Labour has today stated its support for the proscription of the
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps as a terrorist organisation,
either through the existing proscription process or through an
amendment to the National Security Bill that would create a
parallel power to proscribe state bodies like the IRGC on the
basis of their activity.
It follows the growing threat that the IRGC poses on UK soil, as
well as in response to the crackdown on protestors,
the unjust imprisonment of British
nationals in Iran, the execution
of Alireza
Akbari, long-standing concerns about Iran’s threats
to Israel, and its support for violent groups across the region.
In his most recent threat update, MI5 Director Ken McCallum
referred to 10 kidnap and death plots by the Iranian regime on
British soil. Yesterday, British-Iranian Alireza Akbari was
barbarically executed.
Labour’s Shadow Foreign Secretary, MP, and Labour’s Shadow Home
Secretary, MP, said:
“The Iranian Regime’s actions against courageous protestors
seeking a better future, as well as British nationals imprisoned
in Iran and its threats to UK security mean robust action is
needed now.
“The IRGC is behaving like a terrorist organisation and must now
be proscribed as such. Labour supports proscribing the IRGC
either through the existing process, or through amending the
national security bill to create a new process of proscription
for hostile state actors.
“Labour will always take the actions necessary to keep the
British public safe.”
Ends
Notes
- Proscription would provide enforcement agencies with stronger
powers to disrupt the IRGC’s activities in the UK, and to keep
people safe. This could either be done by proscribing the IRGC as
a terrorist organisation under the existing Terrorism Act 2000.
Or, in order to keep the existing regime solely for non-state
groups like Al Qaeda, the government could amend the National
Security Bill to create a parallel power to proscribe state
bodies like the IRGC on the basis of their activity. Labour is
urging the Government to come forward with amendments to the
National Security Bill to tackle hostile state terror activity if
existing counter-terrorism powers are not sufficient or specific
enough to tackle the IRGC.
- The Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation, Jonathan
Hall, has suggested this approach - arguing that “In principle
the National Security Bill could contain a power to proscribe
state bodies on the basis of their hostile activity, but does
not.”