Iran International journalists have been targeted by the Iranian authorities for their reporting. This has included threats of assassination, assault and abduction against staff based in Britain, the United States and Europe.
Iran continues to be ranked among the world’s worst countries for press freedom.
According to Reporters Without Borders, “Iran has reinforced its position as one of the most repressive countries in terms of press freedom, with journalists and independent media constantly persecuted through arbitrary arrests and harsh sentences handed down after unfair trials before revolutionary courts.”
When Iran's armed forces chief of staff declared this week that all Iranians are together in one battle trench, the rallying cry rang hollow with many Iranians bewildered by a punishing war last month and worsening standards of living.
“Our home is not your trench. If you're looking for one, use your own house and stop riding on our backs,” one user said in a message sent to Iran International.
The backlash followed a speech by Major General Abdolrahim Mousavi, chief of staff of Iran’s armed forces, who said on Thursday, “All of our houses are like one trench facing the enemy.”
“Mousavi wants to use the civilian population as human shields,” one user wrote on X.
Another opined: "Did you care then that Iran’s wealth should be for its own people, and now you’re using the same people, drowning in your corruption and crimes, as your shield?!"
Iran is currently grappling with water shortages and widespread power outages amid high summer temperatures, while also dealing with recovery efforts following a 12-day war with Israel and its aftermath.
Mousavi also issued threats for any further attacks on Iran, saying there would be severe consequences for what he called any renewed aggression.
“Even if only one Iranian remains alive, you Americans will not be safe from the slap of his revenge," Mousavi said in a broadcast live on Iranian state television.
“Iran’s air defense was damaged early in the 12-day war, but since then Iran has rebuilt and modernized its systems. Israel now realizes that Iran’s air defense in a future war would be multiple times stronger,” Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) affiliated Tasnim News said on Thursday.
Israel launched a surprise military campaign on June 13 targeting military and nuclear sites, assassinating senior Iranian commanders and killing hundreds of civilians. In response, Iranian missile strikes killed 29 Israeli civilians.
According to an Iranian government spokesperson, 1,062 Iranians were killed during the conflict, including 786 military personnel and 276 civilians.
The United States capped off the conflict with attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities at Isfahan, Natanz and Fordow with long-range bombers and submarine-launched missiles on June 22. Washington brokered a ceasefire on June 24.
More than 600 political prisoners were transferred back to Tehran’s Evin Prison early Friday, jailed activist Mehdi Mahmoudian said, after being held in Greater Tehran Penitentiary since the June 23 Israeli missile strike that damaged the facility.
The transfer began around 4 a.m. on Friday and included detainees arrested before and after the strike, according to Mahmoudian's Telegram channel. Prisoners were placed in Wards 7 and 8, with no prior notice given to families.
Security officers attempted to separate death-row political prisoners from others during the move, sparking protests, Iran International has learned. Several inmates, including veteran activist Mostafa Tajzadeh and Mahmoudian himself, were beaten.
Iran’s judiciary-affiliated Mizan news agency also acknowledged the return of some inmates, reporting on Friday that parts of Evin Prison had resumed operations. The brief report did not specify how many prisoners were moved back, which wards were reopened, or what conditions they now face.
Conditions in Greater Tehran Penitentiary
Mahmoudian said the earlier relocation to Greater Tehran Penitentiary had exposed “inhumane” conditions: poor sanitation, shortages of basic supplies, and harsh living circumstances. He argued that with Evin still unrepaired, the return was not a sign of improved conditions but a “stubborn and irrational” attempt by authorities to project normalcy.
June 23 strike killed 71, Iran says
The transfers come 45 days after Israel struck Evin Prison, calling it a “tool of repression.” Iran’s judiciary said 71 people were killed, including guards, staff, inmates, visiting relatives, and nearby residents.
Facilities destroyed in the strike included several wards, the infirmary, and the visitation hall. Victims included prison prosecutor Ali Ghanaatkar, two senior officials, medical staff, and at least one child.
Harsh relocation after attack
Following the June strike, surviving inmates were forcibly evacuated and sent to Greater Tehran Prison, Ghezel Hesar, and Qarchak Women’s Prison. Rights groups documented severe overcrowding, lack of clean water, food shortages, and denial of medical treatment.