Iran releases British Embassy employee on bail
TEHRAN,Iran — The lawyer for an Iranian employee of the British Embassy accused of involvement in post-election protests says his client has been released on bail.
Abdolsamad Khorramshi says Hossein Rassam, the embassy’s chief political analyst, was released from Evin prison in Tehran on Sunday on bail of about $100,000.
Rassam was jailed on June 27 and has been charged with harming national security.
Iran arrested nine local employees of the British Embassy in June, saying they were involved in protests that followed last month’s disputed presidential election. The others were released, and Rassam is the only one who has been charged.
British Foreign Secretary David Miliband told the BBC the claims against the staff had no substance.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.
TEHRAN,Iran (AP) — President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, already at the center of a post-election crisis, came under criticism from his own hard-line supporters Sunday for appointing a first vice president who once caused an outcry by saying Iranians were friends of Israelis.
Ahmadinejad has been under siege by opposition supporters who claim he stole last month’s election from pro-reform candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi. The latest criticism was a reminder that while hard-liners have supported Ahmadinejad in the election dispute, they often criticized him before the vote, especially over his handling of Iran’s economy.
The disagreements among hard-liners had been set aside since the June 12 election as they faced hundreds of thousands of Mousavi supporters who protested in the streets over what they said was massive vote fraud.
Authorities have cracked down violently and have arrested hundreds. They detained 40 on Friday after police clashed with thousands of protesters in the biggest opposition show of strength in weeks, the semiofficial Fars news agency reported Sunday. Some of those arrested were eventually released, it said.
The clashes followed a sermon by one of Iran’s most powerful clerics, former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, who criticized the government’s response to the election dispute.
Also Friday, Ahmadinejad appointed Esfandiar Rahim Mashai, his son’s father-in-law, as his first vice president. Mashai angered hard-liners in 2008 when he said Iranians were “friends of all people in the world — even Israelis.”
Mashai was serving as vice president in charge of tourism and cultural heritage at the time. Iran has 12 vice presidents, but the first vice president is the most important because he leads Cabinet meetings in the absence of the president.
Hossein Shariatmadari, an aide to supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and editor of hard-line Kayhan newspaper, said Sunday that Mashai’s appointment caused “a wave of surprise mixed with regret and concern” among Ahmadinejad supporters.
“Many of the closest individuals to the president strongly oppose the appointment,” he added.
Most hard-liners consider Israel to be Iran’s archenemy, and Ahmadinejad himself has repeatedly called for the Jewish state’s destruction.
Khamenei, who has supported Ahmadinejad in the election dispute, called Mashai’s comments about Israelis “illogical” shortly after he said them but urged critics to abandon their call for the president to fire his relative.
Mashai also angered many of Iran’s top clerics in 2007 when he attended a ceremony in Turkey where women performed a traditional dance. Conservative interpretations of Islam prohibit women from dancing.
He ran into trouble again in 2008 when he hosted a ceremony in Tehran in which several women played tambourines while another one carried the Quran to a podium to recite verses from the Muslim holy book. Hard-liners viewed the festive mood as disrespectful to the Quran.
Ali Motahari, a prominent hard-line lawmaker, said lawmakers should summon Ahmadinejad to parliament to express opposition to Mashai. Others said they planned to appeal to Khamenei to reverse the appointment. The supreme leader has final say over all state matters.
The criticism was a change of focus for hard-liners, who have spent the last few weeks lambasting Mousavi and his supporters for challenging the presidential election. On Saturday, hard-liners accused Rafsanjani of defying Khamenei by using his sermon to encourage opposition supporters to continue their protests.
Rafsanjani, speaking publicly for the first time since the election, denounced the government’s violent crackdown against protesters and demanded the release of those detained. Instead of suppression, he said the government should work to address the concerns Iranians have over the legitimacy of the vote.
The sermon was a direct challenge to Khamenei and his hard-line supporters, who have said the election was fair and have called on opposition supporters to drop their claims of vote fraud.
The protest movement and the split it has caused within the highest reaches of Iran’s clerical hierarchy have presented Khamenei with the country’s greatest challenge since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
Related News
Iran releases prominent opposition figure on bail after more than 3 months in jailOctober 1st, 2009 Iran releases prominent opposition figure on bailTEHRAN, Iran — One of Iran's most prominent pro-reform figures has been released on bail after more than three months in jail on charges of inciting the country's postelection unrest, state media and his lawyer said Thursday. Saeed Hajjarian is considered a top architect and ideologue of the movement pushing for more social and political freedoms in Iran.
Report: Iran releases top opposition figure on bail after more than 3 months in jailOctober 1st, 2009 Report: Iran releases opposition figure on bailTEHRAN, Iran — Iran has released one of the country's most prominent pro-reform figures on bail after jailing him for more than three months on charges of inciting the country's postelection unrest, state media reported Thursday. Saeed Hajjarian is considered a top architect and ideologue of the movement pushing for more social and political freedoms in Iran.
