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Bolivia: dos partidos históricos perderán su sigla y el MAS se salva por menos de 8 mil votos

Dos partidos políticos perderán la sigla luego de las elecciones del domingo en Bolivia, al no haber alcanzado el mínimo de 3% de votos que establecen las leyes bolivianas para mantener vigente una sigla.
Se trata de Acción Democrática Nacionalista (ADN) y Unión Cívica Solidaridad. Ambos partidos ayudaron a consolidar el modelo de “democracia pactada” que caracterizó la política boliviana hasta inicios de los 2000, cuando el Movimiento Al Socialismo (MAS) de Evo Morales desplazó a los viejos partidos y se convirtió en la fuerza hegemónica, con votaciones que superaron el 60%.
ADN fue fundado en 1979 por el ex presidente Hugo Banzer y fue uno de los partidos más influyentes en el sistema político boliviano tras la recuperación de la democracia. Para las elecciones recientes formó parte de la alianza Libertad y Progreso, con la que Pavel Aracena, un ingeniero sin trayectoria política, buscó la presidencia y obtuvo 1,45% de respaldo.

En tanto UCS, fue creado en 1989 por el empresario y político Max Fernández y actualmente es liderado por su hijo Jhonny, quien perdió las elecciones al obtener 1,62% de votos bajo la alianza La Fuerza del Pueblo, que estaba respaldada por UCS.
La Ley de Régimen Electoral establece que una organización política perderá su personería jurídica cuando no logre al menos el 3% de los votos válidos en una elección.
Además de estos dos partidos, otras agrupaciones regionales que integraron las alianzas también perderán vigencia, informó a Infobae el vocal del Tribunal Supremo Electoral, Gustavo Ávila.
En tanto el MAS obtuvo el domingo apenas el 3,17% y logró salvar su sigla por décimas equivalentes a menos de ocho mil votos. El partido que protagonizó la política boliviana en las últimas dos décadas y gobernó con mayorías legislativas, pasó a tener una representación marginal en el Congreso con solo un diputado.

Según la analista política Ana Velasco, la debacle del MAS se originó en 2016 con el desconocimiento de un referendo popular que negó la ampliación de mandatos presidenciales cuando Morales buscaba postular para un cuarto periodo. Pese al rechazo a esta intención, el entonces gobernante logró inscribir su candidatura en 2019 mediante un fallo constitucional que lo habilitó bajo el argumento de que era su derecho humano.
Esa elección marcaría el fin de su autoridad. Morales renunció 21 días después de la votación en medio de protestas ciudadanas y acusaciones de fraude electoral, a las que se sumaron un motín policial que precipitó su caída.
Tras un año de Gobierno interino, el MAS retomó el poder en 2020 cuando el ex ministro de Economía, Luis Arce, ganó la Presidencia con el 55% de apoyo. Sin embargo, las disputas tempranas entre el nuevo gobernante y su antiguo jefe terminaron por dinamitar el partido más numeroso del país, que quedó bajo control legal de los aliados de Arce.
A las elecciones de 2025, la izquierda llegó a las urnas dividida entre el candidato oficialista Eduardo Del Castillo y el senador Andrónico Rodríguez, que fue considerado por muchos el sucesor político de Morales pese al distanciamiento reciente entre ambos políticos. Adicionalmente, el ex presidente promovió el voto nulo en rechazo a su inhabilitación electoral y logró más que cerca del 19% de los electores anulara la papeleta.
Por su parte, ni Rodríguez ni Del Castillo lograron convencer al electorado sobre la continuidad de las políticas de izquierda para el próximo quinquenio, cuando el país está sumido en una crisis económica marcada por el aumento de los precios y la escasez de dólares y combustible. La votación concluyó con la victoria del centrista Rodrigo Paz (32%) que disputará el balotaje contra el liberal Jorge Quiroga (26,7%) el 19 de octubre.
Con esos resultados esta elección marca un punto de inflexión en la historia política boliviana: el repliegue de la izquierda tras 20 años de hegemonía y la desaparición de dos siglas icónicas del viejo sistema de partidos.
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Child safety nonprofit founded by Steyer’s brother has multiple Epstein ties: ‘No concerns’

