Britain Calls in Iranian Ambassador After Spy Charges Filed

The UK government has summoned Iran's ambassador following charges against two men accused of conducting surveillance on Jewish targets for Iranian intelligence. The suspects allegedly gathered information on the Israeli Embassy and Britain's oldest synagogue over a five-week period last summer.

LONDON – British officials called in Iran’s ambassador to the United Kingdom on Monday following the filing of espionage charges against two individuals suspected of working with Iranian intelligence operations.

The charges were brought against an Iranian citizen and a person holding both British and Iranian citizenship, who prosecutors say conducted surveillance activities on Jewish locations throughout Britain last week in a London courtroom.

According to court documents, the defendants spent five weeks during the summer months collecting intelligence and performing reconnaissance work on Jewish community sites at the direction of Iran’s spy network.

Britain’s foreign ministry released a statement emphasizing their stance on the matter: “National security remains our top priority, and we take threats posed by Iran and those who do its bidding extremely seriously.”

The statement continued: “This government will take all measures necessary to protect the British people, including exposing Iran’s reckless and destabilising actions at home and abroad.”

Court officials identified the defendants as Nematollah Shahsavani, a 40-year-old holding dual citizenship, and 22-year-old Iranian citizen Alireza Farasati. Prosecutors allege the pair conducted hostile reconnaissance operations targeting the Israeli Embassy, Britain’s most historic synagogue, and additional Jewish community locations.

Both defendants declined to enter pleas during their court appearance and remain in jail custody pending their scheduled hearing at London’s Old Bailey Court on April 17.

For years, British intelligence officials and parliamentary members have raised concerns about Iranian-backed threats, claiming Tehran has orchestrated more than 20 suspected kidnapping and murder schemes targeting individuals in the UK.

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