Iran Asks Interpol to Arrest Natanz 'Sabotage' Suspect

Iran has asked Interpol to help arrest a suspect in a sabotage attack on its Natanz nuclear facility which it blames on Israel, a local newspaper reported Sunday.
National television has published
a photo and identified the man as 43-year-old Reza Karimi, saying the
intelligence ministry had established his role in last week's
"sabotage" at Natanz.
The broadcaster said the suspect
had "fled the country before the incident" and that "legal
procedures to arrest and return him to the country are currently underway".
Neither state TV nor other media
provided further details on the suspect. The intelligence ministry has not
issued an official statement.
The ultraconservative Kayhan daily
reported in its Sunday edition that "intelligence and judicial
authorities" are engaged in the process.
It added that "after his
identity was established, necessary measures were taken through Interpol to
arrest and return" the suspect.
Kayhan did not specify what form
of Interpol assistance had been requested.
As of Sunday noon, Interpol's
public "red notice" list online returned no results for Reza Karimi.
A Red Notice is a request to law
enforcement worldwide to locate and provisionally arrest a person pending
extradition, surrender or similar legal action, according to Interpol's website.
A "small explosion" hit
the Natanz plant's electricity distribution system a week ago, according to the
Atomic Energy Organization of Iran.
The Iranian foreign ministry
accused arch-foe Israel of an act of "nuclear terrorism" and vowed revenge.
Israel has neither confirmed nor
denied involvement but public radio reports said it was a sabotage operation by
the Mossad spy agency, citing unnamed intelligence sources.
The New York Times, quoting
unnamed US and Israeli intelligence officials, also said there had been
"an Israeli role" in the attack.
Iran's foreign ministry spokesman
Saeed Khatibzadeh last week indirectly accused Israel of attempting to scuttle
talks underway in Vienna aimed at reviving a landmark nuclear agreement.
The talks are focused on bringing the US back in to the accord after former president Donald Trump withdrew from it in 2018 and reimposed sanctions on Tehran, and to bring Iran back into compliance with key nuclear commitments it suspended in response to the sanctions.