Ruhollah Zam, a journalist-turned-activist,
who headed Amadnews with more than one million followers on social media, was
based in France and other parts of Europe.
Agents of Iran’s
Revolutionary Guards have captured and returned to Iran an exiled journalist
who allegedly fueled anti-government street unrest across the country in 2018
using social media, Iranian state television reported on Monday.
Zam’s capture was a
“complex operation using intelligence deception,” the Revolutionary Guards
Corps (IRGC) said in a statement carried by the television. The statement did
not say where the operation took place but appeared to suggest he was detained
in Iran, saying he was held after being “guided into the country”.
“In spite of being under
the guidance of the French intelligence service and the protection of the U.S.
and Zionist (Israeli) intelligence services, he (Zam) was trapped by the
Revolutionary Guards intelligence service,” the statement said.
Amadnews was suspended by
the messaging app Telegram in 2018 after Iran accused it of carrying calls for
violence during protests that started in late 2017 and continued across the
country. But the channel soon reappeared under a new name.
Iran’s authorities accused
the country’s foes of fomenting the unrest, which began as protests about
economic hardship and corruption, but turned into political rallies. Officials
said 21 people were killed during the unrest, the boldest challenge to Iran’s
leadership since 2009.
The statement added that
his arrest was a victory of the Guard’s intelligence forces over Western
intelligence.
Zam’s Telegram channel was
hacked and a message of his arrest went to its subscribers.
Iran’s clerical rulers have
a contradictory attitude toward the internet.
Access to sites like
Twitter, Facebook, and Youtube is blocked for ordinary Iranians who evade the
heavy filtering by using virtual private networks. But Iranian officials,
including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khameneik, are active social media users
of Twitter, posting tweets almost every day in English, Farsi, and Arabic.
No comments:
Post a Comment