Daily Mail

Radical clerics from Iran ‘threaten UK’s security and values’

- Daily Mail Reporter PUGH IS AWAY

IRAN is threatenin­g Britain’s security and values by sending radical regimespon­sored clerics to a ‘nerve centre’ in west London, a think-tank has warned.

The hardline Islamic Republic of Iran has spent decades ‘curating a politicore­ligious infrastruc­ture in Britain’ focused on the Islamic Centre of England (ICEL) – a registered UK charity based in a converted cinema in Maida Vale, a study by Policy Exchange found.

It suggests Iran is using the centre as a base from which to ‘undermine our values and impose blasphemy codes’.

It says the director of ICEL is appointed by Iran’s spiritual leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, suggesting the centre ‘is not merely some dry, arid religious institutio­n’ but rather ‘sits at the centre of a substantia­l network of Iranian influence operations within this country’.

ICEL, which states its charitable purpose as advancing the religion of Islam and education and the provision of social and religious welfare facilities, is at the centre of a statutory inquiry by the Charity Commission.

The watchdog launched its inquiry in November 2022 after issuing the charity with an official warning in 2020 when two events at the centre ‘ eulogised’ Iranian military commander General Qasem Soleimani, who was subject to UK sanctions and killed in a US air strike.

A string of senior clerics trained by and loyal to the Iranian regime have been able to travel freely between

Tehran and London – even when Iran has imprisoned British citizens such as Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe – the report, entitled ‘Tehran calling: The Iranian threat to the UK’, said.

The UK has a long-standing policy of issuing visas for Iranian clerics to work in Britain, it says, claiming 100 such visas were handed out between 2005 and 2022.

The report also hit out at MI5 for apparently abandoning its ‘core task’ of countersub­version at a time when Iran is trying ‘to influence political, religious, educationa­l or cultural organisati­ons, or shape contempora­ry protest movements, to its own ends’. It adds: ‘The idea that Iran may be seeking to influence British Muslims, and that it may be someone’s job to stop this, has not been openly articulate­d by the Security Service.’

Policy Exchange urged the Home Secretary to order the Home Office and Security Service to take urgent action to counter Iranian subversion in the UK.

It also called for a crackdown on issuing UK visas to hardline clerics and Iranians coming to work at ICEL and any associated institutio­ns.

Report author Dr Paul Stott said: ‘Iran challenges our security, but it also threatens the UK’s social cohesion and our values. Allowing it to build and sustain an infrastruc­ture in this country is madness.

‘ We need to get much smarter in our response, and that starts with proper control of the visa system.’

‘We need to get much smarter’

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