The Phnom Penh Post

Tehran points fingers at US and allies over deadly attack

- Marc Jourdier

IRANIAN President Hassan Rouhani on Sunday pointed blame at Arab separatist­s for a deadly attack on a military parade and accused an unnamed US-backed Gulf state of supporting them.

Tehran also summoned diplomats from Denmark, the Netherland­s and Britain for allegedly hosting members of the group suspected of links to Saturday’s attack that killed 24 people, according to a revised death toll.

Four militants attacked a parade commemorat­ing the start of the 19801988 Iran-Iraq war in the southweste­rn city of Ahvaz, capital of the border province of Khuzestan.

Officials and an eyewitness said the gunmen were clad in Iranian military uniforms and had sprayed the crowd with gunfire using weapons they had stashed in a nearby park.

Iranian authoritie­s see an Arab separatist movement, the Ahwazi Democratic Popular Front (ADPF) or Al-Ahwazi, as the main suspect.

“One of the countries in the south of the Persian Gulf took care of their financial, weaponry and political needs,” said President Rouhani.

“All these little mercenary countries we see in this region are backed by America. It is the Americans who incite them.”

London-based opposition channel Iran Internatio­nal TV aired an interview Saturday with Yaqoub Hor Altostari, presented as a spokesman for ADPF, indirectly claiming responsibi­lity for the attack and calling it “resistance against legitimate targets”.

But in a statement on its website, the group denied any involvemen­t, accusing Iranian authoritie­s of ordering the attack to distract from Tehran’s support for “militias in the region”.

Diplomatic row

Iran summoned diplomats from Denmark, the Netherland­s and Britain to complain about them “hosting some members of the terrorist group” and “double standards in fighting terrorism”, the foreign ministry said.

The British charge d’affaires “was told that it is not acceptable that the spokesman for the mercenary Al-Ahwazi group be allowed to claim responsibl­ity for this terrorist act through a London-based TV network”, said ministry spokesman Bahram Ghasemi.

Britain said its diplomat had extended the country’s condolence­s to Tehran and that Iranian officials were planning to lodge a formal complaint with the United Kingdom’s media watchdog, Ofcom.

Ghasemi also said Iran expected the Danish and Dutch government­s to “hand over the perpetrato­rs of this attack and anyone related to them to Iran for a fair trial”.

Denmark said there would be conse- quences if any such links were establishe­d, while the Netherland­s said it had heard the Iranian version of events and offered its condolence­s.

Iran also warned the United Arab Emirates over “offensive remarks” attributed to a UAE “political adviser” following the attack.

Oman, Kuwait and Qatar issued condemnati­ons of the attack, while Saudi Arabia and Bahrain had yet to react on Sunday.

The UAE minister of state for foreign affairs, Anwar Gargash, for his part, stressed his country’s rejection of acts of terrorism and accused Tehran of a campaign of “official incitement” against the Emirates.

State media initially gave a toll of 29 dead and 57 wounded in the attack, including women and children, but Ahvaz city governor Jamal Alami Neysi said Sunday this was a mistake and put the numbers at 24 dead and 60 wounded.

Three attackers were also killed and the fourth died later of his injuries, the armed forces said.

IS had claimed the attack via its propaganda mouthpiece Amaq, and that the attack was in response to Iranian involvemen­t in conflicts across the region.

The Revolution­ary Guards accused Shiite-dominated Iran’s Sunni archrival Saudi Arabia of funding the attackers, while Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei also blamed Iran’s pro-US rivals.

“A deadly and unforgetta­ble revenge will be exacted . . . in the near future,” it said.

 ?? ATTA KENARE/AFP ?? Iranians carry the body of one of those killed during an attack on a military parade, during a mass funeral for the victims in the southweste­rn Iranian city of Ahvaz on Monday.
ATTA KENARE/AFP Iranians carry the body of one of those killed during an attack on a military parade, during a mass funeral for the victims in the southweste­rn Iranian city of Ahvaz on Monday.

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