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<text id=94TT0318>
<title>
Mar. 21, 1994: The Tehran Connection
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Mar. 21, 1994 Hard Times For Hillary
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
TERRORISM, Page 50
The Tehran Connection
</hdr>
<body>
<p>An exclusive look at how Iran hunts down its opponents abroad
</p>
<p>By Thomas Sancton--With reporting by Nomi Morris/Berlin, Elaine Shannon/Washington
and Kenneth R. Timmerman/Geneva, Istanbul, Paris and Vienna
</p>
<p> On a sweltering August afternoon in 1991, three dark-haired
men approached an ivy-covered villa in the Paris suburb of Suresnes.
It was the home of Shahpour Bakhtiar, 76, exiled former Prime
Minister of Iran and a leader of the anti-Khomeini opposition.
Since fleeing Tehran in 1979, Bakhtiar had been one of the most
closely guarded men in France, watched over by paramilitary
police 24 hours a day.
</p>
<p> The arrival of the three men raised no alarm, since one was
Farydoun Boyerahmadi, 38, a Bakhtiar aide and confidant. He
was bringing two friends, Ali Vakili Rad, 32, and Mohammed Azadi,
31, to meet the famous exile. The guards at the door collected
the visitors' passports, frisked the men, then waved them inside.
</p>
<p> Bakhtiar and his personal secretary, Fouroush Katibeh, greeted
the guests in a ground-floor salon. As soon as Katibeh went
to the kitchen to make tea, one of the visitors leaped at Bakhtiar
and, according to the autopsy report, struck a "mortal blow"
to the throat. The secretary was similarly dispatched. With
two knives grabbed from the kitchen, the assailants hacked at
their victims' throats, chests and arms so savagely that a knife
blade was broken. An hour after arriving, Boyerahmadi calmly
collected the trio's passports, and the men drove off in an
orange BMW. The guards failed to notice that Vakili's and Azadi's
shirts were drenched in blood.
</p>
<p> The vicious attack touched off one of the most intensive murder
investigations in French history. Conducted by Judge Jean-Louis
Bruguiere, 50, a dogged investigator of terrorist activities,
the probe followed a winding trail that led through Switzerland
and Turkey to the highest levels of the Tehran government. The
judge completed his work last month by turning over 18 volumes
of documents to the Paris Appeals Court. This week judges will
hear arguments from the prosecutor and defense attorneys, and
must decide by April 7 whether to charge three key suspects
in the case with "criminal conspiracy" and "complicity." If
convicted, they risk a maximum sentence of life in prison.
</p>
<p> Like another trial of accused Iran-backed assassins now under
way in Berlin, the Bakhtiar case will in effect put the Tehran
government in the dock. Bruguiere's investigation appears to
have assembled an unprecedented body of evidence linking Iranian
officials to the murder of a political opponent abroad. "This
case," says a French official familiar with the investigation,
"marks the first time that we have so many proofs of the implication
of the state in an operation of this importance." Defense lawyers
contend that the evidence against their clients is flimsy, and
Iranian officials vehemently deny any involvement in this or
other foreign assassinations.
</p>
<p> Nonetheless, the secret 177-page prosecutor's report, a copy
of which TIME has obtained, lays out a credible chain of accusations.
It declares flatly that "Iranian intelligence services effectively
took part in carrying out this criminal conspiracy." The head
of the intelligence and security ministry, Ali Fallahian, is
believed to be in charge of Tehran's worldwide assassination
networks. Investigators also claim to have uncovered links to
Iran's foreign ministry, telecommunications ministry, Islamic
orientation ministry and state television network, IRIB. One
key charge in the prosecutor's report is that an important member
of the alleged assassins' support network entered Switzerland
with an order of mission typed under the letterhead of the foreign
ministry and initialed by a ranking official above the typed
words "for the Foreign Minister," referring to Ali Akbar Velayati,
one of the most senior members of the government. "The whole
Iranian state apparatus is at the service of these operations,"
says a French official. "The government assumes the legitimacy
of killing opponents anywhere in the world."
</p>
<p> Since 1979, more than 60 Iranian dissidents have been murdered
abroad. "No one is immune to this threat," says Manouchehr Ganji,
leader of a Paris-based opposition group, who lives with 24-hour
police protection. Nor are non-Iranians safe. Salman Rushdie,
the Indian-born author of The Satanic Verses, remains under
a Tehran death sentence pronounced five years ago and reconfirmed
last month. Iranian operatives are suspected in the killings
of Saudi and Jordanian intelligence agents as well as the murders
of five Turkish intellectuals since 1990. "Turkey is a prime
target," says Istanbul police chief Necdet Menzir, "because
we are a Muslim country with a secular democratic system."
