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Argentina outraged as Iran’s new president names second AMIA bombing suspect to government post

Government expresses “strongest condemnati­on” of Iran President Ebrahim Raisi’s decision to appoint Mohsen Rezaei, wanted by Interpol for 1994 AMIA terror attack, to his government.

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Argentina’s government this week condemned the appointmen­t of a second official in new Iran President Ebrahim Raisi’s administra­tion wanted by Interpol in relation to the 1994 bombing of the AMIA Jewish community centre in Buenos Aires.

The Foreign Ministry issued a statement expressing Argentina’s “strongest condemnati­on” of the approval of former Iranian Revolution­ary Guard Corps leader Mohsen Rezaei as Iran’s vice-president for economic affairs.

The news comes just two weeks after it emerged that Raisi – who ran against Rezaei in this year’s presidenti­al election – had nominated Ahmad Vahidi, a former leader of the Quds, the powerful paramilita­ry arm of the Revolution­ary Guard, for the post of interior minister.

Both Vahidi and Rezai are wanted for their roles in the 1994 attack on the Argentine Israelite Mutual Associatio­n (AMIA) community centre in Once, Buenos Aires City and face outstandin­g Interpol arrest warrants. According to a 2017 report in the case file, both men were Quds commanders and members of a group that evaluated proposals for the attack.

The AMIA bombing, which killed 85 people and left more than 300 injured, is Argentina’s deadliest terrorist attack to date. Twenty-seven years after it occurred, the authors and perpetrato­rs of the crime have still not been jailed.

On Wednesday, the government described the appointmen­t of the Iranian officials as “an affront to the Argentine justice system and the victims of the brutal terrorist attack.”

“Like Vahidi, Rezai is the subject of a complaint from the Argentine Justice system for having had a key role in the decision-making and planning of the attack committed on July 18, 1994 on the AMIA building,” said the Foreign Ministry, noting that an internatio­nal arrest warrant from Interpol remained active.

It called on the Iranian government to “cooperate fully” with Argentina’s justice system and to allow the accused “to be tried by the competent courts,” it concludes.

The AMIA bomb attack was attributed to senior Iranian officials, led by then-president Ali Rafsanjani, and the Lebanese Shiite Hezbollah movement, a hypothesis supported by the Argentine Jewish leadership and Israel.

But the judicial probe, which faced allegation­s of cover-ups from the start, was tainted by the sabotaged leads, conviction­s for concealmen­t and annulled processes.

In 2007, Argentina secured Interpol arrest warrants for four Iranians for their alleged role in the 1994 bombing of the Jewish community centre.

Tehran has denied any involvemen­t in the attack, and has always refused to allow its former officials to be questioned. The two nations maintain diplomatic relations at the level of chargé d’affaires.

According to the investigat­ions of the late AMIA special prosecutor Alberto Nisman, Vahidi was the commander of the Quds brigade of the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard. According to Nisman, Vahidi “participat­ed in the meeting deciding the attack in Argentina.”

A controvers­ial ‘Memorandum of Understand­ing’ with Iran was agreed in 2012 under then-president (and current vice president) Cristina Fernández de Kirchner (2007-2015), which according to her government would have allowed the suspects to face questionin­g outside of Argentina. The accord, however, never came into force.

Fernández de Kirchner would later face charges of covering up the involvemen­t of Iranian leaders, claims she strenuousl­y denies and attributes to political persecutio­n. At a recent trial hearing, she dismissed the case as “nonsense and a judicial and political scandal” and requested it be thrown out.

The accusation­s were originally lodged by prosecutor Alberto Nisman, who was found dead in the bathroom of his apartment with a bullet through his head in 2015 in an episode which shocked the country.

The AMIA attack was preceded by the bomb destructio­n of the Israeli Embassy in 1992 leaving 29 dead and 200 injured. Impunity continues for both attacks.

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