0
Wednesday 3 October 2018 - 06:23

Ofcom probes UK-based Saudi-funded TV network for praising Iran attack

Story Code : 753611
File photo shows a view to the headquarters of the British media regulator Ofcom in London.
File photo shows a view to the headquarters of the British media regulator Ofcom in London.

“We are assessing this news program as a priority against our broadcasting rules,” a spokesperson of Ofcom told the Guardian newspaper on Monday more than two weeks after Iran International aired an interview with the spokesman of a banned terrorist group which hailed the attack on a military parade in the southwestern Iranian city of Ahvaz.  

Yacoub Hor al-Tostari, the spokesman of the al-Ahvaziyah terrorist group, appeared in an interview with Iran International praising the attack in Ahvaz.

There were earlier reports indicating that al-Ahvaziyah had claimed the responsibility for the attack in Ahvaz. However, the group later withdrew the claims. Daesh, a Takfiri terrorist group, which has almost been obliterated from its bastions in Iraq and Syria, claimed the responsibility. Iranian officials have taken Daesh directly accountable for the attack although they insist Ahvaziyah was also to blame for its criminal activities in the region.

Iran’s ambassador to the UK, Hamid Baeidinejad, said after the attack that his embassy had lodged an official complaint with the British authorities against Iran International, a Farsi TV channel which is based in Chiswick, west London.

The station is believed to be directly supported by the royal Saudi court. The Guardian cited a source close to the Saudi government as saying that Iran International receives as estimated $250m (£192m) from the Saudi royal court each year.

“The money is coming from Saudi Arabia, it is from the royal court,” the source told the newspaper on Tuesday.

Saudi Arabia has consistently supported terrorist organizations that have an abundant record of carrying out attacks against civilians in Iran.

Iran International aired a live coverage of a rally of the Mujahedin-e-Khalq (MeK) earlier this year. Iranian  authorities say the MeK, also known as the MKO, has directly been involved in the death of more than 20,000 civilians in Iran since the Islamic revolution of 1979.
Comment