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She says activism has made her and other critics of Iran’s authoritarian regime vulnerable to becoming targets of foreign interference on Australian soil.

“We’ve had so many cases where people have been followed. I was followed myself,” she says.
‘What is that secret quota?’
The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) refused to confirm or deny the claims detailed in the documents, and Biggs declined an interview with SBS News, saying: “I cannot comment on operational security or intelligence issues.”
“More broadly in relation to Iran, you would know that the Albanese government has taken stronger action in relation to Iran than any previous Australian government, both in terms of sanctions and our declarations with others on human rights.
You would also know that we have very strong laws in place to protect our democracy, and what I would always say to all governments and also to our diasporas here, is that we will safeguard our democracy.
“What is that secret quota that needs to be filled … for the Australian government to act on its responsibilities and duties to its citizens? For us, the question is, how many more Australian lives need to be placed at risk?”
In response to a question about the safety of Iranian-Australians and national security, a DFAT spokesperson told SBS News in a statement: “Australia takes seriously the threat of foreign interference and will not tolerate, under any circumstances, attempts by foreign regimes to disrupt peaceful protests, suppress freedom of speech, or engage in hostile activities such as surveillance, harassment, and intimidation of individuals in our community.”
Calls to list the IRGC as a terrorist organisation
ASIO’s director general, Mike Burgess, warned that Australia is “not immune to hostile nation states, such as Iran, undertaking acts of security concern on our shores or near region”.
“They are the masterminds, they are the executors of the policy of fear and hostage-taking [in Iran].”

In February 2023, . It was disclosed that ASIO had interrupted an operation targeting an Australian-Iranian critic of the regime in Australia.
She says it would be a strong step “to make for our safety” and to recognise “the realities of what the Islamic regime of Iran stands for”.
‘Survival is their ultimate goal’
“There is significant fear of the IRGC in the Iranian-Australian community — a fear which is founded in the clear evidence that the IRGC operates well beyond Iran’s borders with the express purpose of threatening,” the report stated.
Since 2010, the IRGC has been subject to sanctions in Australia. The Labor government has also sanctioned 200 individuals and entities linked to Iran, including nearly 100 associated with the IRGC, since the Woman, Life, Freedom protests in 2022.
“It will not help much in changing [the] IRGC’s behaviour… More and more pressure on Iran has never changed the state’s behaviour. The regime’s behaviour… has been worsened.
The issue with the regime is to survive. So survival is their ultimate goal, and in so doing, they are willing to do whatever they can in order to confront Western pressures.
‘Important step for our safety’
While the Senate inquiry report did not go so far as to recommend closing the embassy, it did suggest expelling any “Iranian officials found to be involved” in hostile behaviour against Australians.

“The Australian public [and] the Australian government, is at risk.
Every single day, it maintains this relationship with the regime in Iran, it’s at risk.
“They can use this relatively good relationship as a channel to affect or to change Iran’s behaviour, both domestically and regionally — or to convey the voice of Western concerns to Iran via Canberra.”
“The last few years have shown me that I am a second-class citizen. It showed me that I will never truly be considered equal to another Australian citizen.”