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FIRST ON FOX: Jim Steyer — the brother of billionaire California gubernatorial candidate Tom Steyer — has multiple board members with ties to Jeffrey Epstein involved in his children’s online safety organization, Common Sense Media (CSM), which could set off alarm bells as wealthy elites continue to face a reckoning for exchanging emails with Epstein or riding on his private jet.
CSM, which will be hosting a conference next week that will include many industry experts and Democratic politicians as speakers, including former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California and Illinois Gov JB Pritzker, is a nonprofit organization with the stated goal of putting children’s «well-being first in the digital era,» and providing parental guidance while also providing a forum for industry experts to discuss how to safeguard minors online.
While none of the previously reported ties between the board members and Epstein implicate them in any wrongdoing related to his crimes, the optics of their past communications could raise questions about the judgment of some of their past interactions with him and the vetting process to be on the board.
«Having reviewed the related references here, we have no concerns about these individuals. Common Sense Media remains the leading non-partisan children’s advocacy organization dedicated to protecting and promoting the best interest of America’s children and families,» a CSM spokesperson told Fox News Digital.
WATCH: HILLARY CLINTON STORMS OUT OF EPSTEIN DEPOSITION AFTER HOUSE LAWMAKER LEAKS PHOTO FROM INSIDE
The Department of Justice released a trove of Epstein documents on Dec. 19 following President Trump’s signature on the Epstein Files Transparency Act in November 2025. (Joe Schildhorn/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images)
The Steyer brothers have not appeared in the Epstein emails and have not been accused of any wrongdoing.
WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM FACES FRESH SCRUTINY AS EPSTEIN TIES REVIVE PAST SCANDALS, CRITICISM
Tim Zagat
Tim Zagat, the founder and former CEO of Zagat Survey, a fine dining rating service, was reported by the New York Post to have repeatedly visited dining establishments with Epstein and is listed in Epstein’s flight logbook — a revelation uncovered by recent disclosures from the Department of Justice.
Zagat also reportedly attended a dinner at Epstein’s Upper East Side mansion in 2014, which included Hollywood director Woody Allen and his wife Soon-Yi Previn, former Hyatt hotels boss Nick Pritzker, who is Democratic Illinois Governor JB Pritzker’s cousin once removed, among others. Several emails reviewed by Fox News Digital show that Zagat reached out to Epstein to invite him to meals on multiple occasions.
He is also listed on a flight entry from 2002 on Epstein’s notorious «Lolita Express» private jet that appears to match up with a late-February trip to a TED conference in California.

Jeffrey Epstein was found dead in federal custody in 2019. (New York State Sex Offender Registry via AP, File)
«JE. SK. GERALDINE LAYBORNE. KIT LAYBORNE. STEVEN PINKER. NINA TIM ZAGAT,» the entry reads, listing off a series of passengers.
The entry is unclear if the «JE» reference indicates Epstein himself was on the flight.
What is clear, however, is that the flight included one other CSM board member.
Geraldine Laybourne
Geraldine Laybourne who served as president of Nickelodeon from 1984 to 1996, was also mentioned as a passenger on one of the 2002 entries. In the past, Laybourne has claimed she did not know the plane belonged to Epstein but that she had simply accepted a flight from New York to Monterey, California.
«We said yes. We did not know whose plane it was or who Jeffrey Epstein was,» Laybourne told the Daily Beast in 2023.
WATCH: BILL CLINTON GRILLED ON SHIRTLESS HOT TUB PHOTO AMID SWIRLING QUESTIONS ON EPSTEIN RELATIONSHIP
Howard Gardner
In another case, CSM brought on Howard Gardner, a celebrated scholar best known for his research on education at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, who maintained contact with Epstein long after news of his crimes had surfaced.
Gardner had lengthy correspondence with Epstein, according to reporting from Bloomberg. Gardner’s name appears at least 380 times in the DOJ’s Epstein disclosures. Most are email communications or logistical arrangements.
In one email, Epstein described planned outings with Gardner.
«I am having a ‘smart day’ at Harvard. Larry Summers – finance. Chomsky – language. Eric Lander, George Church – genetics. Howard Gardner – intelligence,» Epstein wrote, referring to various experts and their areas of study.
Gardner told The Harvard Crimson last year that «Once [Epstein] had been arrested, I made it clear to him that I could no longer accept any funding but, as a friend and beneficiary of his philanthropy, I tried to be supportive.»
«Of course, no one I knew (which included dozens of Harvard faculty) had any idea of the nature and extent of Epstein’s crimes, which only became clear in the following years,» he continued.
PETER ATTIA OUT AS CBS NEWS CONTRIBUTOR AFTER NAME APPEARED OVER 1,700 TIMES IN EPSTEIN FILES
Cyrus Vance Jr.
Cyrus Vance Jr., a former district attorney for Manhattan from 2010 to 2021, joined CSM’s board in 2024 despite past backlash after his office’s insistence in 2011 that Epstein should receive more lenient treatment.
Specifically, Vance’s office argued that Epstein should be designated a Level 1 sex offender — a reduction from level 3, the classification reserved for high-level threats.
The judge overseeing the case was reportedly taken aback by the request, according to court transcripts.

