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Iran International

Iran International
CountryUnited Kingdom
Broadcast areaWorldwide
HeadquartersLondon, UK
Programming
Language(s)Persian, English, Arabic
Picture format1080i (HDTV)
Ownership
OwnerVolant Media UK Ltd
History
Launched19 May 2017; 7 years ago (2017-05-19)
Links
Websiteiranintl.com
Radio Iran International
Frequency15630 kHz / 5830 kHz SW

Iran International (Persian: ایران اینترنشنال) is a Persian-language satellite television channel and multilingual digital news operation established in May 2017 and headquartered in London aimed at Iranians and people interested in Iranian news, culture, society and sports.[1]

In February 2023, threats from the Iranian government against its UK-based journalists[2] led the network to move headquarters temporarily to Washington, D.C.[3]

News content is available online, via radio and via satellite broadcasting worldwide including inside Iran despite official attempts at censorship. The network reports on Iran's geopolitical role, economy, human rights violations, political developments, LGBTQ+ rights and other topics sensitive to the government in Iran.[4][5]

Overview

Iran International claims to have 20 million viewers despite the Iranian government using satellite jammers. The network focuses mostly on news reporting and programming, but also broadcasts programs and documentaries on science, art, technology, sports and culture.

Its programs include 24 with Fardad Farahzad, The Lead (hosted by Niusha Saremi) and Hattrick (hosted by Mazdak Mirzaei). It also has a weekly podcast named Eye for Iran with Negar Mojtahedi.

The channel has received media attention for its reporting on human rights violations, political developments, LGBTQ+ rights and women's rights in Iran[4][5] and has twice been nominated for International Channel of the Year by the Association for International Broadcasting and won a 2023 Clio Entertainment Award as well as a 2023 Promax UK award.[6][7][8]

The channel is backed by a Saudi-British investor with ties to the Saudi government,[9][10][11][12] but Iran International's management claims the independence of its editorial operation and denies a link to any government.[13]

In 2022, an independent survey carried out by the Group for Analyzing and Measuring Attitudes in Iran (GAMAAN) and reported by the AIB[6] found that Iran International is the most influential source of independent news in Iran with 33% of the daily audience.[14] More than half of the 27,000 participants surveyed also reported that they trusted Iran International "a lot" or "to some extent".[15]

During the Mahsa Amini protests on 9 November 2022, the Iranian Minister of Intelligence Ismail Khatib announced that Iran International had been declared a terrorist organization by the Islamic Republic of Iran, accused of inciting riots protesting the government.[16][17][18]

News sources have reported that the Iranian government is waging an "intimidation campaign" against personnel of the TV station, freezing their assets, interrogating their relatives and "threatening to snatch them from British streets if they do not quit their jobs".[19][20] In February 2023 Magomed-Husejn Dovtaev was charged with terrorism after being caught photographing areas surrounding the studios, and in September Iran International said it was resuming broadcasting from London, UK.[21][22]

History and availability

Iran International was launched on 18 May 2017,[23] with the aim of serving the 80 million people that live in Iran and the Iranian diaspora around the world, in addition to informing and educating a global audience on the latest news and developments in Iran and across the Middle East.[24]

The channel is headquartered in London and broadcasts internationally, with a team of journalists that have joined Iran International from other Persian-language news channels including Manoto, Radio Farda, BBC Persian Service and Voice of America. It has bureaus in Istanbul, Paris and Washington D.C.[25]

Iran International broadcasts via the TürkmenÄlem 52°E / MonacoSAT satellite to a wide region of Europe and Asia (including Iran), and also transmits an audio relay of it receivable in Iran via shortwave radio (SW). It also broadcasts worldwide via online streaming through its website or streaming apps.[26]

It is licensed in the United Kingdom to Global Media Circulating Ltd as an editorial news service based in London[27] and is managed by DMA Media Ltd, which has bureaus in Paris, Istanbul, Kabul and Washington.[28] Volant Media UK launched a sister channel in 2021, Afghanistan International.[29]

