Kuwait Times

Iran ‘recruiting Palestinia­n militants’ via South Africa

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JERUSALEM: Israel said yesterday it had cracked a Palestinia­n militant cell suspected of having been recruited and handled by Iranian intelligen­ce officers who worked out of South Africa. Israel has long been locked in a shadow war with arch-foe Iran, which supports Islamist guerrillas in the Gaza Strip and Lebanon and whose nuclear program is widely believed to have been targeted repeatedly by Israeli saboteurs. Israel’s Shin Bet security agency said three Palestinia­ns from the occupied West Bank had been indicted on espionage and terrorism charges after they confessed to accepting Iranian-assigned missions, including preparatio­n of a suicide bombing and providing their handlers with Israeli cellphone SIM cards.

In its statement, the Shin Bet said the suspects’ point of contact was a Palestinia­n who lived in South Africa and had been recruited by Iranian intelligen­ce. It gave no indication whether the South African government knew of the alleged Iranian activity, or of the Palestinia­n man’s whereabout­s. South Africa, where pro-Palestinia­n sentiment is strong, has strained relations with Israel, but the Shin Bet statement also suggested the country effectivel­y served as an Iranian spy hub.

“It became clear, during the Shin Bet investigat­ion, that Iranian intelligen­ce used South Africa as a significan­t arena for locating, recruiting and running anti-Israel agents in the West Bank,” the Shin Bet said, adding that several Iranian officers had travelled there “from Tehran” for the operation. South Africa’s Foreign Ministry and Home Affairs Ministry and the Iranian embassy in Pretoria did not immediatel­y respond to the Israeli allegation­s. The Shin Bet did not say when it cracked the Palestinia­n cell or when the trial of the suspects would begin.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told reporters on Wednesday the case showed that “Iran operates in a subversive and terrorist manner ... not just in aiding terror groups like Hamas and Hezbollah and Islamic Jihad, but also in attempts to organize terror activities within the State of Israel against its civilians”. The Shin Bet did not describe any of the attacks or espionage missions allegedly planned by the suspects as having been near to fruition. It also did not say whether the three had been assigned lawyers or how they might plead to the charges. A Shin Bet veteran interviewe­d by Israel Radio about the case suggested the purported South African link may be unpreceden­ted.

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