Germany arrests Pakistani man accused of spying for Iran

Syed Mustufa H is alleged to have spied on former head of German-Israeli Society for Iran


News Desk July 08, 2016
A suspect is detained by plain clothes police during a raid at a house in the Kreuzberg district of Berlin, Germany February 4, 2016. PHOTO: REUTERS/FILE

A Pakistani man was arrested by German authorities on Tuesday for allegedly spying for Iran on the former head of a group that promotes German-Israeli relations.

According to Associated Press, federal prosecutors said Thursday that the 31-year-old, identified only as Syed Mustufa H in keeping with German privacy rules, was arrested on Tuesday in the northern city of Bremen.

US ends case against former envoy accused of spying for Pakistan

They said in a statement that he was ‘in contact with an intelligence unit attributed to Iran’, without elaborating. He is alleged to have spied on the former head of the German-Israeli Society and people close to him, among others, and handed over information to Iran in October.

The ex-head of the German-Israeli group, former lawmaker Reinhold Robbe, told the Bild newspaper that he wasn't surprised by the alleged espionage and he ‘will not be intimidated’.

Earlier this year, the US Justice Department closed its espionage investigation into a former American diplomat who had been accused of spying for Pakistan.

FBI agents had raided Robin L Raphel’s home and office in 2014, looking for evidence that she was spying for Islamabad, an accusation which Raphel had denied vehemently.

“It was clear from the outset that this investigation was based on a fundamental misunderstanding,” her lawyer, Amy Jeffress, said in a statement.

“It is of the utmost importance to our national security that our diplomats be able to do their work without fearing that their routine diplomatic communications will subject them to criminal investigation,” she added, according to the New York Times.

No charges were filed against Raphel, Jeffress continued, sharply criticising government officials for revealing details of the investigation to reporters.

Pakistan expels Bangladesh diplomat as 'spy' row escalates

The espionage case against Raphel began after US officials intercepted a conversation in which a Pakistani official suggested that his government was receiving American secrets from her. The investigation did not turn out to be very successful and prosecutors were left with no choice but to focus on charges of keeping classified information in her home. Raphel consistently refused plea deals in negotiations with the government.

Raphel maintained close ties with Pakistani officials even during the rough patch in the Pak-US relationship when many other American diplomats decried Pakistan’s duplicity in the fight against terrorism. For decades, she has also been at the center of steering American policy towards Pakistan.

Raphel was recruited by Richard C Holbrooke, the State Department’s special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, at the start of the Obama administration.

This article originally appeared on Daily Mail

COMMENTS (4)

NDA | 8 years ago | Reply @Raj: @Point: First , names are similar in Iran, Afghanistan, India and Afghanistan. It is not difficult to obtain passports either. One must check what nationality actually he was from. Further, Iran is recruiting Shias from Pakistan and Afghanistan for conflict in the Middle East and offering nationality to heirs if the persons get killed in battle. This is devilish conduct and India is party to it for obvious reasons.
Roadkashehzada | 8 years ago | Reply Pakistan should also register a case against him for spying for a foreign country and put him in jail once he has completed his term in Germany. We need to give a strong message to Pakistanis working for foreign agencies be it Iranian, saudi, emirati or whatever. People like him caused massive deportation of Pakistani shias from UAE 3 years ago
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