French scholar's father hopes she returns home in weeks, after release on bail from Iran jailAugust 17th, 2009 Father: Frenchwoman should leave Iran within weeksPARIS — The father of a French academic on trial in Iran said Monday he hopes she can come home within weeks as the government continued efforts to secure her unconditional release. Clotilde Reiss is one of more than 100 people in a mass trial in Iran on charges linked to postelection protests.
British embassy official confesses to spying during trial in IranAugust 9th, 2009 TEHRAN - Britain's troubled relations with Iran suffered a further setback as a British embassy official confessed to spying during a trial in Tehran, saying that Britain had provided financial assistance to Iran's reformists to weaken the hardline clerical regime during the disputed presidential elections in June this year. Hossein Rassam, a political analyst with the embassy, said the embassy had allocated a budget of 300,000 pounds to set up links with political groups, individuals and activists.
Iran President Ahmadinejad criticized by hard-line supporters over choice of vice presidentJuly 19th, 2009 Iran's Ahmadinejad criticized over VP choiceTEHRAN,Iran — President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, already at the center of a post-election crisis, came under criticism from his own hard-line supporters Sunday for appointing a first vice president who once caused an outcry by saying Iranians were friends of Israelis. Ahmadinejad has been under siege by opposition supporters who claim he stole last month's election from pro-reform candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi.
Iran frees British embassy staffer on bailJuly 19th, 2009 TEHRAN - Iran Sunday freed a British embassy staffer, the last of nine arrested on suspicion in fomenting dissent after alleged fraud in Iran's June 12 presidential elections. Hossein Rassam, chief analyst of the British embassy, had been detained for more than three weeks.
Report:US forces releases 5 Iranian diplomats in BaghdadJuly 9th, 2009 US releases 5 Iranian diplomatsTEHRAN,Iran — Iran's state television says U.S. forces have released five Iranian diplomats who were detained in 2006 in northern Iraq on suspicion of aiding Shiite Iraqi militants.
Iran frees a British embassy employee, another still heldJuly 6th, 2009 LONDON - One of the last two British Embassy employees, held in Iran on the alleged charges of being behind last month's post-election violence in the country, has been released. The British Foreign Office on Monday confirmed the news, but added that embassy's chief political analyst Hossein Rassam is still under detention.
Iran to use UK travel advisory as "proof" against British Embassy employeeJuly 5th, 2009 TEHRAN - Iran is set to use a travel advisory posted on the British Foreign Office's website as evidence against a British Embassy employee in the political plot trial. British embassy's chief political analyst Hossein Rassam, 44, was accused of being a British agent provocateur behind last month's post-election street protests, the Telegraph reports.
Iranian lawyer says to seek permission to meet detained UK embassy stafferJuly 4th, 2009 TEHRAN - An Iranian lawyer has said that he is seeking the permission of the concerned authorities here to see a detained British embassy staffer who has been accused of "acting against national security". "I have not met with him yet, but I will ask the judiciary for an appointment," The Telegraph quoted lawyer Abolsamad Khorramshahi, as saying.
Lawyer: Local British embassy employee charged by Iran with 'acting against national security'July 4th, 2009 British embassy employee in Iran chargedTEHRAN — The lawyer for a detained Iranian employee of the British embassy in Tehran says his client has been charged with "acting against national security."
Lawyer Abdolsamad Khorramshi says his client is being held in Evin prison and will in all likelihood stand trial soon. The lawyer on Saturday identified his client as Hossein Rassam, the embassy's chief political analyst, and said he had not yet been able to meet with him or see the text of the indictment.
Not downgrading diplomatic ties with Britain, says IranJune 29th, 2009 TEHRAN - Iran is not planning to downgrade diplomatic ties with Britain or any European country, foreign ministry spokesman Hassan Ghashghavi said Monday. Police arrested eight Iranian staff members of the British embassy in Tehran Sunday, a move condemned by British Foreign Minister David Miliband.
8 British embassy staff members arrested in Iran: ReportJune 28th, 2009 TEHRAN - Iran has arrested eight local staff members of the British embassy in Tehran for alleged involvement in demonstrations over the June 12 presidential election, Fars news agency reported Sunday. Iran accuses Western agents of inciting unrest and interfering in internal political matters.
Britain calls detention of UK embassy employees in Iran 'harassment and intimidation'June 28th, 2009 UK calls embassy detentions in Iran 'unacceptable'CORFU, Greece — Britain's foreign secretary categorically denied Sunday that his country had helped foment postelection discontent in Iran. David Miliband, who is on the Greek island of Corfu for a meeting of foreign ministers' from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, condemned the detention of British Embassy employees in Iran, which he said occurred Saturday.
Lawyer: US journalist leaves jail in Iran after court suspends her prison sentenceMay 11th, 2009 Lawyer: US reporter leaves jail in IranTEHRAN, Iran — A lawyer for a U.S. journalist jailed in Iran says she has been freed from prison after an appeals court suspended her eight-year jail sentence.