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Iranian leader calls to wipe out Israel

Uzi | 27.10.2005 11:57

The election of President Ahmadinejad, a hardliner, has caused concern in the West, which want to curb his nuclear ambitions

British officials will demand an explanation from the Iranian charge d'affaires in London today over "sickening" comments made by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran, who has called for Israel to be "wiped off the map".



Mr Ahmadinejad, who defends his country's "inalienable right" to nuclear power and has called for a global Islamic revolution, sparked an international furore last night after Iranian state television reported a speech he made at a conference in Tehran called "The World without Zionism."

Reverting to the vitriol of Ayatollah Khomeini, leader of the Iranian revolution, Mr Ahmadinejad urged the destruction of Israel by Palestinian militants: "There is no doubt that the new wave in Palestine will soon wipe off this disgraceful blot from the face of the Islamic world," he said. "As the Imam (Khomeini) said, Israel must be wiped off the map."

Mr Ahmadinejad also warned fellow Islamic leaders against softening their stance against the "Zionist regime". Last month, Bahrain announced that it would resume trade with Israel.


"Anybody who recognises Israel will burn in the fire of the Islamic nation’s fury. Anybody who recognizes the Zionist regime is acknowledging the surrender and defeat of the Islamic world," Mr Ahmadinejad is reported to have said.

Within hours of the speech a Palestinian suicide bomber blew himself up in an Israeli market, killing five people in the deadliest attack in the country in three months.

Governments around the world condemned the President's speech and expressed fears for Iran's nuclear ambitions.

The Foreign Office called the comments "deeply disturbing and sickening".

"Saying Iran wants to wipe Israel from the map will only heighten concerns about Iran’s nuclear ambitions... We will be protesting to the Iranian charge d’affaires," said a spokesman. Canada, Spain and France are all expected to protest to Iranian representatives today.

Israel’s deputy ambassador to Britain, Zvi Rav-Ner, said that Mr Ahmadinejad's comments should be addressed by the UN and that Iran was threatening the peace of the world.

"From 1945, when the UN was established, no leader of a state has called for genocide and wiping off of another member state of the UN. That is unheard of," he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

"Iran, which has been involved in supporting terror worldwide, in Lebanon, in Argentina, in other places around the world, has been trying to develop the most dangerous capabilities, that is acquiring a nuclear bomb. Combined with its long range missiles, I think it is becoming a global problem, a real source of instability for the peace of the world," said Mr Rav-Ner.

In America, the Bush Administration said that Mr Ahmadinejad's speech displayed Iran's true intentions. "I think it reconfirms what we have been saying about the regime in Iran. It underscores the concerns we have about Iran’s nuclear intentions," said Scott McClellan, the White House press secretary.

Israel has been the declared enemy of Iran since the revolution in 1979 and Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the country's Supreme Leader, routinely calls Israel a "cancerous tumour" that must be excised from the Middle East.

Nonetheless, Mr Ahmadinejad's remarks demonstrate a marked shift from the more conciliatory tone of Mohammed Khatami, the reformist President he succeeded in August.




Uzi

Comments

Hide the following 5 comments

BAN IRAN FROM THE UN

27.10.2005 13:21

Shows what he want nuclear capabilty for too.

Of course if Israel pre-empts this with a strike against Iran, they will be condemned, just as they were for bombing the Oskirak reactor in Iraq.

But then that is the typical duplicity of the left; one rule for the jews and a different rule for everyone else.

Ilan


Ilan is a moron

27.10.2005 14:35

Israel is NOT "the jews", Ilan.

And it shows how bad a headfull of right wing Zionist twaddle is for mental health when you start slagging "the left" for something that hasn't even happened!

Tilting at windmills, dickhead.

you stupid. me not


3,000 Years and still trying to Murder the Jews

27.10.2005 15:05

There was Arab terror against the Jews before the establishment of the State of Israel, and there was Arab terror against Jews before there were ever any "occupied territories". There was Arab terror against Jews before the "peace process", and there has been Arab terror against Jews since the "peace process. There has been Arab terror against Jews before "Disengagement" and there has been Arab terror against Israel since "Disengagement".

Until the "Palestinians" and the rest of the Arab world are prepared to accept a Jewish State in the Land of Israel, then we must view them as our enemies. So long as the "Palestinians" and the Arab world continue to incite their masses (and particularly their children) to hate the Jewish State and People, they will be treated as our enemies. Anyone who is prepared to accept a Jewish State in the Land of Israel can live together with us in peace, anyone who is unable to accept these terms had better find someplace else to live.

True, the world will raise a fuss. The world has always cried out anytime Jews have stood up to defend themselves and their rights. The world has always been prepared to offer flowery eulogies over weak and dead Jews.

kelly


Long live Israel

27.10.2005 16:46



The Hamas does not believe that there is a difference, their charter states:-

"The prophet, prayer and peace be upon him, said: The time will not come until Muslims will fight the Jews (and kill them); until the Jews hide behind rocks and trees, which will cry: O Muslim! there is a Jew hiding behind me, come on and kill him! This will not apply to the Gharqad, which is a Jewish tree (cited by Bukhari and Muslim)."

So at least Hamas are honest as to who they hate; unlike you.

The extreme hatred directed to Israel is because it is a Jewish state..

Muslim states do not face this hatred; nobody critices them for having expelled their jewish residents.

Is Israel the 'worst state' in the world - of course not; Iran, China, North Korea, Sudan, Congo, Saudi, Thailand, Cambodia, Burma (to name just a few) have despicable records far exceeding the perceived injustices of which Israel is constantly accused. And yet none of these other matters ever reach the newspapers - why is Israel singled out for special treatment?

Why has the UN tabled an anti Israel motion at every session when they have failed to act on Rwanda when the slaughter could have been stopped or to condemn Mugabe?

Israel has done more good for the world in its brief existence than any other country - if you now anybody suffering from cancer, heart disease, diabetes - then they are being treated by Israeli developed drugs.


But the fact remains that unless we are weak, cast into the sea, you will not accept us. Unless our hands are in the air like the boy in the photo of the Warsaw Ghetto you hate us.

Well we are tired of dying and we intend to live - sorry to disapoint.


J&P


-

27.10.2005 17:13

If ever there was a situation where two wrongs do not make a right this is it. What we see here, in the subject of the original posting and the subsequent postings is two different sets of fundamentalists slugging it out each claiming the moral high ground. What rational people should be doing is rejecting such fundamentalism in all its forms, and see that both sides, zionists and jew-hating arab politicans are both in the wrong.

Just because someone stands up and decries one party's hate-statements, it doesnt mean we have to accept the other sides either. The arabs shouldnt be promoting jew-baiting, the zionists shouldnt be claiming all jews support their right wing palestinan-bating state at the same time.

All this is doing is fermenting an atmosphere where the blood-stained religious and right wing fundmentalists in both countries can carry the day by blaming everyone else. Hatred has always been used as a tool by those in power. Recognise it and say no to those on both sides.

Maggie's spare handbag