MPs and peers urge Sunak to declare Iran's IRGC as terror organisation

More than 100 MPs and peers sign letter urging Rishi Sunak to proscribe Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps as a ‘terror group which is openly operating in Britain’

  • The letter was signed by a cross-party group of 125 MPs and peers this week
  • The group urged Rishi Sunak to proscribe the IRGC as a ‘terror organisation’

More than 100 MPs and peers have signed a letter urging the Government to recognise Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a ‘terror organisation’ which is ‘openly operating’ in Britain.

The letter, signed by a cross-party alliance of 125 MPs and peers on Wednesday, claims the IRGC is now ‘openly operating’ on Britain’s shores and Prime Minister Sunak must proscribe the group as a ‘terror organisation’ as a matter of urgency.

It read: ‘The IRGC has been systematically destabilising the Middle East since the Islamic Revolution, killing thousands. This threat is no longer thousands of miles away because the IRGC is now openly operating on our shores.

‘The list of reasons for proscription are many. From active assassination plots revealed by MI5 and collection of intelligence on British-Jewish targets using UK-based criminal gangs, through its violent intimidation on journalists operating in the UK and radicalisation at British Islamic centres. The group has cruelly held British nationals as state hostages and killed many more.’ 

It described the Government’s decision to proscribe militant groups Hamas and Hezbollah as terrorist organisations as ‘important steps’ but it was now ‘incumbent to go after the parent organisation’ by ‘proscribing the IRGC’.

More than 100 MPs and peers have signed a letter urging the Government to recognise Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) (pictured) as a ‘terror organisation’ which is ‘openly operating’ in Britain

The letter, signed by a cross-party alliance of 125 MPs and peers on Wednesday, claims the IRGC is now ‘openly operating’ on Britain’s shores and Prime Minister Sunak must proscribe the group as a ‘terror organisation’ as a matter of urgency

The letter comes after Security minister Tom Tugendhat suggested to the House of Commons there was a split around the Cabinet table on the issue.

In reply to Tory MP Bob Blackman, who was among those to urge the Government to proscribe the IRGC in February, Mr Tugendhat said: ‘He will know it’s not me he has to persuade in this matter and that there are many areas in which I would like to go.

‘I can assure him this Government is absolutely listening to exactly what he is saying. The Home Secretary and I are as one on this.’

He added: ‘The IRGC is a vicious organisation and its first victims are the Iranian people who have been brutalised and murdered by that despotic regime for far too long.’

The letter, which includes signatures from Tory MP Alicia Kearns, Michael Fabricant and Dame Diana Johnson, also expresses support for Iranian activist Vahid Beheshti, 46, who has lost 14kg and has entered the 57th day of his hunger strike urging Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to take action against the group.

It read: ‘Vahid has shown remarkable dignity and strength throughout his protest and has widespread support from parliamentarians who share his sense of urgency in the need to proscribe the IRGC as a terror organisation.’

The letter, which includes signatures from Tory MP Alicia Kearns (pictured), Michael Fabricant and Dame Diana Johnson, also expresses support for Iranian activist Vahid Beheshti, 46, who has lost 14kg and has entered the 57th day of his hunger strike urging Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to take action against the group

Labour peer Dame Diana Johnson also signed the letter addressed to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak on Wednesday

Mr Beheshti, who is on the 57th day of his hunger strike outside the Foreign Office in London, welcomed the letter but said he was prepared to ‘pay the price’ for as long as it took to get a response from Mr Sunak.

He told MailOnline: ‘I will stay here and pay the price, whatever it is, to get this done. I won’t go anywhere.

‘We need to proscribe this terrorist organisation now and show them strong leadership because that is the only language the IRGC understands.’ 

The IRGC was set up over 40 years ago to defend Iran’s 1979 Islamic revolution and has since exerted influence across the Middle East.

It has close ties to Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and was recently linked to threats against journalists at independent Iranian TV channel Iran International based in Chiswick, west London.

Scotland Yard placed armed response vehicles outside the Persian-language broadcaster’s office last year after its journalists were threatened.

Two journalists were warned by police of a ‘credible threat’ to their lives from Iranian security forces last week.

The channel was forced to switch its output operation to its office in Washington DC, and journalists went into hiding while working from home.

The broadcaster is expected to reopen its new office in a new ‘fortified’ undisclosed location in Britain later this year.

Proscription makes it a criminal offence to be a member, encourage support for, or provide funds for a proscribed group.

The Home Office was approached for comment. 

Mr Beheshti (pictured, middle), who is on the 57th day of his hunger strike outside the Foreign Office in London, welcomed the letter but said he was prepared to ‘pay the price’ for as long as it took to get a response from Mr Sunak

He told MailOnline: ‘I will stay here and pay the price, whatever it is, to get this done. I won’t go anywhere’. Pictured: Mr Beheshti with wife Mattie Heaven

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