Former Israeli government minister charged with spying for Iran
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Former Israeli government minister charged with spying for Iran

Shin Bet said Gonen Segev was extradited from Guinea and arrested upon arrival in the Jewish state on suspicion of "assisting the enemy"

Gonen Segev. Credit: Ancho Gosh-JINIPIX
Gonen Segev. Credit: Ancho Gosh-JINIPIX

A former Israeli government minister, once imprisoned for trying to smuggle drugs, is back behind bars after being charged with spying for Iran, the country’s internal security agency said.

The Shin Bet said Gonen Segev was extradited from Guinea and arrested upon arrival in Israel last month on suspicion of “committing offences of assisting the enemy in war and spying against the state of Israel”.

It said Segev, a former energy minister, acted as an agent for Iranian intelligence and relayed information “connected to the energy market and security sites in Israel including buildings and officials in political and security organisations”.

Segev, who served in the Cabinet under prime minister Yitzhak Rabin in the mid-1990s, was arrested in 2004 for attempting to smuggle 32,000 Ecstasy tablets from the Netherlands to Israel using an expired diplomatic passport.

Segev, a former doctor whose medical license was revoked, was released from prison in 2007 and had been living in Africa in recent years.

The Shin Bet said Segev met with his operators twice in Iran, and also met with Iranian agents in hotels and apartments around the world.

Segev was given a “secret communications system to encrypt messages” with his operators.

The statement said that Segev maintained connections with Israeli civilians who had ties to the country’s security and foreign relations.

It said he acted to connect them with Iranian agents who posed as businessmen.

Israel and Iran are bitter enemies, and the allegations against Segev are extremely grave. Israel considers Iran to be its biggest threat, citing Iranian calls for Israel’s destruction, Iran’s support for hostile militant groups like Hezbollah and its development of long-range missiles.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been an outspoken critic of the international nuclear deal with Iran and welcomed the US decision to withdraw from the deal.

More recently, Israeli forces have carried out a number of airstrikes on Iranian forces in neighbouring Syria.

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