WORLD / MID-EAST
Iran slams European countries for ‘harboring’ separatists as Denmark convicts trio
Published: Feb 08, 2022 06:22 PM

Iranians raise their national flags during a rally outside the former US embassy in the capital Tehran on November 4, 2021, to mark the 42nd anniversary of the start of the Iran hostage crisis. More than 50 US embassy staff were taken hostage by supporters of the Islamic revolution on November 4, 1979. Photo: AFP

Iranians raise their national flags during a rally outside the former US embassy in the capital Tehran on November 4, 2021, to mark the 42nd anniversary of the start of the Iran hostage crisis. More than 50 US embassy staff were taken hostage by supporters of the Islamic revolution on November 4, 1979. Photo: AFP

Iran on Monday slammed European countries for refusing to extradite leaders of separatist organizations, days after a Danish court convicted three members of one group of spying on the Islamic republic.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh also accused Saudi Arabia of funding the Arab Struggle Movement for the Liberation of Ahvaz (ASMLA), to which the three convicted Iranians belonged and which Tehran designates a terrorist group.

On Friday, a Danish court convicted the trio of spying on Iran on behalf of Saudi intelligence between 2012 and 2020.

Danish police had in 2018 foiled a plot - believed to be sponsored by Tehran - to assassinate one of the three men. 

Then Denmark's counterintelligence forces investigated their activities.

Their sentencing is scheduled for March and they face up to 12 years in prison.

On Monday, Khatibzadeh said it was "regrettable" that European countries continued to "harbor" members of such groups rather than extradite them to Iran. He accused European countries of applying "double standards," given the groups were subject to Interpol-issued worldwide requests to detain their members.

Copenhagen has accused Tehran of a plot to eliminate the senior ASMLA official, in retaliation for a September 2018 attack in Ahvaz, capital of Iran's southwestern Khuzestan province, that left 24 people dead.

Tehran at the time accused Denmark, the Netherlands and Britain of harboring members of the group, which Iran accused of being responsible for the attack in Ahvaz.

AFP