Saturday, March 31, 2007

NEWS)))))

Iran’s main opposition movement, the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), said on Saturday that Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) had planned the recent capture of 15 British marines and naval personnel and are holding the group in an effort to gain concessions from the West.A unit of the IRGC Navy’s 3rd regional command based in Khorramshahr Garrison executed the premeditated operation to capture the Britons on March 23, said Hossein Abedini, a member of the NCRI’s Foreign Affairs Committee, at a press conference in London. He said that the garrison was on a full state of alert.“Rear Admiral Rashid Hosseini, the commander of the IRGC Navy’s third regional command, personally had command of the operation to arrest the British sailors”, he told reporters. “A number of IRGC Navy commanders had previously been stationed in Khorramshahr. Colonel Badin was the operational commander based in Khorramshahr at the time of the arrests”. He gave the names of three IRGC officers - Colonel Majidi, Colonel Abbas-Zadeh, and Colonel Isavi – who were involved in the seizure.Abedini said that the information he had showed that Rear Admiral Morteza Safari, commander of the IRGC Navy, was in contact with Rear Admiral Hosseini as the operation was taking place. Rear Admiral Safari is one of a number of IRGC commanders who were brought under sanctions under United Nations Security Council Resolution 1747 earlier this month.A command force comprised of representatives of the ministries of intelligence and foreign affairs in coordination with the IRGC Joint Chiefs of Staff under the direct supervision of the Iran’s Supreme National Security Council is presently following up the case of the sailors, he said.Abedini said that the NCRI’s information had been smuggled out of Iran by the People’s Mojahedin Organisation of Iran (PMOI), one of the Council’s leading member organisations.“The clerical regime had in a premeditated act arrested British sailors in order to win concessions from the international community and divert attention from its nuclear projects. Claims that the sailors were arrested in Iranian territorial waters are baseless.“Taking British sailors as hostages is part of the religious fascism’s policy of exporting terrorism and fundamentalism”. He said that a “correct policy” regarding Tehran must be comprised of two elements: “On the one hand, all diplomatic and commercial ties with this regime must be cut off and instead comprehensive sanctions must be imposed against it and on the other hand all the obstacles and restrictions on the Iranian opposition must be lifted; in particular the unlawful terror tag must be lifted from the People’s Mojahedin Organisation of Iran”.“The British government’s refusal over the past three months to implement the verdict of the Court of First Instance of the European Communities insofar as removing the terrorist label from the PMOI has convinced Tehran’s rulers that its breeches of Security Council resolutions and its meddling in Iraq will face no serious response”, he added.Abedini told reporters that the NCRI had passed on its information to Number 10 Downing Street.The 15 British sailors and marines were seized at gunpoint earlier this month after they finished a routine search of a merchant ship which London says was in Iraqi waters.Tehran claims the 14 men and one woman had moved 500 metres into Iranian territorial waters, a claim London denies. The British Ministry of Defence has released global positioning system data as evidence that the group had been more than 2 km outside Iranian waters.

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Reuters reported on Thursday that the Iranian embassy in London released a second letter on Thursday it said was from British woman captive Faye Turney in which she called on Britain to start withdrawing its troops from Iraq."Isn't it time for us to start withdrawing our forces from Iraq and let them determine their own future?" said the letter, addressed to the British parliament and faxed to Reuters from the Iranian embassy.Turney is the only woman among 15 British sailors and marines seized last week by Iranian regime’s forces. Britain insists they were in Iraqi waters in the Gulf but Tehran says they were trespassing in Iranian waters.Iran had indicated it was prepared to release Turney, but this was put on hold on Thursday.Iran's Mehr state run news agency quoted military commander Alireza Afshar saying Britain must apologize for entering Iran's waters and promise it would not happen again."The release of a female British soldier has been suspended," he was quoted as saying. "The wrong behaviour of those who live in London caused the suspension."Reuters added that in the letter, whose authenticity could not immediately be confirmed, Turney said her group was in Iranian waters.The somewhat stilted language of the letter led some linguistic experts to suggest the text may have been written originally in Farsi and then translated into English. Turney was shown on Iranian television on Wednesday, saying in an interview that her group had trespassed in Iraqi waters. A letter apparently from her, released on Wednesday, also said the Britons had gone into Iraqi waters.
Prime Minister Tony Blair said Thursday that Britain would not negotiate over British sailors and marines held hostage by Iran. In an interview with ITV News, Blair again called for the unconditional return of the 15 Royal Navy personnel who were seized by Iranian authorities last week. Britain took its case to free its 15 sailors and marines held by Iran to the United Nations on Thursday, asking the Security Council to support a statement that would "deplore" Tehran's action and demand their immediate release.

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Iranian regime has officially informed the United Nations nuclear watchdog that it has partly suspended its cooperation with the agency, state media reported on Thursday.The announcement came less than a week after the United Nations Security Council imposed greater sanctions against Tehran over its failure to suspend uranium enrichment activities as had been demanded of it by the International Atomic Energy Agency.“Today a letter was given to Iran’s permanent representation in the IAEA regarding the government’s recent ratification to withdraw some of Iran’s cooperation with the IAEA in reaction to [Security Council] Resolution 1747. The letter will be handed over to the IAEA’s secretariat in the coming hours”, the state-run news agency ISNA quoted an unnamed official as saying.The official said that the letter contained the text of the government ratification on the suspension of cooperation along with a statement of reasons.Iran’s official news agency IRNA reported soon after that the cabinet ratification on its withdrawal from the IAEA Safeguards Agreement was officially communicated to IAEA Director General Mohamed ElBaradei on Thursday.Tehran had approved the Safeguards Agreement on February 25, 2003.