Local media in Iran reported on Tuesday July 25, that the authorities had apprehended multiple adherents of the Bahai faith, accusing them of espionage on behalf of Israel, which is considered Tehran’s main adversary.

Iranian authorities have arrested several followers of the Bahai faith accused of spying for Tehran’s arch-foe Israel, local media in the Islamic republic reported on Tuesday.

The Bahais, Iran’s largest non-Muslim religious minority, are not recognized by the state and often targeted over alleged ties to Israel, home to their most important shrines and world headquarters.

Fars reported the group was alleged to have links “with the Zionist center known as Bayt al-Adl located in the occupied Palestinian territories”, referring to the Bahais’ Universal House of Justice in the coastal Israeli city of Haifa.

The report did not specify how many had been arrested.

The intelligence services also accused the group of “promoting Bahai teachings” particularly among children, according to Fars.

Iran, where Shiite Islam is the state religion, recognizes some minority faiths including Christianity, Judaism and Zoroastrianism.

Bahais, however, are branded “heretics” by the Islamic republic.

Bahais consider Bahaullah, born in 1817 in modern-day Iran, to be the latest prophet sent by God and founder of their monotheistic faith.

The group has complained of discrimination in Iran since the emergence of their faith in the second half of the 19th century, well before the 1979 Islamic revolution.

The Bahai community claims to have more than seven million followers worldwide, including some 300,000 in Iran.

Khalil Wakim, with AFP