Posts Tagged ‘Ahmadinejad’

Canadian delegation walks out again as Iran’s leader takes to podium at UN

By The Canadian Press - Wednesday, September 26, 2012 - 0 Comments

NEW YORK, N.Y. – Canadian diplomats boycotted Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s sermonizing speech to the United…

NEW YORK, N.Y. – Canadian diplomats boycotted Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s sermonizing speech to the United Nations on Wednesday, but the Iranian president brushed off Canada’s anti-Iran bent even as Tehran warned its citizens to avoid the country for fear of rampant “Iranophobia.”

It wasn’t the first time the Canadian delegation has snubbed Ahmadinejad — they walked out last year and in 2009 at the United Nations annual gathering of world leaders.

But tensions are running higher than ever between the two countries after Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird shuttered Canada’s embassy in Iran three weeks ago.

In Ottawa, Baird said Canada’s boycott of Ahmadinejad’s “bizarre” speech at the United Nations General Assembly — during which American and Israeli officials also walked out — sent a strong message.

“Canada didn’t want to be associated in any way, shape or form with the ramblings of an anti-Semitic hate-monger,” he said. “Obviously we don’t want to give it any credibility by even being there. I noticed the government of Barack Obama made the same conclusion, which I think was wise.”

Ahmadinejad was dismissive of Canada in a news conference following his speech to the UN.

“Any country is free to have or to not have relations with other countries,” he said.

“I fundamentally don’t see this as a very important issue. Of course we did not have a substantial economic relationship with Canada.”

Ahmadinejad didn’t mention Canada by name during his speech to the United Nations General Assembly, but a statement posted Wednesday by the Islamic Republic News Agency, Iran’s official news agency, was making headlines all the same.

The statement, attributed to Iran’s Foreign Ministry, warned Iranian citizens against travelling to Canada, citing “Islamophobia,” “Iranophobia” and a “double standard” in Canada towards human rights.

Baird was unequivocal in his scorn for the statement.

“I think it’s absolutely ridiculous, and I think 99 per cent of Canadians would share that view,” he said.

On Sept. 7, Baird abruptly announced that Canada had shut down its embassy in Tehran and ordered personnel at the Iranian embassy in Ottawa to leave the country within five days.

“There have been cases of arrest and expulsion of Iranian expatriates under various pretexts and Iranians are deprived of their basic rights to continue with their ordinary activities, including the right to access their banking accounts and do ordinary transactions,” the Iranian Foreign Ministry statement said.

In the past, Ahmadinejad has used the UN spotlight to attack Israel, cast doubt on the Holocaust and question American accounts of the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

There was some of the same in Wednesday’s speech, but in his final address to the UN, Ahmadinejad also took on a loftier tone as he described a new world order.

In what sounded like a sermon at times, Ahmadinejad envisioned a world that lacks the “hegemony of arrogance,” citing what he called the “continued threat by the uncivilized Zionists to resort to military action against our great nation.”

A saviour will soon emerge who will change the world, he added.

“I do not believe that Muslims, Christians, Jews, Hindus, Buddhists, and others have any problems or are hostile against each other,” he said.

He made no reference to Iran’s nuclear program. The United States, Israel, Canada and others fear that program is little more than a pretence for building a nuclear weapon for use against the Israelis.

Iran, however, insists its a peaceful program. The country has been subjected to tough sanctions for its refusal to co-operate with the UN’s nuclear watchdog agency; the UN has asked for proof that its intentions are peaceful as Iran enriches uranium to levels that would allow the construction of a nuclear bomb.

Baird said Canada is pushing for even tougher sanctions.

“We’re always ready to implement new sanctions against Iran … we’re always ready to do even more than what we’ve done up until now,” he said in French on Parliament Hill.

“We’re working now with our allies to see to it that the sanctions be even stronger. We’re much more active than some of the other countries; that’s important.”

Israel has been pounding the drum beat of war against Iran for months. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been criticized for attempting to pressure the U.S. into joining Israel in launching a military strike.

U.S. President Barack Obama, who addressed the UN himself earlier this week in a forceful rebuke of the recent anti-American violence in the Middle East, says the dispute can still be resolved through diplomacy. But he’s also pledged to prevent Iran from building a bomb.

