Anti-Iran Propaganda Figure to Stand Trial in Coming Days: Judiciary


Anti-Iran Propaganda Figure to Stand Trial in Coming Days: Judiciary

TEHRAN (Tasnim) – The spokesman for Iran’s Judiciary said the trial session of Ruhollah Zam, the head of an anti-Iranian website and Telegram channel, will be held in coming days.

Speaking to the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting on Saturday, Gholam Hossein Esmaeili said the court session of Zam will be held in the coming days within the framework of the country’s laws and regulations.

“In addition to the main defendant in the case, five other people have been arrested and some others have been summoned to the court and their cases are under investigation,” he stated.

The case of Zam will be dealt with separately and the other defendants’ cases will be handled gradually, the spokesman went on to say.

The Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) announced, in a statement back in October, that in a “complicated” operation, it had managed to arrest Zam, the administrator of a website “directed and supported by France’s intelligence service”.

The IRGC emphasized that Zam had been running extensive psychological warfare in recent years with direct logistical support of foreign intelligence services and counter-revolutionary agents outside the country in order to sow discord inside Iran, stoke Iranophobia, disseminate lies, foment doubt among the younger generation about religious beliefs, prepare the ground for acts of violence and terror and create chaos and unrest inside the country.

“This evil mercenary element” was busted during a “sophisticated” intelligence operation, according to the IRGC statement.

“Despite being under the guidance of the French intelligence service and the support of the US and Zionist intelligence services…, and being guarded round the clock by various means and covers, he fell into a trap laid by… the IRGC’s Intelligence Organization,” the statement read.

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.

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