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Anybody working for Iran in UK must register or face jail, government announces

Tuesday, 4 March 2025 15:12

By Alix Culbertson, political reporter

Anybody who works for - or is a proxy of - the Iranian state will have to register their presence in the UK or face jail time.

Security minister Dan Jarvis said Iran, including its IRGC intelligence services and the Ministry of Intelligence and Security, is being placed on the "enhanced tier" of the Foreign Influence Registration Scheme (FIRS).

That means any members of the Iranian state, or anybody acting on behalf of the state, carrying out "political influence activities" in the UK will have to register themselves with the scheme.

Failure to register is a criminal offence and can mean up to five years in jail.

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Iran is the first foreign power to be placed on the enhanced tier of the scheme, which has two levels aimed at strengthening the resilience of the UK's political system against covert foreign influence.

The first level is a "political influence" tier, involving communications with senior decision makers such as UK ministers, MPs and senior civil servants.

Mr Jarvis said the scheme, which he called "a critical disruptive tool for the UK", will be up and running by the summer.

State threat reviewer to look at counter-terror laws

He also announced Jonathan Hall KC, the UK's independent state threat and terrorism legislation reviewer, has been asked to review the sections of the UK's counter-terrorism framework that could be applied to "modern day state threats, such as those in Iran".

Mr Hall will look at how the UK proscribes state and state-linked bodies to provide "more flexibility than is offered under the existing powers".

The IRGC has been sanctioned by the UK but is not a proscribed terror group. The government has faced multiple calls for it to be proscribed.

The security minister also announced all 45 UK police forces are being offered training and guidance on state threats activity by counter terrorism policing so they "know what to do and what to look for".

Iran targeting Jewish and Israeli people

In October, the head of MI5 revealed the security service had foiled 20 Iran-backed plots in the UK since the beginning of 2022.

Mr Jarvis said the Iranian state has been targeting Jewish and Israeli people in the UK, as well as UK-based Persian-language media critical of Iran.

The minister said Iran is trying to "stifle criticism through intimidation and fear".

"These threats are unacceptable," he said.

"They must and will be defended against at every turn."

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Britons criminally liable if working with foreign power

He added threats from Iran are not just physical in nature, with the National Cyber Security Centre seeing "malicious" cyber activity conducted by Iranian state-affiliated actors targeting the UK.

Mr Jarvis reminded MPs the National Security Act 2023 gave police new powers such as the ability to arrest anybody assisting foreign intelligence services, with a maximum penalty of 14 years in prison.

He said the UK security profession, including private investigators, has recently been issued guidance about how the National Security Act applies to them, emphasising how they may be criminally liable if they are working for any foreign power.

The minister said the government is exploring further sanctions against other Iranian-linked criminals, and the National Crime Agency will target anyone who assists the IRGC and others to launder their money.

Sky News

(c) Sky News 2025: Anybody working for Iran in UK must register or face jail, government announces

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