</p>
<p> On the basis of extensive reporting in France, Switzerland,
Germany, Austria and Turkey, much of it involving privileged
access to investigators as well as to police and court files,
TIME has compiled this report on four major murder cases. Complete
with mysterious blue baseball caps, safe houses and none-too-bright
hit men, these cases, Western authorities believe, point to
Tehran's role in hunting down its opponents abroad.
</p>
<p> Bakhtiar: Follow the Numbers
</p>
<p> The trail that led French investigators to uncover the Tehran
connection began with the killers' flight from the Bakhtiar
murder scene on Aug. 6, 1991. The bodies of the former Prime
Minister and his secretary were not discovered until the morning
of Aug. 8, giving the fugitives a substantial head start. But
Vakili and Azadi, who shaved off their mustaches and ditched
their bloody shirts in the Bois de Boulogne, were beset by a
series of mishaps after parting company with Boyerahmadi. Traveling
on false Turkish passports and speaking little French, the pair
hopped a train to Lyons but got off at the wrong station and
missed a connection to Geneva, where their contacts were waiting
to sneak them back to Tehran. The morning after the murder,
as police reconstructed their flight, they arrived at the Swiss
border by taxi. An official suspected that their visas were
forged and refused to admit them. Five days later, they arrived
in Annecy, where they left a wallet full of incriminating information
in a phone booth.
</p>
<p> Meanwhile, the French police had finally found Bakhtiar's body
and put out international arrest warrants. Boyerahmadi had disappeared
without a trace. Eventually Azadi and Vakili made their way
to Geneva, where Azadi met his contact and was whisked out of
the country. Vakili, however, was picked up by Swiss police
on Aug. 21, while wandering lost and abandoned along the banks
of Lake Leman. He was extradited to France the next month.
</p>
<p> Interrogated by Bruguiere, Vakili admitted he was present at
the murder scene but denied any connection to the Iranian government.
Yet the judge was already tracing the link through France's
computerized national telephone system, which automatically
stores a record of every call. By running a computer analysis
on 20,000 calls made from public phones along the escape route--particularly the booth where the wallet was found--investigators
were able to zero in on a few key numbers called by the fleeing
suspects.
</p>
<p> Two of these numbers led to apartments in Istanbul linked to
a certain Mesut Edipsoy. An Iranian-born Turk, Edipsoy had rented
one of the flats for two Iranians suspected of involvement in
the plot and allowed them to use his own apartment as well.
According to the prosecutor's report, the Iranians requested
that Edipsoy procure the falsified Turkish passports that the
killers used.
</p>
<p> Although Turkish police let Edipsoy slip away, the authorities
were more helpful when it came to letting the French analyze
phone calls from his apartments. A Paris number dialed from
Istanbul led investigators to a woman who admitted working for
Iran's intelligence agency, VEVAK. She said the call had come
from her case officer, who was seeking confirmation of Bakhtiar's
death on Aug. 7, one day before the crime was discovered.
</p>
<p> Before and just after the killing, calls were made from the
same Istanbul apartment to the telecommunications ministry and
to another Tehran number used by the Iranian secret service.
Other calls were made to the headquarters of Iran's IRIB network,
which is believed to provide cover for intelligence operations.
Still more were made to Geneva hotels, where, according to Bruguiere's
findings, members of the killers' alleged support team were
staying. French investigators say these calls connected the
Istanbul apartments, which served as logistical bases for the
assassination, to the killers, Iranian intelligence and the
Iranian government.
</p>
<p> The paper trail provided other links. Combing through thousands
of visa applications, French authorities found forms submitted
by Vakili and Azadi. Their applications had been endorsed by
a French electronics company called Syfax. Officials of the
company said they had intervened at the request of Iranian businessman
Massoud Hendi, a nephew of the Ayatullah Khomeini and a former
Paris bureau chief for Iranian television.
</p>
<p> Arrested while vacationing with his family in Paris in September
1991, Hendi admitted seeking the visas but said he had done
so innocently: Hossein Sheikhattar, a senior aide to the telecommunications
minister, had asked him to help two friends enter France by
inviting them as guests of Syfax. Hendi's lawyer, Jerome Herce,
insists that his client's efforts to obtain visas "prove nothing,"
since the two alleged killers actually entered France on a different
set of visas. But the prosecutor claims this fact has "no effect
on the charges of complicity" in the murder.
