UK Convicts Austrian National Over ‘Terror Plot’ Against Iran International

A handout image released by the Metropolitan Police Service shows the custody photograph of Austrian national Magomed-Husejn Dovtaev (AFP)
A handout image released by the Metropolitan Police Service shows the custody photograph of Austrian national Magomed-Husejn Dovtaev (AFP)
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UK Convicts Austrian National Over ‘Terror Plot’ Against Iran International

A handout image released by the Metropolitan Police Service shows the custody photograph of Austrian national Magomed-Husejn Dovtaev (AFP)
A handout image released by the Metropolitan Police Service shows the custody photograph of Austrian national Magomed-Husejn Dovtaev (AFP)

A British court has sentenced an Austrian born in Chechnya to three and a half years in prison, convicting him of carrying out "hostile reconnaissance" against a London-based Iranian television channel.

Last Wednesday, a jury in London convicted Magomed-Husejn Dovtaev following a brief trial.

Dovtaev, 31, pleaded not guilty to possession of records containing information likely to be helpful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism.

He was detained by counterterrorism officers in west London last Feb. 11.

The Public Prosecution said that Dovtaev went to London to gather "hostile information" in connection with a building housing the Persian-language channel Iran International, whose journalists report on human rights violations believed to be being committed in Iran.

Paul Kelleher, Dovtayev's defense attorney, said there was every possibility his client was a "useful idiot" and that claims Iran would contemplate a terrorist attack on a news organization in England were "far-fetched."

But Judge Richard Marks expressed his "satisfaction with the criminal standards of evidence that an attack of some sort on Iran International was the plan of those behind this."

Iran refuted the British media's false allegations about harming presenters and broadcasters.

Iranian Chargé d'Affaires in London Mehdi Hosseini Mateen denied the British media's accusations of an "alleged Iranian plot" to assassinate two international television broadcasters living in London.

Mehr News Agency reported on Friday that Mateen rejected the claims of ITV News, saying they were baseless and similar to a Hollywood movie.

ITV News previously published a report claiming that the Iran Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) had contacted a human trafficker in Oct. 2022, offering $200,000 to assassinate two international broadcasters in London.

The Iranian Chargé d'Affaires said that the report claimed that the person hired was a double agent working with a Western intelligence organization and uncovered the plot.

Mateen added that regardless of the undeniable violent behaviors of the alleged London-based TV network against Iranian national security, Tehran is not linked to those who made these allegations.

The Iranian government classified Iran International as a terrorist organization based on its coverage of the protests that broke out in the country following the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini.

Amini died in September 2022, three days after the morality police in Tehran arrested her. Her death sparked widespread protests against political and religious leaders in Iran.

The suppression of these protests led to the deaths of hundreds, and the authorities arrested thousands of people.



Protesters Force 4 Bangladesh Cenbank Deputies to Resign

Commuters wait at a traffic light in Dhaka on August 7, 2024, after former prime minister Sheikh Hasina fled the country. (Photo by MUNIR UZ ZAMAN / AFP)
Commuters wait at a traffic light in Dhaka on August 7, 2024, after former prime minister Sheikh Hasina fled the country. (Photo by MUNIR UZ ZAMAN / AFP)
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Protesters Force 4 Bangladesh Cenbank Deputies to Resign

Commuters wait at a traffic light in Dhaka on August 7, 2024, after former prime minister Sheikh Hasina fled the country. (Photo by MUNIR UZ ZAMAN / AFP)
Commuters wait at a traffic light in Dhaka on August 7, 2024, after former prime minister Sheikh Hasina fled the country. (Photo by MUNIR UZ ZAMAN / AFP)

Four deputy governors of Bangladesh's central bank were forced to resign on Wednesday after about 300-400 officials protested against what they said was corruption by top officials, two sources at the bank told Reuters.
Protesters also demanded the resignation of Bangladesh Bank governor Abdur Rouf Talukder, who was not present during the demonstrations at the bank's headquarters in capital Dhaka, said the sources, who did not want to be named.
Talukder and the bank's spokesperson did not answer calls made to seek comment.
The protests at the central bank came two days after Sheikh Hasina resigned as Bangladesh's prime minister and fled the country following weeks of deadly protests that began as demonstrations by students against government job quotas but escalated into a movement demanding her resignation.
Deputy Governor Nurun Nahar will continue handling operational work at the bank for now but will have to leave when new deputy governors are appointed, said one of the sources.
"Although many officials, including myself, continue to work, we support the protests," said another central bank official who did not join the protests and did not want to be named.
Two of Talukder's deputies were also not in office on Wednesday but agreed to resign after protesters spoke to them by phone, the sources said.
The chief of the financial intelligence department and the policy adviser to the central bank also resigned, the sources said, adding that Bangladesh army personnel ensured the safety of the officials and helped them leave the bank.
Bangladesh Bank announced its monetary policy for the first half of fiscal year 2024-25 last month and the next policy for the second half is due in January.