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Showing posts with label UK. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UK. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Britain expels Iranian diplomats and closes Tehran embassy

Britain expels Iranian diplomats and closes Tehran embassy


William Hague says diplomats must leave UK within 48 hours, saying storming of British embassy in Iran had backing of regime

Julian Borger and Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 30 November 2011 14.54 GMT

The foreign secretary tells MPs he has ordered the expulsion of Iranian diplomats from the UK . The foreign secretary, William Hague, has ordered the expulsion of Iranian diplomats from the UK and announced that the UK is closing its embassy in Tehran, saying that the storming of the mission on Tuesday had the backing of the regime.

Hague said Iranian diplomats would have to leave Britain within 48 hours, and that all British embassy staff in Tehran had now left Iran.

He said that the move would not mean the severance of all ties, as the two countries could continue to have a dialogue at international meetings, as the US has done since the seizure and closure of its embassy in 1979, but the move marks a new low in relations, which have been growing increasingly strained.

The foreign secretary said it was not possible to maintain an embassy in the current circumstances, adding that the estimated 200 protesters who invaded the embassy and the British diplomatic compound yesterday were "student basij militia". The basiji operate as a youth wing of Iran's Revolutionary Guards, one of the most powerful institutions in the country.

Hague said it would be "fanciful" to think that the embassy invasion could have taken place without "without some degree of regime consent".

He added: "If any country makes it impossible for us to operate on their soil they cannot expect to have a functioning embassy here."

Iranian diplomats in London refused to comment on the announcement.

Foreign Office sources said the foreign secretary had made his statement minutes after he received confirmation that the 26 British embassy staff had taken off from Tehran, heading for Britain.

The announcement had been delayed until then for fear "there would be some nutso backlash against our people", the source said.

The fleeing diplomats left the Iranian capital with whatever possessions they could salvage from their homes after the British residential compound in northern Tehran had been completely ransacked, an official said.

"The residential accommodation had been comprehensively trashed. The mob had gone through houses and apartments, wrecking them, nicking things. It was like a gang of feral street kids had been given license to do as much damage as possible," he said.

The crowd had also set fire to the first floor of the embassy, the official said, causing extensive damage. The only staff left at the embassy and the residential compound will be local security staff, who will be asked to prevent the buildings becoming "a playground for local youths".

In the next few days a decision will be made on which country's embassy could act as a UK interests section. In previous low points in UK-Iran relations the Swedes have played that role, but no decision has yet been made.

Hague will now go to Brussels for an EU foreign ministers' meeting looking for support, and for other capitals to call in resident ambassadors to complain.

The message, as one official put it, would be: "If you let your thugs destroy our embassy and assault or scare our staff, you cannot expect to maintain normal civilised relations with the rest of the world."

Earlier on Wednesday, Norway temporarily closed its embassy in Tehran, citing security concerns, and Sweden summoned Iran's ambassador to Stockholm to its foreign ministry. "Iran has a duty to protect diplomatic premises, and authorities there should have intervened immediately," said a Swedish foreign ministry spokesman.

The Scandinavian countries' reactions follow outspoken condemnation of the attack from the US and France. The US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, said: "The United States condemns this attack in the strongest possible terms. It is an affront not only to the British people but also the international community," she said.

In Iran the attack on the embassy has prompted mixed reactions even among the supporters of the regime. The Iranian foreign ministry last night expressed regret over the "unacceptable behaviour by [a] few demonstrators" and promised an investigation.

But Ali Larijani, the country's powerful parliamentary speaker, told MPs on Wednesday that the attack was the result of "several decades of domination-seeking behaviour of Britain".

Larijani also criticised the UN security council for condemning Tuesday's incident.

"The hasty move in the security council in condemning the students' action was done to cover up previous crimes of Britain and the United States," the semi-official Mehr news agency quoted Larijani as saying during an open session at Iran's parliament.

In contrast , the Iranian foreign ministry said it was committed to protecting diplomatic personnel and said a thorough investigation would be launched.

In Tehran the episode has been seen as the latest episode in an extraordinary power struggle between the conservatives in parliament and the judiciary on one side, and the government of the president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, on the other.

Pro-Ahmadinejad supporters have interpreted the recent events as an attempt to hamper the government's efforts to reduce tensions with the international community and undermine the government's foreign policy.

Iranian state agencies, meanwhile, tried to depict Tuesday's events as an spontaneous protest by "university students" and attempted to distance the establishment from the attack.

