Iranian ambassador on the way out after shock expulsion

August 27, 2025 11:55 | News

Iran’s ambassador to Australia has left the embassy after he was expelled over revelations that the regime had directed two anti-Semitic attacks in Sydney and Melbourne.

Ahmad Sadeghi was spotted departing from the Canberra embassy on Wednesday after becoming the first ambassador to be booted by the federal government since World War II.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced the expulsion after Australia’s spy agency said it had “credible evidence” that the Iranian government directed at least two attacks on Jewish premises and was suspected of involvement in others.

Iranian ambassador Ahmad Sadeghi
Iranian ambassador Ahmad Sadeghi (right) was seen carrying a bag as he headed to a car. (Lukas Coch/AAP PHOTOS)

“It’s clearly aimed at disharmony in Australia,” he told ABC radio.

“It’s an attack on our social fabric and on who we are.”

While he would not go into detail about the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation’s evidence – citing ongoing investigation – agencies had been able to trace connections between domestic criminal elements and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard.

The government is now drafting laws to list Iran’s Revolutionary Guard as a terrorist organisation.

It was not previously listed under terrorism laws because it was a government entity.

Iran has denied the allegations through its Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei, who tried to link it to the challenges Australia faced with Israel after the government announced it was preparing to recognise a Palestinian state.

“It looks like that the action, which is against Iran, diplomacy and the relations between the two nations, is a compensation for the criticism that the Australians had against the Zionist regime,” Mr Baghaei said.

An Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson reportedly said Iran would take an “appropriate decision” in response to Australia’s action.

Foreign Minister Penny Wong urged any Australians in Iran to leave immediately and warned travellers not to go to the country as the government no longer has an embassy there.

“The Iranian regime is an unpredictable regime, a regime which we have seen is capable of aggression and violence,” Senator Wong told ABC radio.

An official car leaves Iran's embassy in Canberra
There was a lot of vehicle movement at the Iranian embassy overnight. (Lukas Coch/AAP PHOTOS)

Australia’s travel advice has been updated to warn of a “high risk” of arbitrary detention or arrest.

The Adass Israel Synagogue was one of the sites firebombed by criminal proxies in December 2024, badly damaging the building and injuring a worshipper.

Synagogue board member Benjamin Klein said he received a call from a senior official in Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s office telling him the government would announce “dangerous acts of aggression” were directed by Iran.

“It is quite shocking and traumatic to think that a peaceful, loving shule (synagogue) in Melbourne is targeted and attacked by terrorists from overseas,” Mr Klein told AAP.

He said Victorian and federal authorities had been supportive with increased security arrangements at a temporary location where the congregation now gathered.

Police arrested a second man over the firebombing earlier in August.

The other site targeted was the Lewis’ Continental Kitchen in Sydney, a kosher deli and a mainstay of Bondi in the city’s eastern suburbs, which was firebombed in October.

Executive Council of Australian Jewry Alex Ryvchin said the owner of the popular shop, Judith Lewis, was still processing revelations that the Revolutionary Guard had been linked to the attack.

Lewis' Continental Kitchen in Bondi
Lewis’ Continental Kitchen in Bondi was firebombed in an Iran-linked attack last October. (Bianca De Marchi/AAP PHOTOS)

“The fact that a business is targeted makes every Jewish Australian fearful that they could be next,” he said.

The deli arson attack was allegedly committed by Wayne Dean Ogden, 41, who remains behind bars ahead of a court appearance on October 21.

Sayed Mohammed Moosawi, 32, was released on bail three weeks ago after pleading not guilty to commissioning the attack and directing a criminal group. His case is back in court on the same day.

The federal opposition has backed the government’s action.

“Any foreign power who conducts violent operations through proxies on our shores is not welcome here,” coalition home affairs spokesman Andrew Hastie told ABC radio. 

The Israeli embassy in Australia welcomed the government’s decision as a “strong and important move”.

AAP News

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