Counter terror investigators are examining three separate arson attacks in London against an Iranian dissident and Jewish targets amid fears the Iranian state may be behind them.
The latest attack came on Wednesday evening at about 8.30pm against the offices of the parent group of a company that runs Iran International, a Persian news channel which opposes the regime in Tehran.
The Metropolitan police said an “ignited container” had been thrown at a car park at the company’s offices in Wembley. The fire immediately went out. After a police pursuit involving an armed response vehicle, a 16-year-old boy and two men, aged 19 and 21, were arrested on suspicion of arson endangering life.
It follows an attempted firebomb attack on Finchley Reform Synagogue on Wednesday morning, and an arson attack last month on four ambulances in Golders Green run by a Jewish charity.
A 47-year-old woman and a 46-year-old man remain in custody in connection with the attempted attack on the synagogue. Three men have been charged over the attack on the ambulances. Another man remains on bail over the attack.
On Thursday, Scotland Yard said that two 18-year-olds were arrested at two separate addresses in east London where searches were carried out. One of the men was arrested on suspicion of committing arson with intent to endanger life. The other man was arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to commit arson with intent to endanger life
The Met confirmed that all three incidents are being investigated by London’s counter-terrorism unit. The deputy commissioner for the Met, Matt Jukes, said it was too early to speculate on the motive for these attacks and they are being treated as separate incidents.
Investigators believe some of the suspects for the three attacks in London have criminal pasts. Counter terror experts have spoken before of foreign states using criminal proxies to carry out violence in the UK.
In a briefing on Thursday about all three incidents, Jukes made a pointed warning to those carrying out attacks for foreign states. He said: “For the people who think you can make quick and easy money by committing crimes for others, we will show that they are fools. We will show that they’re wrong and they will face consequences.”
Jukes added: “I make no specific comment about these cases, which are still under very live investigation. But to individuals who think there is quick and easy money to be made here – those who have paid for it will drop them like a stone and they’ll face justice on their own.”
He cited the case of Dylan Earl who is serving 17 years in prison as the ringleader of a Russian-ordered arson attack on London. “You can turn to other cases driven by other actors like that of Dylan Earl,” said Jukes, “convicted and serving a long prison sentence as a result of not understanding that risk and acting in the way he did.”
Asked if police were investigating the possibility that Iran had paid proxies to carry out the attacks, Jukes said: “We cannot and won’t reach definitive conclusions about those cases which are live and still being investigated. But it’s an important part of the current global picture.”

The deputy assistant commissioner, Vicki Evans, who is a national coordinator for counter-terrorism policing, was asked why none of the three incidents had been classed as terrorist attacks.
Evans said: “We’re in the early stages of all of these investigations and are open minded, and we will consider all offences when we are considering charges or further investigation into the individuals.
“They have not been declared terrorist incidents at this stage, but they are being led by counter-terrorism policing in London. It means that we are able to put all of our specialist capabilities to those investigations.”
The militant group Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamia has claimed responsibility for the ambulance attack and suggested it was behind this week’s attack on the synagogue, as well as a number of attacks across Europe.
“We are clearly aware of that group,” said Evans. “Naturally, that is one of our many lines of inquiry and there are many others.” Evans added that a fifth of the workload of counter-terror policing was currently focused on “hostile state activity”.
In a statement on the attack on its office, Iran International’s editorial board said: “At this stage, the motives and intentions of those involved have not been established, and we will not speculate while inquiries continue. But this was a serious incident, and it comes at a time of growing threats and intimidation directed at Iran International and those connected to its journalists.
“In recent months, especially following the recent military operation in Iran, there has been a sharp rise in harassment targeting the relatives of Iran International journalists inside Iran. These actions are part of a wider effort to restrict the free flow of information and deny the Iranian people access to independent news.”
Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: theguardian.com