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance, Jr. opened an investigation into Trump and his family’s businesses in 2019. (Photo by Andrew Burton/Getty Images) (Andrew Burton/Getty Images)
«I have to tell you, I am a little overwhelmed because I have never seen the prosecutor’s office do anything like this. I have done many [cases], much less troubling than this one, where the People would never make a downward argument like this,» Judge Ruth Pickholz said.
Epstein, at that point, had already been convicted of sexual misconduct with minors in 2008.
In response to a request for comment, Vance said he had no knowledge of Epstein’s prior case due to an error in the case. After becoming aware of the case, Vance said he pursued the most stringent restrictions possible for Epstein.
«I have never met, or communicated with Mr. Epstein in any form,» Vance said in a comment.
Vance’s office also received backlash for not prosecuting disgraced Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein in 2015, two years before the «MeToo» movement took him down.
Chelsea Clinton
Finally, Chelsea Clinton, vice chair of the Clinton Foundation, has served on the CSM board for over a decade. She, too, had a brush with Epstein that garnered public attention when Ghislaine Maxwell — an accomplice of Epstein — attended her wedding.
Maxwell had attended at the invitation of Ted Waitt, a donor to the Clinton Foundation, according to later statements from Hillary Clinton.
But reporting from Politico suggested the one-off went deeper. Politico reported that sources had said the pair had been «incredibly close.»

Chelsea Clinton is seen with her mother, Hillary Clinton, at a campaign rally in Raleigh, North Carolina, November 8, 2016. (Reuters)
Chelsea Clinton has repeatedly pushed back against those characterizations.
«It wasn’t until 2015 that Chelsea [her husband] Marc became aware of the horrific allegations against Ghislaine Maxwell and hope that all the victims find justice. Chelsea and Marc were friendly with her because of her relationship with a dear friend of theirs. When that relationship ended, Chelsea’s friendship with her ended as well,» a person familiar with the relationship told Politico.
Both of Chelsea’s parents, Bill and Hillary Clinton, recently went viral after they were interviewed by the House Oversight Committee about their previous longtime relationship with Epstein and Maxwell.
In addition to the board members, CSM includes the Gates Foundation as one of its foundation partners. The foundation’s co-founder, Bill Gates, who is the chair of the board, has repeatedly been tied to Epstein through their email communications and meetings over several years, which Gates called «foolish» earlier this year.

Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates attends a dinner hosted by President Donald Trump with technology leaders in the State Dining Room at the White House in Washington, D.C., Sept. 4, 2025. (Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images)
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«In retrospect, I was foolish to spend any time with him,» Gates said of Epstein. «I think I was quite stupid. I thought it would help me with global health philanthropy. In fact, it failed to do that. It was just a huge mistake.»
He is expected to show up for a transcribed interview with the House Oversight Committee in May.
Fox Digital reached out to the Steyer campaign and the five board members for comment. The Steyer brothers have not
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EN VIVO | Las Fuerzas de Defensa de Israel atacaron instalaciones de desarrollo de misiles balísticos en Teherán

