Iran charges French woman, embassy workers with plot

TEHRAN (Reuters) – An Iranian court yesterday  charged a French woman, two Iranians working for the British and  French embassies in Tehran and dozens of others with spying and  aiding a Western plot to overthrow the system of clerical rule.

The European Union, France and Britain all condemned the  trial. The Swedish EU presidency said in a statement “action  against one EU country, citizen or embassy staff, is considered  an action against all of the EU.“

“This is obviously a show trial directed against the EU,”  Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt told Reuters.
It was the second mass trial in a week aimed at uprooting  the moderate opposition and putting an end to protests that  erupted after the disputed June 12 presidential election.

At least 26 protesters have been killed and scores arrested  in post-election violence. Moderates say the poll was rigged for  President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to win, but officials say it was  the “healthiest” vote since the 1979 Islamic revolution.
The protests have exposed deep rifts within the clerical  establishment in Iran, the world’s fifth biggest oil producer.

French citizen Clotilde Reiss was charged with “acting  against national security by taking part in unrest…  collecting news and information and sending pictures of the  unrest abroad”, state news agency IRNA said.

Espionage and acting against national security are  punishable by death under Iran’s Islamic law.
Reiss, a teaching assistant, confessed her “mistakes” and  asked for clemency, IRNA said. Nazak Afshar, an Iranian working  for the French embassy, was also charged with “providing  information over the vote unrest to foreigners.“

“We were not authorised by the embassy to go to rallies but  we were told to shelter protesters if necessary,” Afshar said.
The British embassy employee, Hossein Rassam, was charged  with espionage and confessed to handing information about the  unrest to Washington, IRNA said.

“The local staff were asked by their superiors at the  British embassy to attend the riots,” IRNA quoted Rassam as  telling the court. Rassam was freed on $100,000 bail on July 19.

“Several British diplomats attended rallies… The British  ambassador and the charge d’affaires also went to a rally.”

EU solidarity

The trial was a further sign that Iran’s hardline leadership  was not interested in reconciliation with the moderate  opposition or repairing ties with the West, analysts said.

“This is not calculated to heal the divide,” said Ali  Ansari, an Iran expert at Britain’s St. Andrews University.
“It’s an attempt by the hardliners to impose their  narrative,” he said. “You can’t kill that many people on the  street and not try to prove that you were right.”

Riot police used force to break up a protest by relatives of  the accused outside the courtroom.
“Relatives of the defendants and a large group of people  gathered in front of the court building yesterday. When they  chanted ‘Allahu Akbar’ (God is greatest), the riot police  attacked them,” the reformist Mosharekat website said.
Reiss has been held in Tehran’s Evin Prison since she was  arrested at a Tehran airport on July 1 as she tried to leave  Iran after spending five months in the central city of Isfahan.

Reiss, wearing a black Islamic gown and a white-brown  headscarf, sat in the front row in the court. It was not clear  whether she had a translator when the indictment was read.

“I wrote a one-page report about the situation in Isfahan… and handed it over to the French embassy’s cultural  section,” IRNA quoted her as saying in court.

“France renews its demand for the immediate liberation of  the young academic, since the accusations against her are  baseless,” France’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
Britain earlier described the trial as an “outrage.“
British Foreign Secretary David Miliband said he had  received support from France and from Sweden, which holds the  European Union presidency.

“We have reaffirmed our solidarity in the face of this  latest Iranian provocation,” he said.
At a mass trial last Saturday more than 100 reformists,  including a former vice-president and several other prominent  figures, were charged with offences that included acting against  national security by fomenting post-election unrest.

Leading moderates, including defeated candidates Mirhossein  Mousavi and Mehdi Karoubi, have defied Supreme Leader Ayatollah  Ali Khamenei, who has formally endorsed Ahmadinejad.

They say the new government Ahmadinejad is to appoint will  be illegitimate. Ahmadinejad has two weeks to name his cabinet.
Iran accuses the West, particularly the United States and  Britain, of fomenting trouble after the election in an attempt  to topple the clerical establishment. They deny the charge.

The latest indictment accused Washington and London of  “providing financial help to Iran’s opposition” to fuel turmoil.