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The detention of an ex-Iranian ambassador wanted by
Argentinean officials in connection with a terror attack on a Jewish
community center in 1994 has triggered a diplomatic dispute between
Britain and Iran.
Since the arrest of former Iranian senior diplomat Hade Soleimanpour
last Thursday in Durham, Britain, officials in Tehran have twice summoned
top representatives at the British embassy, and newspapers and Iranian
leaders have launched rhetorical tirades against their British counterparts.
In a particularly vitriolic editorial, the conservative Tehran daily
Keyhand demanded the eviction of Britain’s ambassador from the
Iranian capital. Direct contacts between London and Tehran have been
simultaneously intensive and tense, with Iranian Foreign Minister
Kamal Kharrazi saying the arrest would harm bilateral ties.
In recent weeks, Argentinean investigators identified the former Iranian
ambassador to Argentina as one of the masterminds behind a massive
terrorist attack against a Jewish facility in Buenos Aires in 1992.
Khatami: Incorrect deed
"I declare from here that the British government will have to
cease carrying on with this incorrect deed in a short period of time
and apologize," Iranian President Mohammed Khatami said after
a visit to the grave of Iran’s spiritual leader, Ayatollah Khomeini.
Khatami also threatened to take an unspecified "strong action"
against Britain.
In "incorrect deeds," Khatami referred to the arrest
of the 47-year-old, who was registered as a student at a university
in northeastern England. The arrest came after Argentinean prosecutors issued
an arrest warrant against the diplomat. Prosecutors believe Soleimanpour
to be the key planner of the July 1994 terrorist attack on the AMIA
Jewish Community Center in Buenos Aires, the largest single act of
terror in Argentinean history.
On June 18 of that year, just before 10 a.m., a bomb detonated in
front of the community center leaving 85 people dead in the rubble
of the decimated building and 200 more seriously injured. Two
years earlier, an attack on the Israeli embassy in Buenos Aires killed
29 dead and injured 200.
Neither crime has ever been solved, but the Argentineans have long
speculated that Iran played a role -- an accusation Tehran has forcefully
rejected as a "Zionist" smear campaign organized by Argentina’s
300,000 person-strong Jewish community. Argentinean investigators
maintain that evidence suggests that both Iran and the militant
group Hizbollah played a role in the attack.
Little happened on the investigative front until after 1999,
when former President Carlos Menem left office. Federal prosecutors
then put the investigation on the front burner, at the same time presenting
some uncomfortable allegations about the former leader. Menem,
whose family is of Syrian origin, is under investigation by Argentinean
justice officials on the suspicion that he accepted a $10 million
bribe from Iran to cover up the attacks and that he keeps well-padded
bank accounts in Switzerland.
Investigation advances
Investigators also appear to be making progress. Argentinean media
reports this spring suggested the government was preparing to issue
arrest warrants against a group of Iranian diplomats as well as ex-diplomat
Soleimanpour, former Iranian Intelligence Minister Ali Fallahian and
the country's supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei.
But the Iranian spiritual leader has not been the focus of investigators
in Buenos Aires -- at least not at this stage. The fact that British
officials arrested a former Iranian diplomat has nonetheless angered
leaders back in Tehran.
"It’s already well known how much damage and suffering
terrorism has caused for the Islamic Republic of Iran," said
Mehdi Karroubi, president of the Iranian parliament. "Still,
pressure just continues to be put on the Islamic Republic. The Iranian
government must defend its own rights as well as those of the innocent
ambassador."
Link to attacks in Germany
The current investigation in many ways mirrors an investigation in
Germany into the 1992 murders of four Iranian Kurdish opposition figures at
Berlin's Mykonos restaurant. Investigators later fingered an
Iranian agent as the bloodbath's ringleader, and several of the
suspects fled to Iran. German prosecutors in that incident accused
senior members of the Iranian government of involvement in the attack.
The two investigations also have a link: Argentinean prosecutors have
asked Abolghasen Mebahi, a witness in the German case now under protection,
to provide testimony against Menem. Buenos Aires prosecutors believe
Mebahi may have information about the bribes allegedly received by
Menem as well as the 1994 attack against the Jewish center.
Iran has retaliated against Argentina for the latest investigative
developments by cutting all cultural and commercial ties with the
South American country.
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Authorities in India have stepped up security following two bomb
blasts in the country's financial capital, Bombay. Over 40 people
were killed and dozens injured when two car bombs exploded within
minutes of each other. One blast occurred at a congested bullion market
while a second near the historic Gateway of India, a popular tourist
attraction. Police said both bombs had been planted in parked taxis.
There have been no claims of responsibility. Police and paramilitary,
meanwhile, have gone on nation-wide alert. New Delhi has deployed
a force of some 60,000 police, placing barricades and deploying anti-riot
forces in Muslim-dominated districts around Bombay. Pakistan, India's
nuclear rival, was quick to condemn Monday's blasts as "acts
of terrorism."
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