Iran arrests UK-linked terrorists
The news coincided with the anniversary of the storming of the US embassy in Tehran after the 1979 revolution - an event which has come to symbolize the Islamic Republic's resistance to Western hostility to the Islamic Republic.
Thousands of people marched outside the former embassy building - now known as the "Den of Espionage" - and shouted "Death to America, England and Israel."
The British Foreign Office rejected Press TV's assertion that, according to Iran's Intelligence Ministry, it "funded and supported certain terrorist groups against the Islamic Republic."
"There is a long history of baseless Iranian allegations against the UK. This is just the latest," a spokesman said.
"The UK does not support or encourage terrorist activity in Iran, or anywhere else in the world, and this claim will be seen as what it is: another in a long line of slurs against the United Kingdom from the government of Iran."
Britain backed a US-led push to tighten sanctions against Iran over the nuclear activities it fears are aimed at making an atomic bomb, something Iran denies.
Iran accused foreign powers of fomenting the anti-government demonstrations which followed the re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in June 2009, which the opposition said was rigged. The authorities put down the "sedition" with sometimes brutal repression.
Thursday's news report, on Iran's English language TV channel, said the arrested militants were paid by a commander of Komala, an Iranian Kurdish group it described as a "terrorist" organization, to carry out five assassinations in the last two years.
The men were all members of Komala and received weapons and cash on the Iran-Iraq border, it said. It did not say who were their victims, Kazinform cites Arab News. See www.arabnews.com for full version.