EU agrees new Iran sanctions, won't label Guards as 'terrorist' for now
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[January 23, 2023]
By Bart H. Meijer and Ingrid Melander
BRUSSELS (Reuters) -The European Union on Monday introduced new
sanctions against Iran for a "brutal" crackdown on protests, but the
bloc's top diplomat said the country's Revolutionary Guards (IRGC)
cannot be listed as a terrorist group without a court decision.
Relations between the 27-nation EU and Tehran have deteriorated during
stalled efforts to revive talks on its nuclear programme, worsening
further as Iran has moved to detain several European nationals.
The bloc has also become increasingly critical of the continuing violent
treatment of domestic protesters, including executions, and the transfer
of Iranian drones to Russia.
Sweden, which currently holds the EU's rotating presidency, said the
bloc's foreign ministers meeting in Brussels on Monday "adopted a new
package of sanctions against Iran, targeting those driving the
repression."
"The EU strongly condemns the brutal and disproportionate use of force
by the Iranian authorities against peaceful protesters," said Sweden's
Foreign Minister Tobias Billstrom, according to a Twitter post by the
country's EU diplomatic mission.
EU diplomats told Reuters last week the bloc was set to add 37 names to
a blacklist of Iranian people and entities banned from travelling to
Europe and subject to an asset freeze.
The European Parliament has called on the EU to go further and list the
IRGC as a terrorist entity, blaming it for the clampdown on protests now
into their fourth month and the supply of drones for Russia's war
against Ukraine.
The IRGC was set up shortly after the 1979 Islamic Revolution to protect
the Shi'ite clerical ruling system. It has an estimated 125,000-strong
military with army, navy and air units, and commands the Basij religious
militia often used in crackdowns.
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High Representative of the European
Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep Borrell speaks
to members of the media as he attends a European Union (EU) Foreign
Ministers' meeting in Brussels, Belgium January 23, 2023.
REUTERS/Johanna Geron
"The Iranian regime, the Revolutionary Guards terrorise their own
population day after day," German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock
told Monday's meeting.
But the EU's top diplomat said a court ruling with a concrete legal
condemnation had to first be handed down in a member country before
the EU itself could apply any such designation.
"It is something that cannot be decided without a court... decision
first. You cannot say I consider you a terrorist because I don't
like you," Josep Borrell told reporters on the sidelines of the
Brussels talks.
The ministers were meeting in the EU political hub where thousands
took to the streets a day before to protest against the detention in
Iran of Belgian aid worker Olivier Vandecasteele.
Iran earlier warned the EU against designating the IRGC as a
terrorist entity.
(Reporting by Bart Meijer and Philip Blenkinsop, Writing by Ingrid
Melander and Gabriela Baczynska, Editing by Peter Graff, Timothy
Heritage and John Stonestreet)
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