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lundi 26 janvier 2015

Iranian regime spy in UAE received cheap medical care in return


A policeman in the United Arab Emirates passed secret information to Iranian regime in return of discounted medical care at an Iranian hospital in that country.
Emirati police sergeant, provided a list of Dubai Police officers and their phone numbers to the agents in the regime’s consulate of Iran, according to a court hearing in late 2014.
The Iranian regime wanted the names of Dubai policemen who were Shiite as well as other information.
Strategy Page reporting on the case wrote on Saturday: “This was all done in such a way that the policeman could feel he was not spying but simply returning a favor to Iranian diplomats who had helped him out with a family medical crises. “
“The fact that the Iranians were seeking the identities of Shia policemen was disturbing as the Iranians have been known to aid or instigate Shia Arabs to do things that benefit Iran, often at the expense of the local Arab government.”
A B, 43, an Emirati police sergeant first made contact with employees at the consulate when he responded to a fire at its offices, according to a state security officer, the National Post reported at the time.
In return, the deputy consul provided him with a discount card for the Iranian Hospital.
A year later, A B, who speaks Farsi, was requested by his manager to go to the consulate to organise a travel visa for his wife.
A B met H S, an intelligence officer at the consulate. H S asked for information about Dubai Police and whether Emirati women are legally allowed to marry Iranians. He also requested a list of Dubai Police officers who were Shia Muslim.
The Iranian regime has been using many front organizations and foundations including schools and hospitals, in the countries of the region as well as other parts of the world to spy in those countries and export terrorism and fundamentalism.
The Washington Post reported in 2013 that how the Iranian regime’s diplomats lured young people in Latin America into attending classes in Iran supervised by Moshen Rabbani, former cultural attache in the Iranian Embassy in Buenos Aires, who is among the Iranian regime’s officials charged with terrorism based on the investigation by the late Argentinian prosecutor Alberto Nisman.

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