Entre los objetivos, se encuentran un complejo de la Guardia Revolucionaria “utilizado para la producción y desarrollo de componentes” y una instalación del Ministerio de Defensa iraní encargado de la elaboración de combustible para los proyectiles
Medio Oriente atraviesa su tercera semana de conflicto sin señales de desescalada y con crecientes interrogantes sobre la situación del estrecho de Ormuz, vital para el comercio energético global y actualmente obstruido por el régimen iraní en el contexto de la guerra.
En la madrugada de este sábado, fuerzas israelíes lanzaron nuevos ataques en Beirut y Teherán, mientras Irán disparó proyectiles contra las bases militares estadounidenses y ciudades como Tel Aviv y Haifa.
Desde Washington, el Departamento del Tesoro autorizó de manera temporal la compra y venta de petróleo iraní en tránsito marítimo, aunque el régimen de Irán negó la existencia de excedentes de crudo para ofrecer en los mercados internacionales.
El presidente Donald Trump afirmó que Estados Unidos está “muy cerca” de alcanzar sus objetivos en la guerra que libra junto a Israel contra Irán, entre ellos la degradación de la capacidad de misiles iraníes, la destrucción de su industria defensiva, la eliminación de su Armada y Fuerza Aérea, y evitar que Teherán obtenga un arma nuclear.
Por su parte, el Ejército de Irán advirtió este sábado a los Emiratos Árabes Unidos que no permitan que se lancen ataques desde su territorio contra dos islas (Abu Musa y Gran Tunb) en disputa en el Golfo, ubicadas cerca del estratégico estrecho de Ormuz.
A continuación, la cobertura minuto a minuto:
El bloqueo del Estrecho de Ormuz por parte de Irán dispara el precio del petróleo y crea un potencial beneficio de USD 63.000 millones para las petroleras de Estados Unidos, según la consultora energética noruega Rystad Energy para la cadena estadounidense CBS News. El barril supera los USD 100 y la volatilidad sacude el mercado global.
Israel atacó instalaciones de desarrollo de misiles balísticos en Teherán
El ejército de Israel llevó a cabo otra ola de bombardeos contra instalaciones para el desarrollo de misiles balísticos en Teherán durante la noche del viernes al sábado, informaron las fuerzas armadas en un comunicado.
“Durante la noche, la Fuerza Aérea israelí, actuando bajo inteligencia precisa de las Fuerzas de Defensa de Israel (FDI, el ejército), completaron una incursión aérea a gran escala en Teherán”, recoge el comunicado.
La aviación israelí bombardeó “decenas” de objetivos, entre los que se encontraban instalaciones para la producción de componentes de misiles balísticos.
Entre ellos se encuentran un complejo de la Guardia Revolucionaria “utilizado para la producción y desarrollo de componentes”, una instalación de producción de misiles, un complejo del Ministerio de Defensa iraní encargado de la producción de combustible para los proyectiles y otro lugar para la producción de sus componentes.
“Las FDI atacaron varios sistemas de defensa del régimen terrorista iraní a través de Teherán”, subrayó el comunicado.
Se escuchan explosiones en la capital de Baréin
Varias explosiones se escucharon en Manama, la capital de Baréin, según un periodista de la agencia de noticias AFP, en el marco de la ofensiva aérea iraní contra los estados del Golfo.
Se observó la interceptación de dos misiles y varias explosiones sacudieron la ciudad tras el sonido de las sirenas de alerta. Teherán ha atacado a Baréin y otros países vecinos en represalia por los ataques estadounidenses e israelíes contra Irán, que comenzaron el 28 de febrero.
El ejército de EEUU aseguró que “redujo” la amenaza de Irán sobre el estrecho de Ormuz
El ejército estadounidense afirmó que la capacidad de Irán para amenazar el estrecho de Ormuz ha quedado “reducida” tras el bombardeo esta semana de una instalación subterránea donde almacenaba misiles de crucero.
“No solo destruimos la instalación, sino que también acabamos con sitios de apoyo de inteligencia y repetidores de radar de misiles que se utilizaban para monitorear los movimientos de los barcos”, declaró el almirante Brad Cooper, jefe del Comando Central de Estados Unidos.
“La capacidad de Irán para amenazar la libertad de navegación en el estrecho de Ormuz y sus alrededores está reducida y no dejaremos de perseguir estos objetivos”, añadió.
Más de veinte países anunciaron este sábado su disposición a contribuir a los esfuerzos para garantizar el paso seguro en el Estrecho de Ormuz, condenando de forma contundente las acciones del régimen de Irán que han limitado la navegación en esta ruta clave para el suministro de energía a escala global. En un comunicado conjunto, los firmantes —principalmente europeos, junto a Emiratos Árabes Unidos y Bahréin— subrayan la importancia estratégica del Estrecho ante los recientes ataques a buques y a infraestructuras civiles atribuidos a Teherán.

