Alleged Leader of US-Based Iran Militant Group Goes on Trial

DUBAI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES — The alleged leader of the militant wing of a U.S.-based Iranian opposition group went on trial Sunday, state TV reported. He’s accused of planning a 2008 bombing at a mosque that killed 14 people and wounded over 200.

In 2020, Iran’s intelligence service detained Jamshid Sharmahd, an Iranian-German national and U.S. resident. Iran said he is the leader of Tondar, the militant wing of the opposition group Kingdom Assembly of Iran.

Sharmahd’s family says he is only the spokesperson for the Kingdom Assembly of Iran, known in Farsi as Anjoman-e Padeshahi-e Iran, and has accused Iran of kidnapping him in Dubai. His hometown is Glendora, California.

Sharmahd confessed to having a relationship with both the FBI and the CIA, state TV alleged. A state TV reporter claimed he was in contact with nine FBI and CIA agents and his last meeting was in January 2020, without elaborating.

Iranian state television long has been believed to be overseen by intelligence agencies in the country and its channels routinely broadcast coerced confessions.

Sharmahd’s family has accused Iran of keeping their father in “555 days of solitary confinement without charges” prior to the hearing.

At the time of his detention, Iran alleged Sharmahd was behind the 2008 bombing that targeted the Hosseynieh Seyed al-Shohada Mosque in the city of Shiraz and that he was planning other attacks around Iran. Besides the 14 killed in the bombing, 215 were wounded.

Sharmahd, who supports restoring Iran’s monarchy that was overthrown in the 1979 Islamic Revolution, had been previously targeted in an apparent Iranian assassination plot on U.S. soil in 2009.

Iran hasn’t said how it detained Sharmahd, which came against the backdrop of covert actions conducted by Iran amid heightened tensions with the U.S. over Tehran’s collapsing nuclear deal with world powers.

Sharmahd had been in Dubai, trying to travel to India for a business deal involving his software company, his son said. He was hoping to get a connecting flight despite the ongoing coronavirus pandemic disrupting global travel.

Western officials believe Iran runs intelligence operations in Dubai and keeps tabs on the hundreds of thousands of Iranians living in the city-state. Iran is suspected of kidnapping and later killing British-Iranian national Abbas Yazdi in Dubai in 2013, though Tehran has denied involvement.

The U.S. State Department runs its Iran Regional Presence Office in Dubai, where diplomats monitor Iranian media reports and talk to Iranians.

Dubai’s hotels long have been targeted by intelligence operatives, such as in the suspected 2010 assassination by the Israeli Mossad of Hamas operative Mahmoud al-Mabhouh. Dubai and the rest of the UAE have since invested even more in an elaborate surveillance network.

The Kingdom Assembly of Iran seeks to restore Iran’s monarchy, which ended when the fatally ill Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi fled the country in 1979 just before the Islamic Revolution. The group’s founder disappeared in the mid-2000s.

Last week, Iran said its intelligence units arrested the No. 2 leader of Tondar, or “Thunder” in Farsi, identified only as “Masmatus.”

Iran has also accused the group of being behind a 2010 bombing at Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s mausoleum in Tehran that wounded several people.

State TV said some family members of victims of the mosque bombing attended Sunday’s hearing, which was presided over by Judge Abolghasem Salavati in Revolutionary Court 15 in the capital, Tehran.

Source: Voice of America

Greece faces energy crisis as prices spiral

Last year’s sharp rise in natural gas prices across Europe, which inevitably hit electricity prices, left a sour inheritance to Greek households and businesses.

As summer gave way to autumn, electricity prices rose across Europe, including Greece, driven by an unprecedented rise in gas prices.

With natgas widely used for power generation across the continent, the rise in prices was passed over to electricity.

However, by late November, skyrocketing wholesale electricity prices impacted retail electricity rates.

According to the Hellenic Statistical Authority (ELSTAT), retail electricity prices in December 2021 rose by 45% y-o-y, with some of the increase not passed to the consumer thanks to government subsidies.

Electricity bills for November and December went through the roof.

The additional monthly cost for a household that consumes 600 kilowatt-hours per month is estimated to be around €80 for November – and that’s after the state subsidy of €39.

The additional cost for December was even higher, at €100, and households are expected to receive inflated bills until at least April.

Currently, the government is following a step-by-step approach, which envisages dealing with the problem monthly.

Finance Minister Christos Staikouras has ruled out any reduction in value-added tax, as this would “derail the budget.”

Government spokesman Giannis Economou noted the Mitsotakis administration “is in constant contact with the market and is considering a series of interventions”.

So far, the government’s response in addressing consumer discontent and financial plight has been the introduction of across-the-board subsidies through stipends provided to electricity suppliers.

With special provisions made for low-earning and vulnerable consumers, since they are the worst hit, the inability to pay the electricity bill has led to the termination of the electricity supply.