In 2018 Iran's ambassador to the UK lodged a complaint to the media regulator because of Iran International's interview with a separatist group spokesman after they claimed responsibility for a terrorist attack on a military parade in Ahvaz in Khuzestan Province, killing 25 civilians and military.[30] The channel aired an interview with Yaqoub Hor Altostari, presented as a spokesman for the group, indirectly claiming responsibility for the attack and calling it "resistance against legitimate targets".[31] After a long investigation Ofcom ruled that Iran International did not breach any rules.[32][33]

On 9 November 2022, among the Mahsa Amini protests, the Iranian Minister of Intelligence Ismail Khatib announced that Iran International has been declared a terrorist organization by the Islamic Republic of Iran for supposedly inciting the anti-government riots. Any cooperation with the channel will be considered an act of cooperation with terrorists and a threat to national security.[17]

In response to Iranian government castigation, Iran International deemed it needed to increase security in order to protect its London staff from threats emanating from Tehran. These bulwarks have included concrete barriers "guaranteed to stop a 7.5 ton truck at 50 miles (80 kilometers) per hour," taking the lead from the way the UK government uses such barriers to defend against vehicular onslaughts, which vehicles are now monitored through checkpoints.[34]

Eventually, on February 18, 2023, after a significant escalation in state-backed threats from Iran and advice from the Metropolitan Police, Iran International TV said it had reluctantly closed its London studios temporarily and moved broadcasting to Washington, D.C.[35][36][37][38] Operations resumed at a new location in London in September 2023.[22][39]

Programming

Iran International studio

According to Middle East Eye, Iran International is a media platform for the Iranian opposition.[40] Kourosh Ziabari of Al-Monitor wrote it "does not shy away from presenting itself as an opposition media organization" and frequently gives the microphone to guests who criticize the Iranian government.[41] The channel has been referred to as an "Iranian exile news outlet" by Borzou Daragahi of The Independent.[42]

The channel is known for raising the profile of Reza Pahlavi, the last heir apparent to the former Iranian throne, by constant coverage and repeatedly interviewing him.[40] It also airs coverage of People's Mujahedin of Iran (MEK), including live broadcast of their rallies.[9]

The claim of responsibility for the Ahvaz military parade attack was made through Iran International.[43] In 2020, the TV broadcast performance of Iranian singers who were flown in from the United States to the Winter at Tantora Festival.[40] Iran International does not run television advertisements.[9]

News output

Iran International relies on a team of journalists around the world and reports on current affairs, health, technology, human rights violations, LGBTQ+ rights, women's rights and more.[25][44][45][46] The channel has reported extensively on the COVID-19 pandemic in Iran, the Iran Nuclear Deal and global politics.[47][48][49]

The channel also airs television shows on sport, culture and politics and has produced documentaries that have been nominated for awards by the Association for International Broadcasters.[50]

Exclusive stories

The channel has been the first to report on several exclusive news stories and has access to a network of whistleblowers and sources inside Iran.[citation needed]

Iran International reported exclusively on the extension of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe's furlough,[51] and her partner Richard Ratcliffe has been a guest on the channel multiple times.[52] The channel was also the first to report that Iranian rapper Amir Tataloo was facing deportation back to Iran from Turkey,[52] and the sentencing of The Salesman star Taraneh Alidoosti.[53]

During the COVID-19 pandemic in Iran, the channel published exclusive documents pertaining to alleged high level government corruption concerning COVID-19 medical supplies, with The Independent writing that the documents "purported to show how Iran regime figures intervened in the procurement of medical supplies to steer South Korean contracts for Covid-19 test-kits through shell companies towards conservative foundations controlled by cronies".[54]

Reporting on the execution of Navid Afkari, Iran International exclusively interviewed Amnesty International's Iran Researcher and human rights lawyer Raha Bahreini, who told the channel that "with the secret and previously unannounced execution of Navid Afkari, the Islamic Republic authorities once again showed the ruthless and merciless of Iran's judiciary system at the international level".[55]

