Ambiguity Surrounds Murder of Iranian Arms Dealer in Italy

Ambiguity still surrounds the murder of Iranian arms dealer Said Ansary Firouz in Formello in Rome’s northern outskirts. (AFP)
Ambiguity still surrounds the murder of Iranian arms dealer Said Ansary Firouz in Formello in Rome’s northern outskirts. (AFP)
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Ambiguity Surrounds Murder of Iranian Arms Dealer in Italy

Ambiguity still surrounds the murder of Iranian arms dealer Said Ansary Firouz in Formello in Rome’s northern outskirts. (AFP)
Ambiguity still surrounds the murder of Iranian arms dealer Said Ansary Firouz in Formello in Rome’s northern outskirts. (AFP)

Ambiguity still surrounds the murder of Iranian arms dealer Said Ansary Firouz, who was shot dead last week at his office in Formello in Rome’s northern outskirts.

Italian police reports said Firouz was killed by his driver, 47-year-old Foloty Kave, who shot his employer before turning the weapon on himself.

Recent investigative data showed that Kave’s motive was blackmail. The gendarmerie reports said Firouz was shot dead in the head and that the relationship between the two men had worsened since last year after Kave was fired from his job.

The reports said the murderer had blackmailed the victim and demanded large sums of money in exchange for information he knew about him.

Firouz was under investigation for a shipment of arms destined for Tehran, police sources said.

The son of a former Iranian ambassador to Italy during the Shah era, Firouz was the middleman and a crucial link connecting supply with demand.

Other Italian news outlets said the victim had ties with the Calabrian or 'Ndrangheta mafia, which may have been behind the assassination and Kave’s suicide attempt. The driver was connected to this criminal organization, which is the most violent in Italy.

Days before his death, the Special Investigative Department (ROS) of the Carabinieri had issued Firouz an indictment notice for international trafficking in weapons of war.

Nine others of Iranian and Italian nationality were also being investigated.

Il Messaggero reported that in 2016 Firouz met in London with Safarian Nasab Esmail, who is under investigation in Rome for international terrorism.

Firouz ran a profitable business selling and renting vintage cars to celebrities and football players.



Mexican Authorities to Seal Secret Tunnel on US Border

 A National Guard agent inspects an illegal tunnel bound to El Paso in US, at the Mexico-US border in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, on January 18, 2025. (AFP)
A National Guard agent inspects an illegal tunnel bound to El Paso in US, at the Mexico-US border in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, on January 18, 2025. (AFP)
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Mexican Authorities to Seal Secret Tunnel on US Border

 A National Guard agent inspects an illegal tunnel bound to El Paso in US, at the Mexico-US border in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, on January 18, 2025. (AFP)
A National Guard agent inspects an illegal tunnel bound to El Paso in US, at the Mexico-US border in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, on January 18, 2025. (AFP)

A clandestine tunnel discovered on the US-Mexico border allowing entry from Ciudad Juarez into the Texan city of El Paso will be sealed by Mexican authorities, an army official said Saturday, adding that its construction was under investigation.

Discovered on January 10 by US and Mexican security agencies, the tunnel measures approximately 300 meters (1,000 feet) in length on the Mexican side and is equipped with lighting, ventilation and is reinforced to prevent collapses.

Hidden in a storm sewer system operating between both cities, its access is about 1.8 meters high and 1.2 meters wide (6 feet high and 4 feet wide), making for easy passage of people or contraband, said General Jose Lemus, commander of Ciudad Juarez's military garrison, which is guarding the tunnel.

The tunnel's construction "must have taken a long time... it could have been one or two years," Lemus told reporters, declining to give details about how long it had been operating as well as its possible builders and operators.

He said the Mexican Attorney General's Office was responsible for the investigation and would be in charge of determining if there was complicity by the authorities due to the fact that it was built without them noticing.

Lemus also said clues about the tunnel's existence and location were discussed by human traffickers on social media platforms like TikTok.

Ahead of the US presidential inauguration of Donald Trump on Monday, both sides of the US-Mexico border have reinforced security measures, as the returning Republican has vowed a massive deportation of migrants soon after he takes office.

In the state of Chihuahua, which includes Ciudad Juarez, authorities reported a fire in a temporary camp for undocumented migrants, which led to the evacuation of 39 adults and 17 minors, according to the state police.

According to the Mexican newspaper Reforma, the fire was started by some of the migrants who were camping there to resist attempts by immigration authorities to detain them and transfer them to Mexico City for later deportation.

The National Institute of Migration did not respond to AFP's requests for comment.