Iranian financial reporter Amir-Abbas Azarmvand arrested on security charges

The security agents reportedly searched Azarmvand’s house and confiscated his laptop, cellphone, and a number of books. (File/Twitter)
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Updated 02 September 2021
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Iranian financial reporter Amir-Abbas Azarmvand arrested on security charges

  •  Iranian intelligence and security agents arrested financial reporter Amir-Abbas Azarmvand on security charges
  • The Committee to Protect Journalists condemned the arrest and urged Iranian authorities to immediately release him

LONDON: Iranian intelligence and security agents on Thursday arrested financial reporter Amir-Abbas Azarmvand on security charges.

Azarmvand, who was at his parents’ house in Tehran when the arrest took place, works for the state-run Iranian economic newspaper SMT and has been charged with “spreading propaganda against the system.”

The US-based Committee to Protect Journalists condemned the arrest and urged Iranian authorities to immediately release him, drop all charges, and allow him to work freely in the country.

A colleague of Azarmvand, who wished to remain anonymous, said the agents had presented the writer with an arrest warrant citing recent critical reporting for SMT on the economic situation of union workers.

The security agents reportedly searched Azarmvand’s house and confiscated his laptop, cellphone, and a number of books.

Coordinator for the CPJ’s Middle East and North Africa program, Sherif Mansour, said: “Iranian authorities must free financial reporter Amir-Abbas Azarmvand immediately and unconditionally. Iran’s continued jailing of journalists for doing their jobs is an outrageous form of censorship that must end.”

According to the international freedom of information organization, Reporters Without Borders, Iran ranked 174 out of 180 countries in the 2021 World Press Freedom Index.

Since the 1979 revolution, at least 860 journalists and citizen-journalists have been prosecuted, arrested, imprisoned, and in some cases executed by the Iranian regime.


Tucker Carlson claims he was detained at Israeli airport

Updated 20 February 2026
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Tucker Carlson claims he was detained at Israeli airport

DUBAI: Earlier this week, Tucker Carlson flew to Israel to interview US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee, according to media reports.

Carlson, who reportedly refused to leave Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion Airport complex, conducted the interview at the airport, after which he said he and his staff were detained and their passports were seized.

“Men who identified themselves as airport security took our passports, hauled our executive producer into a side room and then demanded to know what we spoke to Ambassador Huckabee about,” Carlson said in a statement to The New York Post.

However, Carlson’s claims have been contradicted by Huckabee and Israeli authorities.

Huckabee, a former Arkansas governor and Fox News host, said on social media platform X that “EVERYONE who comes in/out of Israel (every country for that matter) has passports checked & routinely asked security questions,” including himself, despite holding a diplomatic passport and visa.

The US Embassy in Israel also described the interaction as routine passport control procedures.

The Israel Airports Authority said in a statement that Carlson and his staff “were not detained, delayed, or interrogated.”

They were asked “a few routine questions, in accordance with standard procedures applied to many travelers,” and this conversation took place in a separate room within the VIP lounge to protect their privacy, the statement added.

“No unusual incident occurred, and the Israel Airports Authority firmly rejects any other claims.”

Carlson has faced criticism in recent years over his commentary on Israel, with critics accusing him of amplifying narratives that are hostile to Israel and, at times, antisemitic. He has also questioned Israel’s treatment of Christian communities in the region.

After Fox News canceled his show in April 2023, he launched his own program, “The Tucker Carlson Show” in 2024.

The show has featured controversial figures, including Darryl Cooper, who has made statements widely condemned as Holocaust denial, and white nationalist commentator Nick Fuentes.

In his interview with Fuentes, Carlson labeled Huckabee a “Christian Zionist.”

Carlson has also criticized Huckabee for not doing enough to protect Christian interests in the region. In one video, he said: “Why not go ahead and talk to Christians and find out their side of the story? Why aren’t American Christian leaders like Mike Huckabee or Ted Cruz, people who invoke the Christian Bible to justify what they’re doing, why haven’t they done this?”

Huckabee responded to the video on X, writing: “Instead of talking ABOUT me, why don’t you come talk TO me?  You seem to be generating a lot of heat about the Middle East. Why be afraid of the light?”

Carlson accepted the invitation, and their teams coordinated the interview, leading to his brief visit to Israel.