Fears over network of UK student societies linked to ‘Iranian recruitment hub’Fears over network of UK student societies linked to ‘Iranian recruitment hub’
ABSocsAhlulBayt Society groups, known as ABSocs have thousands of followers on UK campuses

A network of student societies has collaborated with an Iranian-backed broadcaster linked with recruiting agents, a Metro investigation has uncovered.

The campaign wing of the AhlulBayt Society, which has more than 45 branches on British campuses, has worked with PressTV, which the US has said is used by Iranian intelligence to ‘recruit assets’.

AhlulBayt Society groups, known as ABSocs, have also partnered with the Islamic Human Rights Commission, which allegedly has links with the Iranian regime and the IRGC.

The revelations have sparked fears that innocent and unwitting students are being ‘radicalised’ and recruited by Iran.

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PressTV has been accused of being a front for recruitment in the UK

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Jonathan Hackett described the collaborated posts as a ‘positive indicator’ for the potential for recruitment

Metro has also found evidence of IRGC statements being shared in an ABSoc university group chat.

Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp has called for the Office for Students to investigate whether British universities are ‘being used to extend’ Iran’s influence.

ABSocs are Shia-faith student societies which have thousands of followers across UK universities and are overseen by the Muslim Student Council (MSC).

While many appear to operate as completely normal religious and social hubs at a campus-level, there are fears about the society’s activity nationally.

Their campaign wing, ABSoc for Justice, openly collaborates on social media with PressTV, the English-language channel of Iran’s state broadcaster.

PressTV and Absoc for Justice openly collaborated together online

The media organisation only operates on social media and through its website in the UK because it has been banned from broadcasting by Ofcom and kicked off YouTube.

PressTV has been accused of being a front for recruiting assets in the UK and abroad, where it is sanctioned in the US and other countries.

The US Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control said in 2023 that PressTV had been ‘used by Iranian intelligence services to recruit sensitive assets, including US persons’. 

‘PressTV is the mothership of this activity’

Jonathan Hackett, a former American intelligence operator and expert in Iran’s covert operations, described the collaboration between PressTV and Absoc for Justice as a ‘positive indicator’ that recruitment was taking place within the society.

He said: ‘PressTV is the mothership of this activity. It has been delisted by Ofcom, yet these people continue working with them.

‘It is probably the best evidence you are going to get [of recruitment].’

Examples of collaborative posts include posts about protests outside the Jordanian embassy in London in April and a joint post with PressTV’s Hebrew channel last December.

There are numerous posts linking the two organisations

Hackett claimed that Iranian intelligence uses organisations such as ABSocs to ‘target and exploit religious views… to identify potential unwitting or witting recruits for the future’.

‘At their events, they are looking for individuals who display some motivations that can be exploited for further use.

‘In many cases, people being exploited do not realise, because things look so friendly, normal and non-threatening.’

Hackett said that Marzieh Hashemi, a PressTV presenter based in Washington, was involved in the early stages of the recruitment of high-profile American spy Monica Witt, who defected to Iran in 2013.

Metro has also uncovered concerns about ABSocs for Justice’s ties to the Islamic Human Rights Commission, which has alleged links to Iran.

Their chairman, Massoud Shadjareh, appeared in videos with ABSoc for Justice earlier this month and the organisations have collaborated on numerous occasions.

IHRC Chair Massoud Shadjareh appeared in a Instagram post with ABSoc for Justice

The Telegraph has reported that Shadjareh met Ayatollah Khamenei before his death and took part in a vigil for IRGC general Qasem Soleimani, who was killed in a US air strike in 2020.

ABSoc for Justice is also listed as a supporter of the IHRC-organized Al-Quds Day rally last March, which was labelled a ‘hate rally’ by MPs and banned by the government.

The IHRC was described as an ‘Islamist group ideologically aligned with the Iranian regime that has a history of “extremist links and terrorist sympathies”‘ in an independent review of Prevent, the government’s counterterrorism scheme, in 2023.

The IHRC insisted, in a statement to Metro, that they are not linked to the Iranian government or the IRGC or Basij.

The IHRC was also named in a report by Lord Walney in March as one of the charities, community centers and other organisations which Tehran could be using to maintain its ‘influence and interests’ in the UK.

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ABSoc for Justice worked with the IHRC at numerous protests, including supporting their banned Al-Quds rally in March

Lord Walney said our investigation ‘exposes an alarming risk that forces supporting the malign and dangerous Iranian regime are seeking to radicalise students through this network of student societies. ‘

He continued: ‘The government needs to get serious with a multifaceted drive to prevent this vile terror-exporting Islamist regime from undermining our country from within.’