</p>
<p> Another alleged co-conspirator is Zeinolabedine Sarhadi. According
to Swiss border police, Sarhadi arrived in their country on
Aug. 13, 1991, ostensibly to work as an archivist in the Iranian
embassy. His real mission, Bruguiere claims, was to help whisk
Bakhtiar's murderers out of the country. Phone data, backed
up by questioning of hotel personnel and inspection of guest
registers, indicate that Sarhadi was in touch with both the
Istanbul base and the Geneva hotel where hit-man Azadi stayed
just before his escape from the country. Sarhadi's lawyer, Nuri
Albala, admits that his client's "passport arrived in Switzerland
on Aug. 13, 1991" but insists that someone else was using it.
The travel document was "stolen," says Albala, after being handed
over to the Iranian airport police.
</p>
<p> Arrested in Switzerland in December 1991 and extradited to France
five months later, Sarhadi has not taken his imprisonment gracefully.
He has written repeatedly to his ambassador, Ali Ahani, demanding
that Tehran intervene on his behalf; Ahani has visited Bruguiere
several times seeking to get the charges dropped.
</p>
<p> The diplomatic interest is understandable: one of the most direct
links between the plot and the Iranian government is the order
of mission dispatching Sarhadi to Switzerland. The one-page
typed document was issued on the authority of Foreign Minister
Ali Akbar Velayati. The original of this letter, dated July
16, 1991, will be a key piece of evidence at the trial.
</p>
<p> Bruguiere believes that he has established a final link between
the killing and Tehran in the person of Gholam Hossein Shoorideh
Chirazi Nejad. A well-traveled Iranian businessman with high-level
government connections, Shoorideh prevailed upon a visiting
Swiss businessman to help two friends get visas by having his
company invite them as guests. One of the "friends" was Nasser
Ghasmi Nejad, whose real purpose was apparently to rendezvous
with Azadi and shepherd him back to Tehran. Shoorideh and Nejad
thus joined the list of six alleged co-conspirators, including
Azadi, Boyerahmadi, Sheikhattar and Edipsoy, who are to be tried
in absentia at the same time as Vakili, Hendi and Sarhadi.
</p>
<p> Rajavi: Riding the Tiger
</p>
<p> Kassem Rajavi was a tempting target. Not only was he the brother
of Massoud Rajavi, leader of the largest and best-armed Iranian
opposition force, the People's Mujahedin, but he was the group's
spokesman before the Geneva-based U.N. Commission on Human Rights,
where he was known for his vehement denunciations of the Tehran
regime. "For years he tickled the tiger," says Swiss investigating
judge Roland Chatelain. "In the end the tiger bit him."
</p>
<p> On April 24, 1990, Rajavi, 56, was heading for his home in the
Geneva suburb of Coppet. Shortly before noon, a Volkswagen Golf
swerved in front of his car and sprayed the windshield with
bullets. Two gunmen jumped out of a second car and methodically
pumped five bullets into Rajavi's head. One of the killers leaned
over and tucked a navy blue baseball cap into the door pocket.
It was the third time police had found a blue baseball cap at
the scene of an Iranian assassination.
</p>
<p> Shortly after the murder, police discovered the Volkswagen at
Geneva's Cointrin Airport. Authorities held up the 5:45 p.m.
Iran Air flight to Tehran for two hours, while they noted the
identity of every passenger. Investigators are now convinced
that several members of the hit team were aboard, as well as
two Iranian diplomats suspected of involvement in the killing.
</p>
<p> By checking the passenger list against hotel registries and
police records, investigators eventually identified 13 individuals
believed to have taken part in the plot. All of them came to
Switzerland on brand-new government-service passports, many
issued in Tehran on the same date. Most listed the same personal
address, Karim-Khan 40, which turns out to be an intelligence-ministry
building. All 13 arrived on Iran Air flights, using tickets
issued on the same date and numbered sequentially. Switzerland
issued international arrest warrants for them on June 15, 1990.
</p>
<p> On Nov. 15, 1992, French police arrested two of the suspects
in Paris. France informed Switzerland last August that an extradition
request would soon be granted. But on Dec. 29, French Prime
Minister Edouard Balladur abruptly announced that "for reasons
linked to the national interest," the two men, Moshen Sharif
Esfahani and Ahmad Taheri, had been "expelled" to Tehran.
