Daily Mail

So was the British citizen EXECUTED

by Iran an MI6 spy – or an unwitting pawn in a brutal battle for power?

- Guy Adams

One day in the late 2000s, a 40- something man named Alireza Akbari left his native Iran and travelled to London hoping to start a new life with his wife Maryam and their daughters Atefah and Faezah.

It was the height of the so-called War on Terror. Which was awkward, since Mr Akbari happened to be a former Deputy Minister in the Islamist theocracy’s notoriousl­y corrupt and despotic government.

Yet, somehow, his arrival in the UK was happily sanctioned by the British authoritie­s: they first granted him a so- called ‘investor visa’ and then, a few years later, handed out a UK passport.

The Akbari family could therefore settle in

Despite his past, the UK sanctioned his passport

Hammersmit­h, West London. Daughter Atefah, who was already an adult, enrolled at a university in the capital. Faezah went to a local primary school. Mum stayed at home. Dad pursued a career in business.

So began a journey that ended last week in a sudden, violent and tragic fashion.

On Saturday, the Iranian regime announced that it had executed Akbari by hanging. He was 61. It seems he’d been secretly held in custody there since 2019.

The crime for which he paid with his life? espionage. According to Iran, Akbari — who helped found its repressive regime — had actually spent recent years working as a ‘spy’ for the UK.

It’s a sensationa­l claim. Which is one reason why the death of Akbari, a dual national and one of just a handful of people with a British passport to suffer the death penalty in recent decades, has sparked a major diplomatic incident which remains in serious danger of boiling over.

Rishi Sunak, who immediatel­y withdrew the UK’s ambassador to Tehran, has called the execution ‘ruthless and cowardly’. Foreign Secretary James Cleverly summoned the regime’s Charge d’Affaires to express ‘disgust’. Sanctions were this week imposed and condemnato­ry statements issued by the UK, the U.S., and the eU.

The UK is also considerin­g declaring Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard — the most fearsome branch of its Armed Forces and of which Akbari was himself once a member — a terrorist organisati­on.

even Prince Harry has been dragged into the row. On Tuesday, Iran’s foreign ministry issued a statement flagging his autobiogra­phy’s disclosure that he’d killed 25 Taliban fighters — or, as Iran sees them, ‘ innocent people’ — in Afghanista­n. This, the Iranian statement alleged, leaves the UK ‘in no position to preach [to] others on human rights’.

Akbari’s grieving family have, for their part, vigorously protested his innocence, saying his conviction on a medieval- sounding charge called ‘corruption on earth’ was based on a false confession obtained via torture.

Relatives say that, prior to Akbari’s death, he’d been held in captivity for three years, often in solitary confinemen­t. During this period, they say interrogat­ors consistent­ly subjected him to degrading and inhumane treatment.

Akbari himself offered some insight into his incarcerat­ion via a taped statement, smuggled out of prison just before his death. In the recording, he claimed to have been brutally ‘interrogat­ed and tortured’ for over 3,500 hours, during which he was physically and psychologi­cally assaulted and force-fed with ‘psychedeli­c drugs’.

‘They broke my will, drove me to madness and forced me to do whatever they wanted,’ he said. ‘By the force of gun and death threats they made me confess to false and corrupt claims.’

To understand how this awful tale unfolded, we must first explore the two competing narratives about how he arrived in the UK in the first place.

One has been aired in court by the Iranian authoritie­s. They reckon the whole thing was a sort of defection, mastermind­ed by MI6 agents who then paid him millions of pounds in return for providing informatio­n about the regime and, in particular, its nuclear ambitions.

They claim that, in a stunt that reads like something out of a James Bond novel, Akbari was instructed to fake a stroke during a 2008 business trip to Vienna. This allegedly gave his wife and daughters a cover story to fly out from Iran to be at his bedside. The whole family could then be spirited away to Britain by the security services.

The Akbari family, for their part, argue — with some justificat­ion — that there are significan­t flaws in this narrative. For start

‘Spy allegation is just a smokescree­n’

ers, there is no documented evidence of him being paid cash by British authoritie­s.

What’s more, they insist that he actually chose to remove himself from Iran to escape political persecutio­n of a sort common under the despotic theocracy, where competing factions constantly juggle for supremacy, and those in power habitually jail and persecute opponents.

The family has argued that Akbari was caught up in a power struggle between supporters of Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d, the hardline anti-Western President of Iran from 2005-2013, and his predecesso­r Mohammad Khatami, a comparativ­e reformer under whom Akbari had served as Deputy Defence Minister.

‘I recall there being a period around 2008 where he ended up in prison,’ Akbari’s nephew Ramin Forghani, who now lives in Luxembourg, told me this week.

‘He was released on bail, but there was talk of him having suffered trauma there, and it didn’t feel safe staying behind, so he got permission to go to Europe on a business trip and was then able to apply for a UK visa.’

A so- called ‘investor visa’ does indeed appear to have been granted to Akbari around this time. It was issued under a scheme popularise­d by the Blair government, through which wealthy foreigners with a spare £2 million to park in the UK were allowed to legally move here and, after three years, become a naturalise­d citizen.

The system was abolished in February last year by the then Home Secretary Priti Patel, amid widespread concern that it had been routinely abused by generation­s of dubious oligarchs and other immigrants from questionab­le corners of the globe who had grown rich via the proceeds of corruption.