En todo el mundo pobre, la tercera guerra del Golfo ha desatado una carrera por la energía. En Nepal, las largas colas para conseguir gas para cocinar han obligado al racionamiento. En Sri Lanka, se ha instado a las empresas a cerrar los miércoles para ahorrar combustible. En Pakistán, las escuelas han cerrado y las universidades han pasado a la enseñanza en línea. Los hogares y los gobiernos se preparan para lo que la directora del FMI, Kristalina Georgieva, ha llamado “lo impensable”.
EEUU afirmó que fueron alcanzados más de 8.000 objetivos del régimen de Irán desde el inicio de la guerra
El jefe del Comando Central de Estados Unidos, el almirante Brad Cooper, informó que el ejército estadounidense atacó más de 8.000 objetivos en Irán desde el comienzo de la guerra, al tiempo que señaló que los ataques iraníes han seguido disminuyendo.
“Hasta el momento, hemos atacado más de 8.000 objetivos militares, incluidos 130 buques iraníes, lo que constituye la mayor eliminación de una armada en un período de tres semanas desde la Segunda Guerra Mundial”, expresó Cooper.
“Mi evaluación operativa sigue siendo la misma: la capacidad de combate de Irán está en constante declive a medida que se intensifican nuestros ataques ofensivos”, subrayó.

Aseguran que Irán intentó atacar sin éxito la base militar de Diego García
El régimen de Irán no logró atacar la base militar conjunta británico-estadounidense de Diego García en el Océano Índico, según confirmó una fuente oficial británica a la agencia de noticias AFP, después de que el Wall Street Journal informara que Teherán había disparado dos misiles balísticos contra ella.
La fuente indicó que el ataque fallido contra Diego García tuvo lugar antes de que el gobierno británico anunciara el viernes que permitiría a Estados Unidos utilizar algunas de sus bases para atacar emplazamientos iraníes utilizados para atacar buques en el Estrecho de Ormuz.
La guerra en Irán ha puesto de relieve la diferencia fundamental en la manera en que China y Occidente entienden las alianzas internacionales. Aunque Beijing mantiene una estrecha relación con Teherán y su presencia es creciente en la región, se abstuvo de ofrecer ayuda militar cuando la República Islámica enfrentó los ataques de Estados Unidos e Israel. Además, el desarrollo del conflicto puso en evidencia las limitaciones del régimen de Xi Jinping para socorrer a un socio fundamental en este contexto.
Un ataque perpetrado por Hezbollah dañó una vivienda en el norte de Israel
Una vivienda en la ciudad norteña de Metula resultó dañada por un cohete lanzado por el grupo terrorista Hezbollah.
Los servicios de rescate informaron que no hay heridos. En el ataque, se lanzaron unos 10 cohetes desde el Líbano.
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Families of Iran’s elite live lavishly abroad while ordinary citizens suffer at home

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For decades, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and ruling clerical elite have relied on a system critics say is as strategic as it is cynical: denounce the West in public, while quietly securing a future there for their own families.
«The Islamic regime in Iran is corrupt to its core,» Kasra Aarabi, director of IRGC research at United Against Nuclear Iran, told Fox News Digital. «While regime clerics and IRGC commanders violently Islamize Iranian society and export anti-Americanism globally, their sons and daughters live lavish lifestyles on blood money in Western capitals.»
Iranian journalist Banafsheh Zand still remembers the girl from her school, the kind of memory that only becomes meaningful years later, when a familiar face reappears in a completely different context.
IRAN’S NEW SUPREME LEADER IS ‘HIS FATHER ON STEROIDS,’ EXPERTS WARN OF HARDLINE RULE
Iranian women walk past a mural painting of Iranian flags in Tehran on Nov. 26, 2024. (Atta Kenare/AFP via Getty Images)
They sat together in classrooms at Tehran’s elite Iranzamin School, an institution designed for the children of diplomats and Iran’s upper class, where students spoke multiple languages and moved easily between cultures. The girl was quiet and studious, already shaped in part by years spent in the United States, where she had lived as a child and picked up fluent English that would later define her public role.
Years later, Zand would see her again, not across a desk or in a school hallway, but on television screens around the world. Her former classmate had become the voice of the 1979 U.S. embassy hostage crisis.
The girl was Masoumeh Ebtekar, the English-speaking spokesperson for the extremists who held 52 Americans hostages for 444 days, and who would go on to defend the takeover of the U.S. embassy and later describe it as «the best move» for the revolution.
And yet, decades later, the story did not end in Tehran. It continued, quietly and almost predictably, in California.