Zarifgate

On 25 April 2021, Iran International obtained a leaked audio file of Iran's Foreign Minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif criticising the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, and claiming that the deceased commander of the Quds Force, Qasem Soleimani had taken Iran into the Syrian Civil War because Russian President Vladimir Putin wanted Iranian forces on the ground to complement the Russian air campaign in support of the Syrian Government.[56][57]

Zarif also mentioned that Russia had wanted to stop the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action and keep Iran at odds with the West.[58]

Elements of the recording also prompted US Republicans to call for the resignation of John Kerry from US President Joe Biden's National Security Council after Zarif revealed during the recording that Kerry had informed him of Israeli operations in Syria.[59]

Human rights

Lesbian activist and journalist at Iran International, Aram Bolandpaz has produced several documentaries on the LGBTQ+ community inside Iran and has been a vocal critic of human rights violations against the community.[4][44]

In June 2020, Iran International reported on a series of honour killings and gender-based violence that took place in Iran,[60] with legal analyst and journalist at Iran International Nargess Tavalossian, the daughter of Nobel Prize winning activist Shirin Ebadi, speaking publicly to global media outlets about the increase in violence against women in the country.[60][5]

The channel has also been noted for its reporting on the arrest of award-winning film director Mohammed Rouslouf.[61]

Staff

The head of TV is Mahmood Enayat,[62] and the Director of News is Aliasghar Ramezanpour,[63] who was the deputy Minister of Culture of Iran under former president Mohammad Khatami.[64]

In July 2019, Iranian media reporter Mazdak Mirzaei, a football commentator and TV host joined Iran International. Mirzaei had worked for IRIB on the weekly TV sports program Navad, that was suspended by the new head of IRIB 3 in March 2019.[41]

In May 2020, Iran International senior journalist Omid Habibinia joined the team.[65] In September 2021, Iran International journalist Tajuden Soroush published several reports on Afghanistan following the 15 August 2021 Fall of Kabul.[66][67][68]

Ownership

Iran International is owned by Volant Media UK Ltd.[69] It is licensed in the United Kingdom to Global Media Circulating Ltd as an editorial news service based in London[27] and is managed by DMA Media Ltd, which has bureaus in Paris, Istanbul, Kabul and Washington.[28] Volant Media UK launched a sister channel in 2021, Afghanistan International.[29]

Corporate documents for Volant Media shows that another Saudi national, Fahad Ibrahim Aldeghither, was the major shareholder of Volant Media before Adel Abdukarim.[69] Aldeghither owned over 75% of the shares of Volant Media from May 2016 to May 2018.[69] Fahad Ibrahim Aldeghither was the chairman of Mobile Telecommunication Company Saudi Arabia (Zain) from March 2013 to February 2016. Zain Saudi is the third-largest telecoms provider in Saudi Arabia.[70]

Intimidation of staff

In December 2019, Shanti Das of The Times reported that Iran is waging an "intimidation campaign" against personnel of the TV station, freezing their assets, interrogating their relatives and "threatening to snatch them from British streets if they do not quit their jobs". Iran's Ministry of Intelligence had previously named the employees of Iran International as "enemy of the state", writing on its website that those who "serve foreigners" and "betray the country" will be punished.[71] The same publication wrote in May 2020 that Iran International is thought to be the target of a state-sponsored programme that "has sought to discredit its reporting and trace its followers" by creating replicas of its social media accounts. Instagram was criticized for hosting the fake accounts.[20]

In 2022 London's Metropolitan Police placed concrete barriers outside its studios in west London as a response to "imminent and credible threats".[72]