While we must, of course, assume that the cash Akbari used to acquire this visa was legitimate­ly obtained, it’s unclear how he reconciled his decision to move to the UK — or indeed anywhere in the enlightene­d enli West — with his apparent app affection for Iran’s repressive repr theocracy. Akbari was, after ft all, one of the original architects of the barbaric regime.

Born in 1961, in the city of Shiraz in Iran’s Fars Province, he seems to have cut his political teeth as an activist in the local Associatio­n of Student Islamic Societies.

The group backed the 1979 revolution that saw the last Shah of Iran ousted by religious fundamenta­lists, paving the way for the Ayatollahs.

Devoted to the Islamist cause, he spent most of the 1980s as a soldier in the Revolution­ary Guard which was by then fighting the Iran-Iraq war.

In 1989, Akbari swore fealty to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei when he became Supreme Leader, and by the 1990s was climbing the greasy pole of government, eventually becoming the deputy defence minister under President Mohammad Khatami responsibl­e for negotiatin­g security agreements with Iran’s strategic allies.

Ironically, given his subsequent path, he appears to have been a staunch opponent of the West and supporter of Iran’s controvers­ial nuclear programme. In 2000, he even travelled to Moscow for a ‘round table’ meeting with Russian allies and, in a media interview, spoke out in support of Putin’s war in Chechnya, saying: ‘These actions match the interests of stability in the entire region of the greater Caucasus.’

Having left office in 2005, Akbari remained outwardly loyal to Iran’s ruling theocracy, even after his move to the UK — a fact that caused deep divisions in his own family. His nephew Ramin Forghani, a human rights campaigner who fled Iran and moved to Scotland in 2013 (before settling in Luxembourg), told me: ‘After I became a political activist in Scotland, and started speaking out against the regime, he cut all contact with me.

‘He seemed to be devoted to the country and the regime, had served it at the highest levels and was one of the first members of the Revolution­ary Guard. This is why the spying allegation makes so little sense.’

Quite why the UK agreed to grant citizenshi­p to such an outspoken ally of the Iranian regime is anyone’s guess.

What also makes only limited sense, from such public records as are available, is Akbari’s subsequent business career. While his wife Maryam and their daughters seem to have mostly remained in London from the late 2000s, he seems to have spent large portions of time in Europe.

Profiles on Facebook and Twitter suggest he was based largely in Vienna and Marbella — on the Costa Del Sol in Spain from around 2014 onwards — while a media interview he gave in early 2019 suggested that his principal residence was Gibraltar.

He has no listed company directorsh­ips in the UK, but may have dealt in precious stones ( his Facebook page contains images of several pieces of valuable-looking jewellery).

On Twitter, he has in recent years adopted a hawkish and largely anti-Western tone in debates about Iran’s nuclear ambitions and has occasional­ly voiced support for Jeremy Corbyn — who has often been called an apologist for the regime, and appeared on Press TV, the now-banned propaganda outlet of the regime.

The events that led to Akbari’s arrest and subsequent execution began in 2018, when his former political superior Ali Shamkhani, who is now secretary of the Supreme National Security Council, invited him to the Iranian city of Karaj to join a group of experts discussing the country’s relations with the West.

That visit appears to have been a success, as he agreed to continue helping Iran’s government by returning for similar talks the following year (an unlikely decision, one might argue, if he really was a spy). Sadly, the second trip saw him get no further than Tehran airport, where he was arrested.

It was this week suggested that Shamkhani — who is embroiled in an ongoing power struggle with hard-line opponents — may have tricked Akbari into returning in order to demonstrat­e his own loyalty to the regime.

Yet while such things are possible in the murky world of Iranian politics, other informed observers believe Akbari was actually arrested as part of a plot to undermine his former political mentor.

‘He was Shamkhani’s man, so it feels like a personal, brutal defenestra­tion of his fiefdom,’ said one insider.

‘Think of it as part of a fight to gain absolute control in which one side has used conspicuou­s cruelty to humiliate the other. There are mafia factions all trying to teach each other a lesson. The spy stuff is just a smokescree­n.’

For three years, Akbari was locked up largely at Tehran’s notorious Evin Prison — where previous inmates include Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, the Iranian-British dual national who was detained on alleged spying charges from 2016 to 2022.

His fate was kept secret after his immediate family chose, on the advice of the UK Foreign Office, not to seek publicity.

That policy only changed last week when it became apparent that his execution was imminent after his daughter Atefah was called to his cell for a final meeting (it is not clear if she was in Iran already or if she had travelled back specifical­ly).

By then, of course, it was too late to save him.

Amid the diplomatic fallout, a host of questions surrounds the highly unusual life of Alireza Akbari. But many of the answers have now been taken to his grave.

 ?? ?? FORMER MENTOR WHO ‘LURED HIM BACK TO IRAN’
FORMER MENTOR WHO ‘LURED HIM BACK TO IRAN’
 ?? ?? Victim: Iran’s former deputy defence minister, British citizen Alireza Akbari; and (right) his old political superior Ali Shamkhani
Victim: Iran’s former deputy defence minister, British citizen Alireza Akbari; and (right) his old political superior Ali Shamkhani
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? HANGED LAST WEEK
HANGED LAST WEEK
 ?? Picture: GETTY ?? Hatred of the West: Iran’s Revolution­ary Guards burn the U.S. flag in Tehran, and (inset) a typical Iranian prison gallows
Picture: GETTY Hatred of the West: Iran’s Revolution­ary Guards burn the U.S. flag in Tehran, and (inset) a typical Iranian prison gallows

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