European ambassadors summoned in Tehran after Iranian diplomat accused in bomb plot

Bomb disposal experts search a car in Brussels on Saturday as part of an investigation into a plot to bomb an Iranian opposition meeting. (Reuters)
Updated 05 July 2018
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European ambassadors summoned in Tehran after Iranian diplomat accused in bomb plot

  • French, Belgian and German representatives summoned in Tehran
  • Iranian diplomat to be sent to Belgium face accusations over plot to bomb opposition meeting

LONDON: Iran’s foreign ministry summoned the French and Belgian ambassadors and Germany’s chargé d’affaires on Wednesday in protest against the arrest of an Iranian diplomat linked to a bomb plot.

France and Germany said on Wednesday they would send two men, including an Iranian diplomat, to Belgium to face accusations they were involved in a plot to bomb an Iranian opposition rally on the outskirts of Paris, judicial sources told Reuters.

Belgium is already investigating two Belgians of Iranian origin arrested on Saturday, the day of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) meeting. 

Five hundred grams of the homemade explosive TATP and a detonation device were found in their car.

The Austrian foreign ministry said on Tuesday it was stripping the diplomatic status of the diplomat arrested in Germany.

Iran's foreign ministry responded on Wednesday by summoning the three European representatives, Fars news agency reported.

The Iranian deputy foreign minister expressed his country’s “strong protest over the arrest of an Iranian diplomat” and that he should be released “without any delay and with no condition,” ministry spokesman Bahram Qasemi said.

He said the arrest was a plot to damage Iran-European ties, as Iranian President Hassan Rouhani was in Europe to save the international nuclear deal following Washington's withdrawal. 

The exiled Iranian opposition group’s meeting was attended by Donald Trump's lawyer Rudy Giuliani, who gave a speech calling for the removal of Iran’s rulers.

Earlier, reports said Iran had summoned France’s ambassador to protest against the staging of the meeting. 

 

 

 

 


UN warns of abuse of Palestinians returning to Gaza through Rafah crossing

Updated 7 sec ago
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UN warns of abuse of Palestinians returning to Gaza through Rafah crossing

  • Human Rights Office describes pattern of ill-treatment, abuse and humiliation of returnees by Israeli forces, and by armed Palestinians allegedly backed by Israeli military
  • Meanwhile, reports continue of airstrikes, gunfire and shelling across Gaza, and Israeli forces demolish a UN-run school

NEW YORK CITY: The Rafah crossing on the border between Gaza and Egypt opened for a fourth consecutive day on Thursday, allowing a limited number of people to pass through.
However, the UN voiced concerns about reported mistreatment of Palestinians returning to the war-ravaged enclave.
The UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs also said reports continue across civilian areas in Gaza of airstrikes, gunfire and shelling, resulting in casualties and damage to infrastructure.
And Israeli forces on Wednesday demolished Jabalya Preparatory Boys’ School in northern Gaza, OCHA said. Run by the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees, it was the last remaining school in a compound of six. Its destruction means the entire educational complex has been razed to the ground.
A limited flow of people were allowed to use the Rafah crossing, Gaza’s main physical connection to the outside world, for four days in a row since it reopened on Monday, OCHA said. Only 98 returnees were received by UN teams inside Gaza between Monday and Thursday, it added, and the crossing remains closed on Fridays.
The UN Human Rights Office warned of what it described as a pattern of ill-treatment, abuse and humiliation of returnees by Israeli forces, and by armed Palestinians allegedly backed by the Israeli military.
According to accounts collected by the UN’s Human Rights Office, armed Palestinians handcuffed and blindfolded returnees, threatened and intimidated them, conducted searches and stole personal belongings and money. Returnees also reported violence, degrading interrogations and invasive body searches upon arrival at Israeli checkpoints.
The accounts point to conduct that violates the rights of Palestinians to personal security and dignity, and freedom from torture and other ill-treatment, the Human Rights Office said.
Meanwhile, the UN said it attempted to coordinate 11 humanitarian missions with the Israeli authorities on Wednesday and Thursday. Six were fully facilitated, but four faced lengthy delays at holding points along designated routes. Two of those missions were only partially completed, the other two eventually went ahead despite the delays.
A mission to monitor humanitarian cargo at the Kissufim crossing, east of Khan Younis, was denied on Wednesday after the crossing was closed.
The purposes of the missions included the collection of water, sanitation supplies, fuel and other items, medical evacuations through the Rafah crossing, and the transportation of returnees to Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, OCHA said.