Iran to put British Embassy staff on trial

By keeptonyblairforpm
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    3rd July, 20o9

    An Iranian Guardians Council leader has said today that British Embassy staff will be put on trial following so-called confessions.

    BBC report here and below.


    Some UK embassy staff detained in Tehran and accused of inciting protests after disputed elections will face trial, a top Iranian cleric says.

    Guardians Council chief Ahmad Jannati said: “Naturally they will be put on trial, they have made confessions.”

    Nine embassy staff were held in Tehran last weekend. Britain says all but two have now been freed.

    EU governments are considering temporarily withdrawing ambassadors to Iran in protest at the detentions.

    “In these incidents, their embassy had a presence, some people were arrested,” Ayatollah Jannati told the thousands of worshippers at Friday prayers, according to news agencies.

    ‘Velvet revolution’ plan

    BBC diplomatic correspondent Jonathan Marcus says this marks a significant deterioration in the already bad relationship between London and Tehran.

    Ayatollah Jannati did not say how many employees would be tried or on what charges.

    Protests gripped Tehran and other Iranian cities after June’s presidential election, amid claims the vote had been rigged in favour of the incumbent, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

    The Guardians Council – Iran’s supreme legislative body, which Ayatollah Jannati heads – on Monday ratified the disputed result, following a partial recount.

    Ayatollah Jannati said on Friday: “After the election, the enemy could not stand people’s joy. The enemy made an effort to poison the people. They had planned a velvet revolution before the election.”

    He said the UK Foreign Office had warned of possible “street riots” around the 12 June election and had advised its nationals to avoid public places.

    Claims ‘without foundation’

    Tehran has repeatedly accused foreign powers – especially Britain and the US – of stoking unrest after the election.

    Britain has protested strongly against the arrests and rejected the Iranian allegations as baseless.

    In the fallout from the crisis, Tehran expelled two British diplomats and the UK responded with a similar measure.

    “We are very concerned by these reports and are investigating. Allegations that our staff were involved in fomenting unrest are wholly without foundation,” a British foreign office statement said on Friday.

    Five of the nine employees were reportedly released on Monday and Iranian state media said on Wednesday it had freed three more, but British and EU officials say two remain in custody.

    Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency reported this week that one of the detainees had played a “remarkable role during the recent unrest in managing it behind the scenes”.

    Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, last month described Britain, as the “most evil” of its enemies.

    Library ballot boxes

    Meanwhile, the governor of one of Iran’s biggest cities, Shiraz, has denied reports that a number of sealed ballot boxes in its main library contained votes from last month’s election.

    Ebrahim Azizi said the boxes were from previous polls and that the interior ministry had ordered they be archived there.

    Earlier this week, an Iranian journalist posted pictures on the internet of several ballot boxes sitting on the floor of the library.

    Historians say the distrust between the UK and Iran stems from the 1800s, when Iran – then Persia – was forced to concede territory to Russia in a treaty drafted by a British diplomat.

    In more modern times, British operatives backed a CIA-organised coup in 1953 against an elected Iranian government.

    In 2007, Iran seized 15 British navy personnel on patrol in waters between Iraq and Iran and held them for 12 days, during which time they were paraded on national television.

    Britain is also among the most vocal opponents of Iran’s nuclear programme, saying its aim is to develop atomic weapons, a claim denied by Tehran.




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    3 Responses to “Iran to put British Embassy staff on trial”

    1. Vigilante Says:

      These employees are described as “local”. That implies Iranian citizenship? Therefore not entitled to diplomatic immunity?

      • keeptonyblairforpm Says:

        Yep, Vigilante! All 9 originally arrested were Iranian citizens. The two they are going to try will not have diplomatic immunity. They know they can’t do this with British citizen Embassy workers, so the Iranian authorities are trying it on with their own – as they have always done. So no change there, then.

        The EU says it is going to make a “strong response” – i.e. calling in their Iranian diplomats to tell ‘em off.

        That’ll teach em!

    2. Vigilante Says:

      Well, they haven’t always restrained themselves with foreign embassy workers with diplomatic immunity. Since 1981, maybe …

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