</p>
<p> France has provided no further explanation. "The Prime Minister
judged the situation, based on certain concrete facts, and decided
on the appropriate action," says an adviser to Interior Minister
Charles Pasqua. Denying there was any "specific threat" from
Tehran, this official adds, "Of course, what we did was contrary
to the extradition convention. But sometimes you just have to
take exceptional measures."
</p>
<p> Qassemlou: In the Lion's Den
</p>
<p> Abdelrahman Qassemlou, 59, leader of the independence-minded
Iranian Kurds, arrived in Vienna on July 11, 1989, to negotiate
an autonomy agreement with emissaries of President Ali Akbar
Hashemi Rafsanjani. After 10 years of fighting, the government
seemed eager to reach a settlement. For two days, Qassemlou,
his deputy Abdullah Ghaderi-Azar, 37, and Fadhil Rasoul, 38,
a Vienna-based Iraqi Kurd serving as a mediator, talked in a
borrowed apartment with interior-ministry official Mohammed
Jaafari Sahraroudi and Hadji Moustafavi, a.k.a. Ladjeverdi,
an intelligence operative. A third Iranian, Amir Mansour Bozorgian,
stood guard at the door.
</p>
<p> On the second day of the talks, at about 7:15 p.m., police found
Sahraroudi standing in the street, clutching his bleeding arm
and shouting "Help! Help!" He told police someone had broken
into the apartment upstairs and shot him. While Sahraroudi was
packed off to the hospital in an ambulance, the police entered
the apartment. They found Qassemlou's bullet-riddled body seated
in an armchair. His two associates were sprawled dead on the
floor. The killers had tossed a blue baseball cap into Qassemlou's
lap.
</p>
<p> The wounded Sahraroudi, who was apparently hit by a stray bullet,
was not as dazed as he seemed. Just before the police arrived,
a witness later recounted, he was talking on the sidewalk to
a man who fit Moustafavi's description. The man drove off on
a red Suzuki motorbike. Apparently, he was carrying the murder
weapons; the next day two silencer-equipped pistols were found
in a garbage dump along with a bloodstained windbreaker and
the bill of sale for the Suzuki Sahraroudi had purchased six
months earlier.
</p>
<p> Nothing about the murder scene made sense. There was no sign
of forcible entry. The furniture seemed to have been rearranged
after the crime. "Bozorgian and Sahraroudi told us someone
had forced their way into the room and opened fire," says a
senior Austrian-government official. "They lied. By all appearances,
the murderers were inside the room at the time of the crime."
</p>
<p> Within hours, police had recovered the murder weapons, had one
suspect in custody (Bozorgian) and a second in the hospital,
and knew the identity of the third. They had a cassette recording
of the conversations before the murder and of the gunshots.
By the morning of July 14, they had interrogated Bozorgian and
Sahraroudi and had found enough "important discrepancies" to
detain them both.
</p>
<p> Nonetheless, they reported there was "no reason" to hold Bozorgian,
who was released the day after the crime and went straight to
the Iranian embassy. Sahraroudi was taken to the embassy on
July 21, after recovering from his bullet wound. Police dutifully
returned to him an envelope containing $9,000 and his diplomatic
passport, which he was seen handing to Bozorgian shortly after
the murder. Next day Sahraroudi was escorted by police to the
airport and flew to Tehran. There he was reportedly given a
hero's welcome. He has since been promoted to the rank of brigadier
general in the Revolutionary Guards and heads the intelligence
directorate of its covert-action branch.
</p>
<p> Four months after the crime, the Austrian state prosecutor issued
arrest warrants for Sahraroudi, Bozorgian and Moustafavi. Police
made a show of cordoning off the Iranian embassy in Vienna on
the theory that Bozorgian might still be holed up there, but
the cordon was quietly withdrawn a few weeks later. In January
1992, Austrian authorities sent a 16-page inquiry to Tehran,
seeking information on the case. The Iranians have never replied,
but that has not stopped Austria from maintaining cordial diplomatic
relations and signing commercial contracts with the mullahs.
</p>
<p> Wolfgang Schallenberg, secretary-general of the Austrian foreign
ministry, denies there was any pressure from Tehran to release
the suspects. Says he: "The police made their determination
according to the information available to them at the time."
But another top-level Vienna bureaucrat privately points out
what may be a more compelling reason for Austria's laxity: "No
country wants to prosecute a terrorist case. It's a threat to
your government, to your stability, to your penal system. A
convicted terrorist faces a life sentence, which means in Austria
at least 15 years. That means 15 years you are at risk."
