guardian.co.uk,
Ian Black and Saeed Kamali Dehghan, Friday 3 February 2012
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| Popular talkshow presenter Pooneh Ghoddoosi, who has been the subject of slurs on the internet and in government media. Photograph: BBC |
Iran is
carrying out a campaign of intimidation and smears against the BBC's Persian TV
service, watched by millions of people in the Islamic Republic but loathed by
the government in Tehran.
In recent
incidents, relatives of BBC staff in London have been detained and threatened
by Iranian intelligence agents, top presenters targeted by malicious rumours
and one employee subjected to an online interrogation in London after a family
member in Iran was jailed. Iran is thought to be preparing a documentary film
discrediting the channel in the runup to parliamentary elections next month.
Sadeq Saba,
the head of BBC Persian, was accused live on air by an unknown caller of raping
Pooneh Ghoddoosi, then presenter of popular Persian-language talk show Your
Turn. Both insist the charge is entirely without foundation but it has since
been repeated as fact by leading Iranian government media outlets.
Iran has
repeatedly jammed BBC Persian TV since it was founded in 2009. The latest bout
of harassment comes against a background of sharply deteriorating relations
between the UK and Iranian governments. Last November Britain shut its Tehran
embassy after it was stormed by demonstrators in apparent retaliation for
sanctions imposed over Iran's nuclear programme. Iran's London embassy was then
ordered closed.
Tensions
worsened in recent weeks after the closure of Press TV, the English-language
Iranian state broadcaster, in London. The UK regulator, Ofcom, revoked its
licence for breaching the Communications Act. BBC Persian staff say they
believe Tehran wants to stop the channel covering the elections on 2 March.
Following
weeks of angry internal debate about how to handle the issue, Mark Thompson, the BBC director general, on Friday issued a strongly worded complaint about
"disturbing new tactics" and called on the Iranian government
"to repudiate the actions of its officials".
Anonymous
callers or others using names such as the Cyber Army of Allah have accused BBC
Persian staff of being drug dealers, converting to Bahaism or Chrstianity –
potentially a capital offence in Iran as it is considered to be apostasy – or
taking bribes. "We are well trained to cut these people off when they say
rude or libellous things," said Ghoddoosi, whose image has been used in
pornographic montages posted on the internet. "They use F-words and
C-words non-stop."
Saba said:
"Even Stalin or other dictators never did what the Iranian regime is doing
with this campaign of intimidation against our journalists. Iran has arrested a
group of people and forced them to confess that they have worked for BBC
Persian. We have not hired anyone in the country and we condemn these brutal
actions."
Journalists
arrested recently include Marzieh Rasouli and Parastoo Dokouhaki. Friends
believe they are under pressure to confess on camera that they have been
collaborating with BBC Persian in Iran.
Saba and
Ghoddoosi are popular in Iran, despite the profound official hostility to the
BBC channel. The channel is considered such a threat that someone has created a
website identical in design to that of BBC Persian to spread allegations
against BBC employees. The fake site uses an .ir domain name, which requires
government permission.
BBC
Persian's reporting has challenged government versions of both the domestic
political scene and Iran's troubled relationship with the west. Iranian
officials often cite BBC Persian's work as evidence of a foreign plot against
the clerical regime. Saba says one news programme is watched by 12 million to
15 million people per week.
Tehran was
furious with the BBC's extensive coverage of the disputed 2009 presidential
election, which gave Mahmoud Ahmadinejad a second term. During the unrest that
followed, BBC Persian conducted hundreds of telephone interviews with
protesters who described deaths, injuries and arrests by security forces. The
BBC's correspondent was expelled. Last year the BBC secured Iranian agreement
to deploy a new resident correspondent, but it has never been implemented.
Last month
security forces raided the home of a BBC Persian employee's relative in Tehran,
searched and confiscated their belongings and transferred the person to Evin
prison. Hours later, a man claiming to be the relative's interrogator at Evin
contacted the employee in London, seeking information about the BBC in return
for the family member's freedom.
"My
brother and mother have both been subject to interrogations in the past two
years," said a colleague. "My brother's personal belongings,
including his computer, were confiscated. They were asked to persuade me to
collaborate and gather information from the BBC."
Fifty-two
BBC Persian staff complained this week about the corporation's handling of the
issue, calling it "scandalous" that Iranian intelligence was able to
interrogate a BBC employee in London. Thompson's statement followed. "This
issue is wider than the BBC – other international media face similar
challenges," he said. "But it is behaviour that all people who
believe in free and independent media should be deeply concerned about."
Initially,
BBC staff believed it was best to simply ignore the Iranian campaign. "I
and others have received death threats," said Ghoddoosi. "They say
'you are a servant of the imperialist English government. We will kill you like
dogs and crush your bones.'
"Virtual
harassment is tolerable – being called a whore or whatever. We dismissed it by
saying silence was the right answer. But when it came to the point of our
relatives getting arrested at airports and having their passports confiscated,
or Iranian intelligence being so brazen that they interrogated someone on
British soil, we finally decided to speak out."

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