Gulf News

EU hits Iran with fresh sanctions

37 MORE OFFICIALS, ENTITIES NOW ON ASSET-FREEZE, VISA-BAN BLACKLIST

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The EU yesterday placed 37 more Iranian officials and entities on an assetfreez­e and visa-ban blacklist over Tehran’s bloody crackdown on protesters, officials said.

The fourth round of sanctions against Tehran over its repression of demonstrat­ors was adopted by the bloc’s foreign ministers meeting in Brussels.

The full list of names was to be given in the EU’s official journal later yesterday.

The bloc has already imposed sanctions on more than 60 Iranian officials and entities over the crackdown on protestors, including targeting Tehran’s “morality police”, Revolution­ary Guard Corps commanders and state media.

But the 27-nation EU has so far stopped short of blacklisti­ng the Revolution­ary Guards themselves as a terror group despite calls from Germany and the Netherland­s to do so.

Bid to revive talks

Iran has warned the bloc against taking the move and EU officials are wary that it could kill off stalled attempts to revive the 2015 deal on Tehran’s nuclear programme being mediated by Brussels.

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell insisted that there needed first to be a legal ruling in an EU member state first before the bloc could make the move.

“You cannot say: ‘I consider you a terrorist because I do not like you’,” Borrell said.

“It has to be done when a court of one member state issues a legal statement, a concrete condemnati­on.”

Demonstrat­ions have swept Iran since the September 16 death in custody of Iranian Kurdish woman Mahsa Amini, 22, after her arrest in Tehran for allegedly failing to adhere to the Islamic republic’s strict dress rules.

Iran has arrested at least 14,000 people in the wave of protests, according to the United Nations.

Iranian authoritie­s have executed four people for their role in the unrest and imposed the death penalty on a total of 18, triggering widespread internatio­nal outrage.

The foreign ministers of France and Belgium urged the bloc to confront issue of Iran’s detention of EU citizens, seen as “hostage-taking” by rights groups and families of those detained.

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