The new year found the country in the grip of an unprecedented avalanche of high energy prices, which soon translated into indiscriminate increases in food and goods prices, which gave rise to strong inflationary pressures.

The latest ELSTAT figures show that inflation for January 2022, taking into account the EU harmonised index, rose to 5.5%, the highest in 20 or more years and is largely driven by high energy prices.

Eurostat estimates that Greek inflation rose by more than one percentage point in a single month, from 4.4% in December 2021.

If this is confirmed when ELSTAT publishes its data on February 15, the index will have recorded its highest reading in the last 11 years.

The last time it climbed so high was in September 2010, hitting 5.7%.

Greece is no longer one of the EU states with the smallest hikes, as in January, it had the seventh-highest consumer price index increase among 19 eurozone members. The average rate in the euro area was 5.1% last month.

Manageable levels

The government has already paid €1.7 bln in subsidies to maintain electricity and gas retail prices at manageable levels, with a further €2 bln earmarked until May.

This is the first time since Greece joined the euro that the government has resorted to wide-ranging energy subsidies to avoid social unrest and consumer price hikes for non-energy products.

Greece is not alone in Europe in subsidising consumer electricity and gas prices, Italy, Spain, and Portugal have introduced some kind of subsidy to help consumers.

Environment and Energy Minister Costas Skrekas reiterated the government’s commitment to providing financial support to consumers.

“Support to households will continue uninterrupted until there is a scaling down of high energy prices in international markets”, Skrekas said.

He added that “January electricity wholesale prices at €227.30/MWh were only slightly lower than in December”.

Wholesale electricity prices traded on the Athens Energy Exchange (ENEX) are now five times higher than a year ago.

The introduction of substantial energy subsidies raises a more fundamental question of market operation and the lack of adequate competition.

Some analysts point out that direct subsidies for specific mass consumer products, such as electricity and gas, are undermining the principles and rules of the EU’s internal market, which took more than 40 years to develop.

Offering widespread subsidies to selected groups of consumers and introducing a permanent subsidy-oriented support mechanism to counter high prices at the EU council level is undermining the free operation of competition-driven energy markets throughout Europe.

Resolving Europe’s high energy price issues has more to do with energy policy and wrong priorities, say analysts.

High costs

Industrial producer prices soared to a 21-year high last month, pointing to further retail price hikes in the weeks and months to come.

The continued rise of wholesale electricity rates entails high maintenance of energy costs, which makes it very difficult for manufacturers and retailers to absorb hikes and prevent them from reaching consumers.

On top of that, there is now the impact of the recent cold snap on agricultural produce, as hikes are already emerging in vegetable prices.

ELSTAT figures showed the industrial producer price index up 29.4% last month from December 2020.

Besides being the biggest yearly rise, the statistics show that December 2021 constitutes a historic high.

Such was the dramatic increase last month that compared to November 2021, industrial producer prices posted a monthly increase of 5.7%.

“While in the past, price lists sent by suppliers to supermarkets used to stay the same for as long as three years, now they may change up to three times a year,” said a spokesman from a major retailers association.

Source: Financial Mirror

COVID19: Four deaths, fewer cases and patients

Cyprus reported four coronavirus deaths on Sunday, with fewer daily cases that dropped to 2,214, and hospitalisations edged lower to 224, of whom 62 were critical.

The health ministry said in its Covid bulletin that the latest victims were three men aged 82 to 90 and an 88 year old woman, raising the death toll for February to ten and 745 since March 2020.

January was the deadliest month with 96, overtaking the previous record of 80 deaths last August. To date, 465 of the victims were male (62.4%) and 280 females, with an average age of 76.3 years.

Intubated patients remained unchanged at 29, while 71% of hospital COVID-19 patients were unvaccinated.

The number of patients admitted at the Covid ward of the Makarios children’s hospital rose by two to 12.

Some 19 patients are still considered post-Covid, the same as on Saturday, having recovered from the virus, but remain intubated and in a serious state.

The total number of SARS-CoV-2 infections since March 2020 has risen to 271,605.

A total of 85,567 PCR and rapid tests were conducted during the past 24 hours, 1,500 fewer than the day before.

Positivity rate drops to 2.59%

The decrease in the number of tests and new cases from 2,568 to 2,214 saw the benchmark ‘positivity rate’ drop from 2.95% to 2.59%, but still far above the safe marker of 1%.

Having peaked at 5,457 on January 4, driven by a spike in the Omicron variant, new cases have dipped below 3,000, having remained above that level for most of the past month.

Of the new infections, 160 were identified through contact tracing linked to earlier infections, 56 were passengers who arrived at Larnaca and Paphos airports, and 138 were diagnosed from private initiative, hospital and GP tests.

A further 844 cases were detected from private rapid tests at labs and pharmacies, and 1,168 were positive from the free national testing programme, available only to those vaccinated or recovered from earlier infections.

Of the 253 samples taken in retirement homes, 15 were positive, with five more new cases from 1,705 tests in restricted institutions.

Source: Financial Mirror