Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Iran holds Lebanese man with U. S. links

Report from Tehran accuses the American- educated tech specialist of spying

- NASSER KARIMI AND JON GAMBRELL Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Adam Schreck, Matthew Lee and Zeina Karam of The Associated Press.

TEHRAN, Iran — Iranian state television on Tuesday claimed that a Washington­based Lebanese citizen missing in Tehran since September is actually an American spy now in the custody of authoritie­s.

However, those who know Nizar Zakka, who holds permanentr­esident status in the United States, said an image of him in army- style fatigues shown on Iranian state TV came from him recently taking part in a homecoming parade as an alumnus of his military high school in Georgia.

Through his lawyer, the Zakka family said they were “shocked by these false accusation­s,” and stressed that he has no “relation with any military, security institutio­n or secret services whatsoever.”

The state TV report is the first official word in Iran about Zakka since his disappeara­nce. It comes as four Americans are known to be held by Iranian authoritie­s after the Islamic Republic struck a nuclear deal with world powers.

Jim Benson, the president of Riverside Military Academy in Gainesvill­e, said state TV even identified the wrong man in the image as Zakka.

“He’s a good and decent man. There’s nothing subversive about him,” Benson said. “We’re terribly worried about him and concerned about how his family is taking all of this.”

Zakka disappeare­d Sept. 18 while visiting Tehran for a state- sponsored conference, according to a statement from the Washington- based group IJMA3- USA, which advocates for Internet freedom across the Middle East. Zakka was last seen leaving his hotel in a taxi for the airport to fly to Beirut, but he never boarded his flight, according to a statement last week signed by Lebanese lawyer Antoine Abou Dib.

Reached Tuesday, Abou Dib said he had not heard of the Iranian claim. IJMA3- USA did not immediatel­y return a

The state TV report claimed Zakka had “deep links” with U. S. intelligen­ce services and its military.

request for comment.

Later Tuesday, Abou Dib told Lebanon’s LBC TV station that Zakka’s family has not received any official informatio­n about him, despite repeated requests to authoritie­s in Tehran and Beirut. The lawyer said Zakka holds only Lebanese citizenshi­p and has never had any links with any foreign intelligen­ce agencies.

In their statement, the Zakka family urged Lebanese authoritie­s “to work seriously on determinin­g the whereabout­s of Mr. Zakka and bring him safely back to his country Lebanon.”

In Washington, U. S. State Department spokesman Elizabeth Trudeau said officials were aware of Zakka’s case. However, “U. S. lawful permanent residents are not U. S. passport holders and would travel on the passport of their nationalit­y,” she said. “Consular assistance would be provided by the country of the individual’s nationalit­y.”

Lebanese officials couldn’t be immediatel­y reached for comment.

The state TV report claimed Zakka had “deep links” with U. S. intelligen­ce services and its military. It also aired a still photo of four men in U. S. Army- style uniforms, two carrying flags and the other two with rifles against their shoulders.

The TV identified a man on the far right as Zakka, though Benson said Zakka was the one on the far left.

Riverside Military Academy teaches both middle school and high school- age boys. Though borrowing from militaryst­yle structure and discipline, the school does not teach boys how to shoot nor does it have links with the U. S. military, Benson said.

“The fact that he’s in that uniform that day is nothing but a one day in one year event where he was representi­ng the alumni of his class in the color guard,” Benson said.

Riverside’s website lists Zakka as an alumnus and describes him as “an internatio­nally recognized expert in informatio­n and communicat­ions technology ( ICT) policy.” It said he graduated from the academy in 1985 and later earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in computer science from the University of Texas.

Zakka’s reported arrest comes as hard- liners in Iran remain opposed to a detente with the U. S. after the nuclear deal. That agreement reached earlier this year promises the lifting of economic sanctions in exchange for curbs on Tehran’s nuclear program.

There also may be another plan: in August, Iranian media began quoting officials discussing the possibilit­y of swapping Americans detained in Iran for 19 Iranians held in the U. S. It’s unclear, however, whether that’s been seriously discussed between Iranian and U. S. officials.

Americans held in Iran include Washington Post journalist Jason Rezaian, an Iranian-American convicted of charges including espionage in a trial widely criticized by the Post and free press groups. Others include former U. S. Marine Amir Hekmati, who holds dual Iranian and American citizenshi­p and was arrested in August 2011, and Saeed Abedini, a pastor from Boise, Idaho, who was convicted in 2013 of threatenin­g Iran’s national security by participat­ing in home churches. Another is reportedly Siamak Namazi, an Iranian- American businessma­n and the son of a politician from the era of the shah.

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