Ahmadinejad assailed both the United States and Israel in his speech, accusing Americans of protecting a nuclear-armed “fake regime.” That shot at Israel prompted the country’s UN ambassador to walk out.

The Iranian leader spoke despite the concerted efforts of some, including Liberal MP Irwin Cotler, to convince UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to pull the plug on his participation.

“Allowing President Ahmadinejad to address the UN General Assembly is a cruel parody of law and justice that will put us on the wrong side of history,” Cotler wrote in a recent letter to the secretary general and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

The letter cited Ahmadinejad for human rights violations, pursuit of nuclear weapons in defiance of the UN and incitement to genocide.

Cotler said the UN should be indicting Ahmadinejad, not inviting him to the podium.

Canada isn’t alone in its outrage about Ahmadinejad. Thousands of protesters streamed into a plaza near the United Nations complex in mid-town Manhattan on Wednesday as the Iranian leader addressed the annual gathering.

Former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani and Newt Gingrich, the one-time Republican presidential hopeful, made appearances at the protest. Syrians were also on hand to denounce Iran’s support of Syrian President Bashar Assad’s bloody crackdown against his opponents.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has decided once again not to speak to the opening of the assembly’s fall session. The UN has met seven times since Harper was elected prime minister; he’s addressed the General Assembly only twice.

In his place, Baird will speak at the UN on Monday.

  • Ahmadinejad’s call for talks: olive branch or delay tactic?

    By Alex Ballingall - Friday, January 27, 2012 at 11:25 AM - 0 Comments

    Why it’s hard to take Tehran’s offer of negotiations seriously

    Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad came forward Thursday to announce his support for renewed negotiations with the international community over his country’s uranium enrichment program. If you’re reading this, you’re likely aware that the dispute over Iran’s nuclear program—which it insists is for energy and medical isotopes, not warheads—has been getting hotter. On Monday, the 27 members of the European Union announced an oil embargo against Iran, effectively putting 18 per cent of the country’s oil exports (roughly 450,000 barrels per day) in jeopardy. The U.S., meanwhile, is pressuring oil companies in India, Japan, China and South Korea to stop dealing with Iran. And Canada has banned any economic activity with Iran’s central bank, as well as any new investment in its oil and gas industry.

    Israel, meanwhile, has held air raid drills to prepare for Iranian missile strikes, while at the same time refusing to preclude the possibility of launching a pre-emptive attack on Iranian nuclear enrichment sites. And of course, as Michael Petrou recently wrote in this magazine, violent attacks and assassinations have been carried out against nuclear scientists in Iran, possibly with the involvement of Israel’s infamous Mossad intelligence agency and/or the CIA. Continue…

  • "Those of us who had been raped spoke the least and cried the most."

    By Michael Petrou - Friday, September 11, 2009 at 11:03 AM - 39 Comments

    More on the abuse of jailed Iranian dissidents.

  • Women? In Ahmadinejad’s cabinet?

    By Katie Engelhart - Thursday, September 3, 2009 at 5:00 PM - 4 Comments

    Proposed welfare minister Ajorlou is a hard-liner

    Women? In Ahmadinejad’s cabinet?The last time a woman was elected to an Iranian cabinet was in the 1960s. It didn’t end well. Eleven years later—and just after the 1979 revolution that launched Iran’s hardline Islamic republic—Farrokhroo Parsay was executed on corruption charges. But after Iran’s 10th presidential election, re-elected President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is promising “a new era,” complete with “major changes” to the government. Last Wednesday, he presented his list of proposed cabinet ministers. For the first time since the revolution, it included women.

    The move may be intended to soften Ahmadinejad’s image and placate the regime’s still-mounting opposition. Iran’s disputed June 12 election, which extended the president’s mandate, gave rise to the most violent domestic crisis since 1979. The new appointments may very well be a nod to the active role that women played in the opposition, taking to the streets in great numbers after the vote. Presidential rival Mirhossein Mousavi, with the help of his Ph.D.-educated wife, was able to mobilize female support with promises to bring down Iran’s “morality police.” Continue…

  • "We have finally learned to fight"

    By Michael Petrou - Monday, June 29, 2009 at 10:52 AM - 0 Comments

    An online version of my first print article on the upheaval in Iran is here. A follow up is on the newsstands now.

From Macleans