What else has Metro found?

Metro has found examples of apparent radical sentiment being shared within ABSocs.

This includes an IRGC statement being shared with a Greenwich University ABSoc after the assassination of Ayatollah Khamenei

The message – obtained by Metro – says ‘the avenging hand of the Iranian nation will not leave the perpetrators of the Imam of the Ummah’s killers unpunished.’

It continues: ‘The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the Armed Forces of the Islamic Republic, and the great popular Basij will powerfully continue the path of their leader’.

An IRGC statement was apparently shared in a Greenwich ABSoc chat

Metro has also seen posts where a number of University ABSocs mourned the death of Ayatollah Khamenei and displayed his picture at events.

Some Absocs have distanced themselves from the MSC. Durham University’s ABSoc wrote in a statement online that ‘no external organisation, including the Muslim Student Council or any other ABSoc, represents the views of the Durham ABSoc’.

Chris Philp MP, Shadow Home Secretary, demanded an investigation into the ties between ABSocs and Iranian-linked groups.

He said: ‘British campuses are being used to extend the reach of a government that brutalises its own people. Extremism remains one of the greatest dangers to our national security, and groups that glorify terrorism or threaten community safety have no place in Britain.

‘The Office for Students must investigate every institution where these groups have operated, and universities receiving public funding should not be providing cover for the agents of a foreign regime. And any foreign student who expresses support for terrorism or extremism must have their visas cancelled and must be removed from this country.’

Chris Philp has called for the Office for Students to investigate (Picture: Jeff Overs/BBC/PA Wire)

Emma Schubart, Research Fellow, Henry Jackson Society, said: ‘These findings should concern both universities and the government. Repeated collaboration with PressTV, which US authorities say has been used for intelligence recruitment, alongside links to organisations associated with the Iranian regime’s ideological infrastructure, raises serious questions about foreign influence on campus.’

A spokesperson for the Community Security Trust, which monitors Iranian influence and its direct threat to the UK, said: ‘This is yet another example of Islamist extremism and Pro-Iranian regime activity that raises serious concerns about radicalisation on UK campuses.

‘Universities and Student Unions need to take much stronger action against this kind of activity, especially given the alleged role of Iran as a hostile state fomenting extremism in the UK.’

What has the IHRC said in response?

In a statement provided to Metro, the IHRC said ‘neither Mr. Shadjareh nor IHRC are linked to IRGC / Basij / the Iranian government or indeed PressTV.’

They continued: ‘Appearing on platforms does not make you a part of the organizers group, otherwise Mr. Shadjareh and indeed IHRC would also be aligned to and or belong to the BBC, RUSI, the British Council,  ITV, Channel 4, the European Parliament, the Home Office,  the UN and any number of other organisations, governmental bodies or media that we have worked with, spoken at or collaborated with. 

‘With regard to your citing William Shawcross, his report has been thoroughly debunked, including by Amnesty International, as Islamophobic and baseless.’

The IHRC organized Al Quds rally (Picture: Maja Smiejkowska/PA Wire)

The statement continued: ‘You would be wise to learn Alice’s lesson: just because Humpty Dumpty says a thing means a thing, it doesn’t automatically make it so.’

The IHRC also said that the claims made against ABSocs and the Muslim Student Council were ‘unevidenced and somewhat fanciful’.

They added that the claims made served to ‘demonise Muslims in the UK, to make the Iranian “threat” look immediate and imminent’.

 A government spokesperson said:’ There is no place for extremist hatred and abuse on university campuses. Activities such as glorifying terrorism, fundraising for terrorist purposes, or supporting proscribed organisations are serious criminal offenses and must never be tolerated.

‘Universities should take their Prevent duties seriously and ensure robust steps are in place to stop unlawful extremist activity and keep students safe.’

Arif Ahmed, Director for Freedom of Speech and Academic Freedom at the Office for Students, said: ‘We are aware of recent reports that foreign states and hostile institutions have sought to exploit the sector in ways that threaten our liberty, our values and our security.

‘It is vital for the integrity of the sector that any such attempts fail. We will continue to work collaboratively with students, academics, government and the sector to root out interference from foreign governments and institutions.’

Metro has approached the Muslim Student Council, PressTV, the Iranian Embassy and the Office for Students for comment.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@usnewsrank.com.

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