Government urged to ban Iranian revolutionary guard amid violent crackdown

Dozens of people have been killed and thousands detained as the Iranian state has attempted to quell mass protests in the country.

By contributor George Lithgow, Press Association
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Supporting image for story: Government urged to ban Iranian revolutionary guard amid violent crackdown
Activists from the Association of Anglo-Iranian Women in the UK said the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps had already gone too far (Stefan Rousseau/PA)

A group of Anglo-Iranian women has called on the Government to ban the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as the Tehran regime’s violent crackdown on protests continues.

Demonstrators gathered outside Downing Street in central London, where they demanded the IRGC be proscribed as a terrorist organisation.

The special armed forces organisation has already been heavily sanctioned in recent years, but there are growing calls for the Prime Minister to go further.

Activists from the Association of Anglo-Iranian Women in the UK during a rally outside 10 Downing Street, central London
Activists from the Association of Anglo-Iranian Women in the UK held a rally outside 10 Downing Street, central London, on Sunday (Stefan Rousseau/PA)

Dozens of people have been killed and thousands detained as the Iranian state has attempted to quell the mass protests in Tehran and other cities using the organisation.

Laila Jazayeri, director of the Association of Anglo-Iranian Women in the UK, said the IRGC had already gone too far.

Speaking at the demonstration on Sunday, she told the Press Association: “The Prime Minister should prescribe the deadly force IRGC, that is killing people inside Iran.”

She said: “There is no need for military intervention. There is no need for boots on the ground.

Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander appearing on the BBC's Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg show
Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander said decisions about the proscription of organisations were kept under constant review (Jeff Overs/BBC/PA)

“Iranian people are capable of bringing the regime down.

“The protesters are empty-handed. They are dealing with heavily armed security forces in some towns and cities.

“But the regime hasn’t been able to send the protesters back home. Why? Because there is a network of resistance.”

Most information coming out of the country is through Starlink satellite transmitters after the regime restricted internet access, and Ms Jazayeri said the UK Government could do more to get Iranians back online.

“The regime has shut down the internet to kill in silence. (The UK Government) should help get access to internet for the Iranian people,” she said.

Asked about the possibility of banning the organisation, Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander told Sky News: “It’s a very thorough process that the Home Secretary would go through in determining whether to proscribe an organisation… I’m not going to second-guess the decisions of the Home Secretary on a matter as significant as this.

“She will follow due process and won’t leave any stone unturned in looking at all the information that is available to her.

“As a government, we keep those decisions about the proscription of organisations under constant review and I have no doubt that Shabana Mahmood is doing that at the moment.”

Later on Sunday, a separate group of around 1,000 protesters gathered on Whitehall calling for “Iranian Freedom”.

The Metropolitan Police said it was monitoring the demonstration.

Dissent against the Islamic Republic has spread around the world, with a protester in London tearing down the country’s flag from its embassy on Saturday.