In February 2023, Iran International moved its headquarters temporarily to Washington, D.C. due to increased threats from the Iranian government against Iran International's UK-based journalists.[2] Scotland Yard warned Iran International staff that it could not "safeguard them from Tehran-backed assassins or kidnappers on UK soil".[73] Magomed-Husekjn Dovtaev was charged in 2023 with terrorism after he was found collecting information outside the channel's headquarters.[74] Dovtaev was charged "with collecting information of a kind likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism".[75]

In March 2024, journalist Pouria Zeraati, was stabbed outside his home in London.[39][76]

Reception

Iran International's news and analysis has been cited in Western media publications including BBC News,[77] The Guardian,[78] The Sydney Morning Herald,[46] The Telegraph,[79] Fox News,[5] and The Independent.[80] Staff at Iran International have also appeared as experts on BBC Radio 4, Sky News, Australian Broadcasting Corporation networks[81] and ITN.

Popularity

In 2022, an independent survey carried out by the Group for Analyzing and Measuring Attitudes in Iran (GAMAAN) and reported by the AIB[6] found that Iran International is the most influential source of independent news in Iran with 33% of the daily audience. It found that Iran International's most popular programs are “Cheshm Andaz” (meaning “outlook”) and “Titr-e Avval” (meaning “headline”). The survey was of the 85% of Iranians who are literate and over the age of 19.[14] More than half of the 27,000 participants surveyed also reported that they trusted Iran International "a lot" or "to some extent".[15]

Another UK-based Persian TV outlet, Manoto, received similarly high levels of trust within Iran in the survey, and was a close second in daily viewership at 30%. But in 2024, Manoto shut down its satellite broadcasting due to financial issues. Manoto still operates via YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook. The BBC News Persia was in third with 17% of daily viewers, and the government-owned Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting network was in 5th place with 16%.

Editorial independence

Though the TV station states that it "adheres to strict international standards of impartiality, balance and accountability",[10] questions have been raised regarding its editorial independence.[9][10]

In October 2018, a report by Saeed Kamali Dehghan in The Guardian claimed Iran International's funding was linked to Saudi Prince Mohammed bin Salman. It also interviewed an unnamed insider who said that the editorial content had been influenced by its investors. A source was reported by The Guardian as saying that Iran International received $250m from Saudi Arabia for launching the channel. The insider and an unnamed ex-employee expressed dismay that Saudi funding had been concealed from the employees. Iran International denied The Guardian's report.[9]

According to The Wall Street Journal, "[some] journalists at Iran International have complained that management is pushing a pro-Saudi, anti-Islamic Republic line". WSJ quoted a former correspondent at the TV station commenting that "a systematic and very persistent push" was made during her time there.[10]

Azadeh Moaveni of New York University has charged the channel is an arm of Saudi Arabia: "I would not describe Iran International as pro-reform, or organically Iranian in any manner".[82]

Union busting

Michelle Stanistreet, general secretary of National Union of Journalists (NUJ) told Press Gazette "[o]ur members at Iran International have faced intimidation and harassment for their work as journalists —that their rights of freedom of association should be trampled on in this way is a grave injustice and one that the NUJ will do all it can to rectify".[83]

On 10 July 2020, International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) released a statement and condemned union busting efforts made by Iran International, its refusal to engage with the UK government's non-departmental public body Acas to recognize a NUJ chapel, as well as what it called a "breach of international labour standards".[84] Iran International had signed a recognition deal with the British Association of Journalists (BAJ), which IFJ describes as a "sweetheart deal" with an "obscure journalists' union", and appointed a senior manager to represent staff while pressuring them to join BAJ.[84] NUJ stated that BAJ had no members there before the deal was made.[83] As of July 2020, BAJ claimed 20 members working at Iran International while NUJ said an "overwhelming majority" of the 140 workers are its members.[83]

On 15 July 2020, it was reported that Labour peer Lord John Hendy submitted a complaint to International Labour Organization (ILO) against the BAJ and Iran International.[85]