</p>
<p> Sharafkandi: Last Supper
</p>
<p> In the back room of Berlin's Mykonos Restaurant on Sept. 17,
1992, eight men were feasting on lamb and stuffed grape leaves.
The diners, members of various Iranian opposition movements,
were in town for a convention of the Socialist International.
The senior member of the group was Sadegh Sharafkandi, 54, who
had succeeded the murdered Qassemlou as head of the Kurdish
opposition.
</p>
<p> At 11 p.m., Iranian dissident Parviz Dastmalchi glanced up at
what he assumed was a late arrival coming to join the gathering.
Suddenly someone shouted in Farsi, "You sons of whores!" and
two gunmen opened fire. Dastmalchi threw himself backward under
a table and played dead. The shooting lasted no more than a
minute, then the gunmen fled in a dark blue BMW. Sharafkandi
and two associates were killed instantly, and a third man died
shortly afterward in the hospital.
</p>
<p> German authorities quickly rounded up five of the eight suspected
perpetrators and have had them on trial in Berlin since last
October. Three others are still at large. The alleged leader,
Kazem Darabi, a 34-year-old importer-exporter, worked for years
as the German-based link between Tehran and the Lebanese Hizballah,
according to the German prosecutors. The indictment identifies
him as "an agent of the Iranian intelligence service VEVAK"
and a Revolutionary Guards member. His assignment, assert German
prosecutors, was to "liquidate" the Kurd leader as part of a
"persecution strategy of the Iranian minister for intelligence
and security against the Iranian opposition." The other four
defendants, all Lebanese, are veterans of the Hizballah and
Amal militia.
</p>
<p> The evidence against the five is overwhelming. The getaway car
contained the fingerprints of a defendant. One of the weapons
recovered from a sports bag left in a parking lot was flecked
with blood from a victim. It also bore fingerprints of another
defendant, whose prints were found in an apartment Darabi kept
in Berlin.
</p>
<p> Whether prosecutors will succeed in proving links to Tehran
officials is less certain, however. A police officer has testified
that a top aide of Chancellor Helmut Kohl ordered a key report
to be removed from the evidence file. The exact contents of
the report are unclear, but the testimony has deepened suspicions
that Iran has been pressuring the German government to limit
the Mykonos case to keep intelligence matters out. However,
German intelligence chief Bernd Schmidbauer, the country's main
liaison with Iran, has repeatedly denied that Tehran has exerted
any undue influence or that the missing report contains crucial
information. Iran's ambassador to Germany, Seyed Hossein Mousavian,
"categorically [denies] any connection between Darabi and
the Iranian state" and blames the killings on "assassins from
the outside, who want to sabotage Iran."
</p>
<p> The case has hardly ruffled Tehran's relations with Bonn. Last
October Intelligence Minister Fallahian visited Bonn for private
meetings with Schmidbauer. The government tried to keep the
meeting a secret, but Fallahian brazenly called a press conference
to "demonstrate that contrary to the public statements of the
German government, we maintain good relations with Bonn." Shortly
afterward, Schmidbauer testified to the close ties between the
two countries by telling a parliamentary committee that German
intelligence had recently delivered a $60,000 computer-training
project to its Iranian counterpart.
</p>
<p> The cooperation may reflect Bonn's efforts to win the freedom
of two German nationals being held on espionage charges in Tehran.
But it may also be related to the fact that Bonn is Tehran's
No. 1 trading partner: apart from oil, 50% of Iran's exports
end up in Germany, and last year Iran imported $2.4 billion
worth of German goods. Last month the German government guaranteed
a refinancing package on about $2.35 billion worth of loans
to Iran.
</p>
<p> The Men Behind the Veil
</p>
<p> The official believed to be most directly responsible for the
assassination squads is Intelligence Minister Fallahian, 45,
a black-bearded mullah who was born into a religious family
and educated in the holy city of Qum. An ardent follower of
Ayatullah Khomeini, Fallahian spent time in the Shah's jails
for spreading antigovernment propaganda. His political rise
began after the 1979 revolution, when he became a religious
magistrate. He quickly won a reputation, say dissidents, as
a "hanging judge," because of his penchant for handing down
death sentences. He became the government's acting chief prosecutor
in 1982.
</p>
<p> Head of intelligence since 1988, Fallahian is believed to play
a key role in organizing covert operations abroad. According
to an Oct. 6, 1993, report by Germany's federal criminal department,
two dozen foreign-based opposition figures have been assassinated
since he took over the ministry. In an August 1992 interview
on Iranian TV, Fallahian openly boasted of his organization's
success in stalking Tehran's opponents. "We track them abroad
too," he said. "Last year [1991, the year of Bakhtiar's assassination]
we succeeded in striking fundamental blows to their top members."