Masoumeh Ebtekar, the English-speaking face of the 1979 U.S. embassy hostage crisis, later rose to senior roles in Iran’s government while her family built ties to life in the West. (Vahid Salemi/AP Photo)
A life far from the revolution
Ebtekar son, Eissa Hashemi, was living in the United States, pursuing graduate studies and eventually building a career in academia in Los Angeles, Zand exposed on her substack «Iran So Far Away» — a trajectory that stands in stark contrast to the ideology his mother helped articulate to the world.
For Zand, this is not an anecdote or an isolated irony, but a window into how the system itself functions.
WITH DOGS, DANCE AND UNCOVERED HAIR, IRANIANS DEFY ‘UNHOLY ALLIANCE’ OF SOCIALISTS, RADICALS: ‘HYPOCRITES!’
«They take the money from corruption inside the country and use it to live a better life elsewhere,» she said. «It’s not a few cases. It’s how they operate.»
What Zand is describing is widely referred to inside Iran as the «aghazadeh» phenomenon, a term used for the children of the Iranian regime’s elite who live lives of privilege abroad while their families enforce ideological restrictions at home, and who have come to symbolize for many Iranians the gap between the regime’s rhetoric and its reality.
CHASING THE APOCALYPSE: RADICAL SHIITE CLERICS ON AMERICAN SOIL PREACH PROPHETIC SHOWDOWN WITH US

Former Iranian President Mohammad Khatami (L) gives a certificate of appreciation to leading reformist politician Saeed Hajjarian during the annual congress of the Islamic Iran Participation Front in Tehran December 4, 2008. (Caren Firouz/Reuters)
A three-tier network inside the West
Exiled Iranian journalist Mehdi Ghadimi, now based in Canada, argues that this phenomenon is structured.
«When we talk about the presence of agents of the Islamic Republic, especially the IRGC, here in Canada, we should understand this is not random,» Ghadimi told Fox News Digital. «It operates in layers.»
The system functions as a three-tiered structure that allows regime-linked individuals to embed themselves across Western societies, according to Ghadimi, beginning with those who arrive as students and academics, often presenting themselves as ordinary immigrants while maintaining ties to the regime or its security apparatus.
«They come as students or professors,» he said, «but many have prior connections to the IRGC, and part of their role is to normalize the Islamic Republic in universities and gather information on activists.»

A billboard depicting Iran’s supreme leaders since 1979: (L to R) Ayatollahs Ruhollah Khomeini (until 1989), Ali Khamenei (until 2026), and Mojtaba Khamenei (incumbent) is displayed above a highway in Tehran on March 10, 2026. Iran marked the appointment of Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei to replace his father as its supreme leader on March 9, 2026. (AFP/Via Getty Images)
That category includes individuals identified in recent reporting across U.S. campuses, such as Leila Khatami, daughter of former Iranian President Mohammad Khatami at Union College in New York, Zeinab Hajjarian, the daughter of Saeed Hajjarian, a founder of Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence, at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, according to a March 18 New York Post report.
The second layer, Ghadimi explained, is financial, consisting of former insiders and trusted affiliates who enter Western countries as investors or business figures, often carrying significant capital that raises questions about its origin.
«In Iran, a monthly salary might be $100 or $200, while an apartment costs $100,000,» he said. «So when someone arrives with millions, they are not an ordinary individual.»
These individuals, he said, often serve as conduits for moving money out of Iran, operating under the cover of private enterprise while maintaining ties to the system that enabled their wealth. «They change their professional status and enter as private-sector investors,» he said. «But they are trusted by the system.»
The third layer involves individuals who receive explicit approval from the regime to move large sums abroad, a process that, according to Ghadimi, requires a «green light» from the security apparatus and often comes with expectations in return. «In order to move that level of money, you need permission,» he said, «and in return, they help finance networks connected to the regime.»

