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Israeli police arrest couple on suspicion of spying for Iran

Israeli police arrest couple on suspicion of spying for Iran
The arrests are the latest in a series of arrests against what Israel's internal security agency Shin Bet believes are Iranian spy-rings.
2 min read
Israeli police say the couple are residents of the city of Lod [Getty]

Israeli police said Thursday they had arrested an Israeli couple on suspicion of spying for Iran, barely a week after two groups allegedly working for Tehran were detained.

"The thwarting of Iran's efforts to recruit Israelis continues," said a statement from the police and Israel's internal security agency, Shin Bet.

The two Israelis, a couple from the central city of Lod, had been involved in gathering intelligence on "national infrastructures, security sites and tracking a female academic," the statement alleged.

"Rafael and Lala Goliev... residents of Lod, were arrested after they carried out tasks on behalf of an Iranian cell that recruits Israelis from the Caucasus countries in Israel."

Police charged that the couple were recruited by Elshan (Elhan) Agayev, an Azerbaijani national acting on behalf of Iranian officials. It was unclear if Agayev is based in Israel.

They alleged that the Golievs carried out surveillance of sensitive Israeli sites, including the headquarters of Israel's Mossad spy agency, and collected intelligence on an academic working at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv.

Thursday's announcement comes little more than a week after Israeli security services said they had uncovered two other suspected spy rings.

On 22 October, Israeli police said they had arrested a group of seven Palestinians from Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem they suspected of planning attacks for Iran.

A day earlier, police said they had arrested seven Israeli citizens from the city of Haifa on suspicion of carrying out hundreds of spy missions on Iran's orders.

The previous week, two other Israelis were charged with various offences after they were allegedly approached by Iranian agents and asked to carry out spy missions.

In September, an Israeli identified as Mordechai Maman from the coastal city of Ashkelon, was arrested on suspicion of being recruited by Iran to plot the assassination of top officials, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Israel is currently engaged in tit-for-tat strikes with Iran, which recently saw the Israeli air force bomb Iran last week. Iran has conducting two missile attacks against Israel this year. 

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