</p>
<p> According to Western intelligence and Iranian dissident sources,
decisions to assassinate opponents at home or abroad are made
at the highest level of the Iranian government: the Supreme
National Security Council. The top political decision-making
body is chaired by Rafsanjani and includes, among others, Fallahian,
Velayati and Ali Khamenei, who succeeded Khomeini as the revolution's
spiritual guide in 1989. The council's secretary, parliamentary
vice president Hassan Rouhani, was recently quoted in the Iranian
newspaper Ettela'at, vowing that Iran "will not hesitate to
destroy the activities of counterrevolutionary groups abroad."
</p>
<p> One man high on Tehran's current hit list is Manouchehr Ganji.
A former education minister under the Shah, Ganji, 63, heads
a Paris-based opposition group known as the Flag of Freedom,
which has monarchist origins but seeks "democratic" change in
Iran. Guarded at all times by a six-man French antiterrorist
squad, Ganji moves about Paris in a bulletproof car and works
behind heavy metal doors with coded locks. "I live the life
of a rat, going from one hole to another," he says. As head
of a Western-backed organization that broadcasts anti-regime
propaganda into Iran, where he claims to have substantial underground
networks, Ganji is considered a "prime target."
</p>
<p> He shares with Salman Rushdie the distinction of having a price
on his head. TIME has obtained a copy of a document, dated March
16, 1993, that promises a "considerable financial reward" for
Ganji's "assassination." Written on government letterhead and
signed by state prosecutor Moussawi Tabrizi, it is addressed
to Fallahian's intelligence ministry. The document accuses Ganji
of "plotting against Islam" and quotes Khamenei as decreeing
that "this man is an apostate and a corrupt man, who must be
eliminated." The document adds that "the President of the Republic
[Rafsanjani] has been informed of this obligatory decree."
French intelligence experts, operating from a photocopy, are
cautious about pronouncing on the document's authenticity but
say it contains "no glaring errors."
</p>
<p> Western intelligence sources say foreign assassinations are
carried out by a special branch of the Revolutionary Guards
known as the Quds (Jerusalem) Force, headed by Brigadier General
Ahmad Vahidi. The foreign ministry typically provides diplomatic
cover, material support and logistical assistance. The Quds
Force, which has its headquarters in Tehran, is said to use
bases like the Imam Ali department in northern Tehran to train
Iranian and foreign recruits.
</p>
<p> In a videotaped 1994 confession that TIME was able to view in
Istanbul, Mehmet Ali Bilici, a militant Turkish fundamentalist,
described his terrorist training at an Iranian camp near Qum.
He said he and other trainees received basic military instruction,
followed by courses in intelligence-trade craft, coded communications,
explosives and covert operations, and acknowledged that he received
"direct orders" from the Iranians to conduct "military operations
on Turkish soil." Bilici has admitted to kidnapping two Iranian
opposition figures who were turned over to VEVAK agents and
later killed.
</p>
<p> "The Iranians are extraordinarily determined in their efforts
to assassinate members of their opposition abroad," says Paris
assistant district attorney Patrick Lalande. "They will tell
you that they treat their opponents abroad just as they treat
them at home and that this is a purely domestic affair." Western
governments do not agree but find it hard to stand up to Iran's
state-backed terror. The Bakhtiar case, with a trail of evidence
that leads right into Tehran's ministries, is a major test of
France's resolve. The trial, which could start as soon as next
June, is more likely to open in the fall and could possibly
be delayed until early 1995. Given France's recent "expulsion"
of Rajavi's suspected killers, some skeptics wonder if the case
will ever get to court.
</p>
<p> French prosecutors insist that nothing can derail the judicial
process at this point. Yet they admit that a conviction could
set off diplomatic reverberations--and, perhaps, even a replay
of the September 1986 bombing wave that left 12 dead and at
least 250 injured in Paris.
</p>
<p> Such worries do not deter Bruguiere. The antiterrorist crusader,
who survived an abortive 1987 grenade attack and packs a .357
Magnum for his own protection, is hard at work on a new investigation.
On Dec. 20, he arrested two alleged VEVAK agents for plotting
to kill an opposition figure in Paris. One of the men is also
implicated in the 1990 murder of Ganji's aide Cyrus Elahi. Judge
Bruguiere is giving the mullahs no rest.
</p>
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