Monday, September 26, 2011

UK plans bulk deportation of Eezham Tamil asylum seekers

File Photo:Inauguration of Global Tamil Forum in London(2010)-Shadow Foriegn Secretary for the Conservatives William Hague


* UK plans bulk deportation of Eezham Tamil asylum seekers


* British diplomat visits Mannaar, meets Bishop

British diplomat visits Mannaar, meets Bishop

[TamilNet, Friday, 23 September 2011, 18:42 GMT]
Fishing ban is still in force in Mannaar district while the uprooted people are still waiting for resettlement, according to representations made by residents to the visiting Deputy High Commissioner of United Kingdom Robbie Bulloch. The British diplomat paid a visit to Mannaar on Wednesday and held discussion with the Bishop of Mannaar Diocese Rt.Rev.Rayappu Joseph and Rev.Fr.Victor Soosai. The discussion was held at Mannaar Bishop’s House.
A section of uprooted people are still remaining in temporary shelters waiting resettlement.
Journalists of the district at a discussion briefed the UK Deputy High Commissioner that they are still finding difficult to discharge their duties without fear and intimidation.

UK plans bulk deportation of Eezham Tamil asylum seekers

[TamilNet, Monday, 26 September 2011, 11:44 GMT]
UK has taken a decision to deport more than 100 Eezham Tamil asylum seekers to Sri Lanka on 28 of this month. The Home Ministry of UK has taken this decision as a test case to declare Sri Lanka a country free from human rights violations, said Eezham Tamil diaspora activists protesting the deportation in a meeting convened by Tamil Lawyers Association at Ealing Amman Temple in London on Sunday. Meanwhile, just last Tuesday, delivering a judgement and stopping the deportation of an Eezham Tamil refugee in India, judge Arul Varma said in New Delhi, “Handing over a refugee to Sri Lanka where he fears persecution will make us nothing short of abettors.” The Indian judge was worrying about the lack of proper refugee laws in India, but UK has striped the rights of its courts to intervene in such matters, the UK lawyers commented.
“The very idea of deporting the convict herein to his country of origin, where he has a well-founded fear of persecution, would not be in consonance with the principles of natural justice. How can the court become a party to the persecution of an individual? The court cannot retrograde itself to the position of a mute spectator,” Indian judge Arul Varma said last Tuesday in the case of refugee Chandra Kumar whom the Indian government wanted to deport to Sri Lanka as a part of punishment for his attempt to leave for Italy without proper documents.
No British court or EU laws could save the cases of the Eezham Tamil asylum seekers that are decided on the ‘fast track’ system based on ‘political’ considerations, Tamil diaspora activists said.
The president of Tamil Lawyers Association, Barrister SJ Joseph advised public protest and political action through Members of Parliament.
Mr Tim Martin of Act Now, who was speaking at the meeting, was accusing the political shade of opinion the British Defence Secretary Liam Fox was favouring to Sri Lanka. Act Now along with Tamil Solidarity went into a campaign against Liam Fox in his constituency.
Tim Martin wanted the UK Home Secretary also to be countered in her own constituency.
The International Crisis Group in its September 13 report has classified UK as an international partner of Sri Lanka along with India, Japan, USA, EU and UN in the war waged in the island.
The listing implies UK as a partner in the war crimes as well.
At the height of the war, instead of voicing for stopping the genocide, UK’s representative at the UN Security Council chose to tell that the LTTE was long ‘blighting’ Sri Lanka.
After the war, the UK is yet to acknowledge the genocide in the island or the right to self-determination of Eezham Tamils as a solution.
Any Eezham Tamil just verbally voicing inside or outside of the island for his or her independence is ‘constitutionally’ enough to penalise the person in the island. One doesn’t need any other reason.
By certifying Sri Lanka a free country for Eezham Tamils at this crucial juncture, what UK wants to convene will have a long impact on Tamil- British relationship, the Tamil diaspora circles said.
Well-wishers and relatives of the asylum seekers have decided in the meeting to mobilise the support of the concerned Members of Parliament representing their constituencies.
With the kind of structural genocide pursued by Sri Lanka, Eezham Tamils refugees coming out of the island will be ever increasing is the opinion of political observers.
If the UK really wants to stop the refugees coming, if it really wants the refugees to get back, if it really wants the Tamil diaspora to engage in productive ways in the island that are beneficial to the UK too, then it should help the liberation of Eezham Tamils, the UK diaspora activists said.

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