Masih Alinejad: Iranians 'plotted to kidnap US, Canada and UK targets'

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Masih Alinejad: I got furious instead of just being scared

Four Iranian intelligence officials have been charged with plotting to kidnap a New York-based journalist critical of Iran, US prosecutors say.

The indictment did not name the target, but Masih Alinejad, an Iranian-American author and activist, says it was her.

The conspirators, who all live in Iran and remain at large, also allegedly plotted to lure a person in the UK and three others in Canada to Iran.

Iran's government said the allegations were "ridiculous and baseless".

The US justice department says the Iranian officials sought to lure the New York-based journalist to a third country where the abduction was planned.

"To he honest, emotionally I got angry. I got furious. Instead of just being scared it made me furious," Ms Alinejad told BBC News, describing how FBI agents came to her home to tell her that she was "not safe".

The plotters even offered money to the writer's relatives in Iran to betray them, which they refused to do, the indictment contends, external.

They hired private investigators to spy on the target's Brooklyn home and family, and set up a live video feed of the property.

They also researched a service offering military-style speedboats for evacuation from New York City, and maritime routes to Venezuela, an ally of Iran.

"I told myself that for years and years the government tried to create fear inside the society, tried to scare us," Ms Alinejad told BBC World TV on Wednesday.

"But this is the time that actually the government of Iran, the whole intelligence services of Iran are scared of me."

The intelligence officials worked to procure surveillance of the four people targeted in Canada and the UK, according to the indictment.

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Ms Alinejad, 44, is a prominent figure on social media and hosts a programme on the US-funded satellite TV channel Voice of America Persian.

She runs the My Stealthy Freedom and White Wednesdays campaigns against the mandatory wearing of headscarves for Iranian women.

Addressing the indictment on TV on Tuesday, external, she said: "Initially, I naturally felt shocked. Then I got worried... Then I thought about it: we have been scared of the Islamic regime for a lifetime. But now the Islamic regime is scared of me."

The indictment says the Iranian officials were aided by an Iranian resident of California, Niloufar Bahadorifar.

She was arrested this month and charged with providing financial aid to the conspirators and violating sanctions against Iran. She has pleaded not guilty.

William Sweeney, the head of New York's FBI office, said it sounded a bit like "some far-fetched movie plot".

Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said on Wednesday that such "Hollywood scenarios" were "nothing unexpected from America".

In 2019, the Paris-based dissident journalist Ruhollah Zam was enticed by Iranian agents to travel to Iraq, where he was kidnapped and taken to Iran. He was executed last year after being convicted of sedition charges.

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