Low Graphics Site
White bar
.: Latest News :. .: News in Pictures :.
Daily SectionMarker

Misc SectionMarker

Horoscope Recipes Weekly SectionMarker

Weekly SectionMarker



Pakistan's Internet Magazine
Herald
Dawn GroupMarker

Archive, Search, Feedback & HelpMarker

Weather

Dawn Classified



FrontPage National International Local Business KSE Forex Sports Editorial Opinion Letters Features Today's Cartoon TV Guide Cowasjee Ayaz Irfan Hussain Review Dawn Magazine Young World Images Dawn Group Subscription To Advertise

DINA
Previous Story DAWN - the Internet Edition Next Story

September 21, 2005 Wednesday Sha’aban 16, 1426


UN speech makes Ahmadinejad hero



By Saloumeh Peyman


TEHRAN: While moves are afoot to bring United Nations Security Council (UNSC) sanctions to bear on Iran for its atomic programme, Iranian President Dr Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has become a national hero and a symbol of defiance against the West.

Populerly known as Engineer Chamran, a reference to late Dr Mustafa Chamaran who was one of the pillars of the Islamic Revolution in Iran, Dr Ahmadinejad returned to a hero’s welcome in Tehran on the weekend, after proclaiming Iran’s inalienable right to produce nuclear fuel at the United Nations General Assembly in New York.

Germany, France and Britain, known as the EU-3, have begun drafting a resolution to get the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to refer Iran to the UNSC immediately after Ahmadinejad’s speech at the UN on Saturday.

Hundreds of Iranian men, families in tow and the women doffing their veils in a departure from Islamic tradition, joined in welcoming Ahmadinejad, wearing the humble, religious man-on-the-street attitude that, unexpectedly for the West, won him a landslide victory against wealthy reformists in the presidential elections in June.

Many older generation Iranians said the welcome accorded to Dr Ahmadinejad reminded them of a time, 60 years ago, when another popular leader, Mohammed Mossadegh, returned home after successfully defending Iran’s national rights to its oil at the Hague, against British oil companies and colluding Iranian elite.

On Monday, Ahmadinejad declared to his people over state television that Iran was not worried about any reference by the IAEA to the UNSC. “They do what they have to do and we do what we have to do—our position will remain unchanged,” he declared.

“The people of Iran will insist on their rights and nothing is going to happen to them,” he added reassuringly.

A retired engineer, Hasan Daqiqi, told IPS: “Dr Ahmadinejad is not doing anything special — only what every single Iranian patriot would do.”

“Do not ask my name, I am one of the millions of Iranian Muslim, secular, nationalists from different walks of society, and President Ahmadinejad has just lifted our spirits — we are proud of him,” said another old man with a luxuriant white beard.

The homecoming celebrations continued through the weekend and merged into Sunday’s commemoration of the birth of Muhammad Al Mahdi, the 12th Shia Imam providing an opportunity to give the right spiritual touch to the political proceedings.

On the other hand, the Iranian government is bracing for tough times days ahead, though supporters of the ruling establishment and even some secular nationalists believe that it is worth paying the price to defend the nation’s right to have access to peaceful nuclear energy.

At a press conference here on Sunday, foreign ministry spokesman, Hamid Reza Asefi, recommended that the IAEA refrain from taking a radical approach. “Europeans and the IAEA should look into Iran’s nuclear case with logic and avoid language of threat and pressure which will bear no fruit.”

“Our advice to the agency (IAEA) is to review Iran’s case tomorrow, logically and realistically, to avoid making the case more complicated,” Asefi said at the conference. Asefi also projected Iran’s defiant mood by saying that Iran would not hesitate to begin uranium enrichment (another step towards making atomic bombs) if it found the IAEA’s course of action wanting from its point of view. Interpretations of Asefi’s press conference in Monday’s Farsi language press were optimistic.

The ‘Aftabyazd’ daily highlighted Asefi’s statement: “Sending Iran’s dossier to the UNSC does not imply military assault on Iran,” the paper said in a headline.

But, the fact that Iran could be banking heavily on support from Asian and African countries as well as China and Russia in the UNSC, if it came to that, was evident through comments in the press, which is closely monitored by the government.

In an editorial in the ‘Sharq’ daily on Monday, Farzaneh Roostaee said: “The dispute on how to cope with Iran’s nuclear case may extend to the next 2006 UNGA as the US has failed to woo Indian support against Iran”.

India and other non-Western nuclear countries, such as Russia, China and South Africa, are chary of backing a reference to the UNSC of Iran’s nuclear programme by the IAEA that has been meeting in Vienna since Monday to decide the issue.

But a decision on the issue could take as long as a week as the 35-nation IAEA, the UN’s nuclear watchdog, thrashes out the reference issue behind closed doors, which could eventually lead to punitive sanctions against Iran. The weekend celebrations focused on the religious tone of Dr Ahmadinejad’s UN speeches and many said it would help the president mobilise the support that may be needed in the coming days in the event of international sanctions or a confrontation with the US

At the celebrations, which included the singing of Shia lyrics praising the 12 immaculate imams, one panegyrist intoned: “Ahmadinejad is the only Shia president to mention the holy name of the 12th Imam Mahdi from the UN podium. He, the President, has shaken the heart of America in the heart of America (UN headquarters)”. The 12th Mohammed Al Mahdi, a direct descendent of Prophet Muhammad (pbuh), disappeared mysteriously 12 centuries ago but Shias believe he will return to rule the world.

“Ahmadinejad has demonstrated to the world that Iran is powerful, a seeker of peace and a reformist,” the panegyrist sang and called for “more voices from Africa and Asia in the UNSC so that justice may prevail”. —Dawn/Inter-Press News Service



Click to learn more...
Please Visit our Sponsor (Ads open in separate window)

Previous Story Top of Page Next Story

Seprater
Contributions
Privacy Policy
© DAWN Group of Newspapers, 2005