Alleged 2024 Armenia-Iran arms deal

In July 2024, Iran International reported on a secret $500 million agreement between Iran and Armenia by citing a "senior military official in the Middle East." The supposed deal was reported to have included Shahed 136, Shahed 129, Shahed 197, and Mohajer drones and air defense systems such as 3rd Khordad, Majid, 15th Khordad, and Arman. It further reportedly involved intelligence cooperation, close military relations, training, and the establishment of bases on Armenian soil.[86][87]

The report was denied by Armenia's Defense Ministry as "fictitious and false".[88][89][87] Mehdi Sobhani, Iran's ambassador in Armenia, also denied the report, calling the outlet "unreliable" and having a "history of publishing incorrect information and biased analyses about the Islamic Republic of Iran." Sobhani said the "purpose of publishing such news is to influence the development of friendly relations between Iran and the countries of the region and emphasized that the Islamic Republic of Iran supports the establishment of peace and stability as well as economic development in the Caucasus region."[90][91][92] Azerbaijani pro-government media also denied the report calling it "entirely fabricated" and aimed at "sabotaging the burgeoning relationship between Azerbaijan and Iran by spreading false information."[93][94] The U.S. Department of State did not comment on the report.[95]

Reporting in occupied Palestinian territories

On 7 October 2024, Iran International Correspondent in Israel Babak Eshaghi was videotaped writing the saying "Woman, Life, Freedom" on the walls of a destroyed building in the besieged Gaza Strip; the saying originated with the Kurdish freedom movement in Iraq, Turkey and Syria but later revitalized as a international popular slogan in support women's rights against violence following global protests in 2022 and 2023 against the mistreatment and murder of Mahsa Jina Amini days after taken under Iranian Guidance Patrol custody for wearing her hijab "improperly"; witnesses said she was subjected to police brutality a few days prior.[96]

Controversies

Iran International has sometimes been accused of being used by or having an unethical connection with the Israeli government. But little to no evidence has been provided. Barak Ravid, a correspondent for the Israeli website Walla, broadly claimed in a tweet in 2022 that: "the Mossad is using this media outlet quite regularly for its information war." But he provided no evidence, links or details to support his claim. In addition, the phrase "using" doesn't indicate if he was also claiming that Iran International was aware it was being used or was complicit in it. Sometimes government officials provide accurate information to reporters, and the information supports the cause of the officials. Reporting such accurate information is within the standards of journalism. Sometimes officials provide inaccurate information, and reporters have reason to think it's accurate and report it. In such cases, the reporters are used by the officials, yet the reporters were not complicit or aware ahead of time. In other cases, a reporter knowingly prints inaccurate information in order to help a government or an official within it, which is a clear and blatant violation of journalistic standards. However, Ravid didn't specify in his tweet what type of "using" he claimed was occurring.[97]

A few pro-government Iranian news outlets based in Iran have made broad claims that Iran International is really a tool of the Israeli government. However, those outlets are either partly or heavily controlled or censored by the Iranian government, and are not reliable news sources. For example, a few weeks after Ravid's tweet, a pro-Islamic Republic website named KhabarOnline repeated Ravid's claim plus added its own claim that Iran International was a tool of the Israeli government. But KhabarOnline's "About Us" page says it is committed to the ideals of the Islamic Revolution, Imam Rahel and the martyrs of the revolution.[98]

In the same month, BBC News published an article describing Ravid's tweet and the attacks by a few media outlets based in Iran on Iran International. But BBC News stated: "Iranian state media often conduct smear campaigns against foreign-based Persian-language outlets, seeing them - particularly those based in London - as part of the West's "soft war" against Iran." The BBC also noted that "Many foreign-based Iranian journalists, including from the BBC's Persian service, have joined Iran International" and that "Its social media are quick to break news, sometimes beating BBC Persian and US-backed Radio Farda."[99][100]

Also, claims of Saudi government influence on Iran International have been made by other sources including The Guardian. Claims of anti-union activity have also been made. The details and discussion of these claims are described in "The Reception" section of this page.

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