Iran Journalist Flees Zarif Delegation to Stay in Sweden
An Iranian journalist covering Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif’s Nordic tour has fled the official delegation and applied for residency in Sweden, officials said Tuesday.The Swedish Migration Agency said Amir-Tohid Fazel, a political reporter for Iran’s ultra-conservative news agency Moj, had “applied for a residence permit in Sweden on 21 August 2019.”It provided no further details.Fazel was traveling with Zarif’s delegation as part of an international tour to Finland, Sweden and Norway and other countries. He said in an interview with Swedish television SVT that on Aug. 20, “when I was in Sweden, one of my colleagues in Tehran contacted me via internet and said ‘four plainclothes came to the news agency with a warrant for your arrest.'” He had recently published a list of names of Iranian officials who allegedly hold dual citizenship in countries the Iranian government views as “hostile states.”Iran does not recognize dual citizenship and refuses to provide consular aid to Iranian dual nationals.”The Iranian government officially announced that it will file a complaint,” Fazel told SVT.Iran’s Foreign Minister Javad Zarif is surrounded by bodyguards as he arrives for a meeting in Oslo, Norway, Aug. 22, 2019.The day after his colleague in Iran tipped him off, while still in Sweden, Fazel managed to slip away from the delegation.”It was very difficult because of the 48 bodyguards that were there to provide security for Dr. Zarif and keep an eye on the reporters,” he said.The journalist refused to be drawn on his political affiliation.Zarif has been on a world diplomatic tour that kicked off Aug. 17 in Kuwait, before visiting the Nordic countries and France, where he held meetings on the sidelines of the G-7 summit in Biarritz.Iran occupies spot 170, out of 180, in the 2019 Reporters Without Borders rankings of countries’ press freedoms.Iran has arrested and imprisoned a number of Iranians with dual nationality, in what Western governments have denounced as a ruthless policy to exercise diplomatic pressure.
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