A woman holds an Iranian flag during the funeral and burial of Ali Shamkhani at Imamzadeh Saleh in northern Tehran, Iran, on March 14, 2026. (Majid Saeedi/Getty Images)
One of the most prominent examples is Mahmoud Reza Khavari, the former chairman of Bank Melli Iran, who fled the country in 2011 after the bank was implicated in a roughly $2.6 billion embezzlement scandal, one of the largest corruption cases in Iran’s history.
Khavari later settled in Canada, where public reporting shows that he and his family acquired millions of dollars in real estate, including properties in Toronto, where he remains more than a decade later.
For Zand, the pattern is unmistakable.
«It’s a mafia structure,» she said.
FORMER IRANIAN MINISTER PRAISES TRUMP ASSASSINATION FATWA AS DAUGHTER LIVES IN NEW YORK

Ali Larijani, addresses a press conference in Tehran, Iran. Larijani, a top Iranian security official and a conservative force within Iran’s theocracy, was killed in an Israeli strike on March 17, 2026. (Henghameh Fahimi/AFP via Getty Images)
A global footprint: from Atlanta to London
As previously reported by Fox News Digital, Fatemeh Ardeshir-Larijani, the daughter of senior Iranian political figure Ali Larijani and a conservative force within Iran’s theocracy, who was killed in an Israeli strike this week, held a position at Emory University’s Winship Cancer Institute in Atlanta before leaving earlier this year following public pressure.
At the same time, a February 2026 report by The Guardian highlighted how relatives of Iranian elites have built lives not only in the United States, but also in Britain and Canada, including members of the Larijani family and relatives of other senior officials, even as the regime continues to position itself in opposition to the West.
Thousands of relatives of Iranian officials were believed to be living across Western countries, IranWire reported in 2022, though precise figures remain difficult to independently verify, underscoring both the scale of the phenomenon and the opacity of the system behind it.
«The problem is even more visible in Europe,» Aarabi said, «Governments, not least the U.K., have turned a blind eye.»
IRAN’S SUPREME LEADER MOJTABA KHAMENEI ‘MISFUNCTIONING,’ NOT CONTROLLING REGIME: SOURCES

In this picture obtained from Iran’s ISNA news agency, Mojtaba Khamenei, son of Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, looks on in Tehran on October 13, 2024. (Hamed JAFARNEJAD / ISNA / AFP via Getty Images)
Power, assets and the next generation
Mojtaba Khamenei, who is slated as the country’s new supreme leader, has been linked to a network of overseas assets, including high-value real estate in Europe.
A March 2026 investigation by The Times of London, identified two luxury apartments in London’s Kensington neighborhood, acquired in 2014 and 2016 through intermediaries, that sit directly adjacent to the Israeli Embassy compound.
The findings are part of a broader probe into Khamenei’s alleged overseas holdings, with a Bloomberg investigation estimating a portfolio spanning multiple countries and totaling roughly $138 million in assets across Europe and the Gulf, pending verification of full ownership structures.
«He has been operating behind the scenes, managing a large part of the Revolutionary Guard’s security and economic cartel,» Ghadimi said. «His hands are deeply stained with corruption and crimes, and the same Revolutionary Guard is now the main force backing his rise.»
US OFFERS $10M REWARD FOR INFO ON IRAN’S NEW SUPREME LEADER, TOP IRGC OFFICIALS

A person holds an image of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as Iranian demonstrators protest against the U.S.-Israeli strikes, in Tehran, Iran, Feb. 28, 2026. (Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via Reuters)
A system Iranians themselves cannot escape
Inside Iran, the contrast with everyday life is stark. Women are arrested for violating dress codes, protesters are jailed and economic hardship has deepened across much of the population. Outside Iran, the children of the elite live differently.
«They’re telling people how to live, what to wear, what to believe,» Zand said. «But their own families don’t live like that.»
For her, the issue is not only hypocrisy, but strategy. «It’s also about influence,» she said. «They integrate into societies, they build networks, they learn how the West works.»
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Pro-government demonstrators burn an American flag at Tehran University, on June 19, 2009 in Tehran, Iran. (Getty Images)
Aarabi believes Western governments have failed to respond accordingly. «The Islamic regime’s oligarchs should be treated no differently from Putin’s oligarchs,» he said. «The West should identify, sanction and deport these individuals.»
war with iran,europe,iran,mojtaba khamenei
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