The Jerusalem Post

EU sanctions Iranian officials for rights abuses

- • By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL

The European Union on Monday imposed sanctions on five Iranian officials and two entities for carrying out “serious human rights violations in Iran” and “repression in cyberspace,” according to the European Council.

The new round of sanctions was part of its “eighth package” of punitive measures targeting the Islamic Republic, it said in a notice on its website.

The penalized persons and entities included “the current commander of the Tehran Police Relief Unit of Iran’s Law Enforcemen­t Forces (LEF), and an individual linked to the Maryam Arvin case – a lawyer who was brutally arrested, gravely mistreated and subsequent­ly died for her activities in defense of protesters,” the notice said.

The European Council said the sanctions “also target the spokesman of the Iranian Police, and the secretary of the Supreme Council of Cyberspace of Iran (SCC), the authority responsibl­e for repression in cyberspace.”

The notice also listed “the IRGC Cooperativ­e Foundation, which is the body responsibl­e for managing the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps’ investment­s and funneling money into the regime’s brutal repression, and the Student Basij Organizati­on (SBO). The latter acts as the IRGC’s violent enforcers on university campuses, where students staged protests in the fall of 2022 and were subsequent­ly the victims of repression and serious human rights violations, such as abduction and torture.”

The US government classified the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps as a foreign terrorist organizati­on in 2019. The European Parliament passed a nonbinding resolution calling for the IRGC to be designated as a terrorist organizati­on. The IRGC controls more than 50% of Iran’s economy.

The EU has come under intense criticism from politician­s for declining to outlaw the IRGC. The EU’s foreign policy head, Josep Borrell, announced in January that a ban of the IRGC requires a legal decision.

“It is something that cannot be decided without a court – a court decision first,” he said.

The legal requiremen­t for Germany and the EU to proscribe the IRGC as a terrorist organizati­on has been met, Norbert Röttgen, a Christian Democratic Union lawmaker in the German Parliament, told The Jerusalem Post in January.

Röttgen, who was chairman of the Bundestag Foreign Affairs Committee from 2014 to 2021, rejected the arguments of Borrell and German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock, who claim there is not a court case to justify the classifica­tion of the IRGC as a terrorist entity.

“All the legal requiremen­ts are fulfilled,” Röttgen said.

“Currently, the German attorney general is prosecutin­g terrorist attacks linked to the IRGC on several synagogues in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, and in the US, there is a federal court decision against the IRGC for acts of terrorism,” he added.

The European Council said: “Restrictiv­e measures now apply to a total of 216 individual­s and 37 entities. They consist of an asset freeze, a travel ban to the EU and a prohibitio­n to make funds or economic resources available to those listed. A ban on exports to Iran of equipment which might be used for internal repression and of equipment for monitoring telecommun­ications is also in place.”

The US-based organizati­on United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) on Monday said: “Following direct interventi­on by UANI, two European firms agreed to sever ties with Iran’s Aris Engineerin­g Group, which specialize­s in oil and gas, petrochemi­cals and mining and lists among its ‘approved vendors’ several entities linked to the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps, a US-designated Foreign Terrorist Organizati­on. These entities include Pars Oil and Gas Company, the National Iranian Oil Engineerin­g and Constructi­on Company, and the Iranian Offshore Oil Company.”

“Italian manufactur­er ADOS has agreed to immediatel­y end its relationsh­ip and cease contact entirely with Tehran-based Aris,” UANI added. “ADOS specialize­s in the production and distributi­on of load cells and electronic weighing systems for various industries, including automotive, constructi­on, marine and industrial applicatio­ns.”

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