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Berlin summons Iranian ambassador over arrest of alleged spy

Berlin’s landmark Television Tower is seen next to the Berlin Cathedral and the rebuilt Berlin Palace which houses the Humboldt Forum from viewing platform of French Cathedral in Berlin. (File/AFP)
Berlin’s landmark Television Tower is seen next to the Berlin Cathedral and the rebuilt Berlin Palace which houses the Humboldt Forum from viewing platform of French Cathedral in Berlin. (File/AFP)
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Updated 01 July 2025

Berlin summons Iranian ambassador over arrest of alleged spy

Berlin’s landmark Television Tower is seen next to the Berlin Cathedral and the rebuilt Berlin Palace.
  • The Danish suspect, identified only as Ali S., was arrested in the city of Aarhus by local police on Thursday
  • The man was “strongly suspected of having worked for an intelligence service,” they said

BERLIN: Iran’s ambassador to Germany was summoned by the foreign ministry on Tuesday after the arrest in Denmark of a man suspected of spying on Jewish targets in Berlin for Tehran.
“We will not tolerate any threat to Jewish life in Germany,” the ministry said in a post on X announcing the summoning.
It added that the allegations needed to be “thoroughly investigated.”
The Danish suspect, identified only as Ali S., was arrested in the city of Aarhus by local police on Thursday, the German federal prosecutor’s office said in a statement earlier on Tuesday.
The man was “strongly suspected of having worked for an intelligence service,” they said.
Ali S. had in early 2025 “received an order from an Iranian intelligence service to collect information on Jewish localities and specific Jewish individuals in Berlin.”
To this end, he allegedly scoped out three properties in June.
The suspected reconnaissance work was “presumably in preparation of further intelligence activities in Germany, possibly including terrorist attacks on Jewish targets,” the statement said.
Speaking on a visit to Odesa in Ukraine, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul said that, if confirmed, the incident “would once again underline that Iran is a threat to Jews all over the world.”
According to German weekly Der Spiegel, the suspect had taken photos of buildings including the seat of the German-Israeli Society in Berlin.
Investigators believe Ali S. was working on behalf of the Quds Force, the foreign operations arm of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, Der Spiegel reported.
Germany has been on high alert for possible attacks against Jewish people since Palestinian militant group Hamas’s assault on Israel on October 7, 2023, which triggered the war in Gaza.
In September, German police shot dead a young Austrian man known to have had ties to radical Islam as he was preparing to carry out an attack on the Israeli consulate in Munich.
German authorities have also been on alert for potential Iranian espionage activity on their soil.
A German-Iranian national was jailed in late 2023 over a plot to attack a synagogue in the western German city of Bochum in 2022.
Authorities said the plot was planned with the help of “Iranian state agencies.”


Record-breaking US shutdown ends as political fallout begins

Record-breaking US shutdown ends as political fallout begins
Updated 15 sec ago

Record-breaking US shutdown ends as political fallout begins

Record-breaking US shutdown ends as political fallout begins

WASHINGTON : Congress on Wednesday ended the longest government shutdown in US history — 43 days that paralyzed Washington and left hundreds of thousands of workers unpaid while Donald Trump’s Republicans and Democrats played a high-stakes blame game.
The Republican-led House of Representatives voted largely along party lines to approve a Senate-passed package that will reopen federal departments and agencies, as many Democrats fume over what they see as a capitulation by party leaders.
“They knew that it would cause pain, and they did it anyway,” House Speaker Mike Johnson said in a withering floor speech before the vote, pointing the finger for the standoff at the minority party.
“The whole exercise was pointless. It was wrong and it was cruel.”
The package — which Trump is scheduled to sign later Wednesday evening — funds military construction, veterans’ affairs, the Department of Agriculture and Congress itself through next fall, and the rest of government through the end of January.
Around 670,000 furloughed civil servants will report back to work, and a similar number who were kept at their posts with no compensation — including more than 60,000 air traffic controllers and airport security staff — will get back pay.
The deal also restores federal workers fired by Trump during the shutdown, while air travel that has been disrupted across the country will gradually return to normal.
The White House said the president planned to sign the bill in an Oval Office ceremony at 9:45 p.m. .
Trump himself had little to say on the vote, although he took to social media to falsely accuse Democrats of having “cost our Country $1.5 Trillion... with their recent antics of viciously closing our Country.”
The full financial toll of the shutdown has yet to be determined, although the Congressional Budget Office estimates that it has caused $14 billion in lost growth.

Johnson and his Republicans had almost no room for error as their majority is down to two votes.
Democratic leadership — furious over what they see as their Senate colleagues folding — had urged members to vote no and all but a handful held the line.
Although polling showed the public mostly on Democrats’ side throughout the standoff, Republicans are widely seen as having done better from its conclusion.
For more than five weeks, Democrats held firm on refusing to reopen the government unless Trump agreed to extend pandemic-era tax credits that made health insurance affordable for millions of Americans.
Election victories in multiple states last week gave Democrats further encouragement and a reinvigorated sense of purpose.
But a group of eight Senate moderates broke ranks to cut a deal with Republicans that offers a vote in the upper chamber on health care subsidies — but no floor time in the House and no guarantee of action.
Democrats are now deep in a painful reckoning over how their tough stance crumbled without any notable win.
Democratic leadership is arguing that — while their health care demands went largely unheard — they were able to shine the spotlight on an issue they hope will power them to victory in the 2026 midterm elections.
“Over the last several weeks, we have elevated successfully the issue of the Republican health care crisis, and we’re not backing away from it,” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries told MSNBC.
But his Senate counterpart Chuck Schumer is facing a backlash from the fractious progressive base for failing to keep his members unified, with a handful of House Democrats calling for his head.
Outside Washington, some of the party’s hottest prospects for the 2028 presidential nomination added their own voices to the chorus of opprobrium.
California Governor Gavin Newsom called the agreement “pathetic,” while his Illinois counterpart JB Pritzker said it amounted to an “empty promise.” Former transportation secretary Pete Buttigieg called it a “bad deal.”