http://www.iranmania.com/News/ArticleView/Default.asp?NewsCode=47131&NewsKind=Current%20Affairs

Argentina orders ex-Iran President held

Friday, November 10, 2006 - ©2005 IranMania.com

LONDON, November 10 (IranMania) - A federal judge ordered the detention 
of former Iranian President Hashemi Rafsanjani and eight others in 
connection with the 1994 bombing of a Jewish cultural center that killed 
85 people, the judge's office said, The Associated Press reported.

A special prosecutor sought the order, alleging that the worst terrorist 
attack on Argentine soil was orchestrated by leaders of the Iranian 
government and entrusted to the Lebanon-based militant group Hezbollah.

Iran's leading diplomatic envoy in Buenos Aires, Mohsen Baharvand, told 
The Associated Press that his government would oppose any efforts to 
detain Rafsanjani or other Iranian nationals. Baharvand, Iran's charge 
d'affaires, said the case was politically motivated.

An official in the office of Federal Judge Rodolfo Canicoba Corral, who 
spoke with the AP on condition of not being identified, said the judge 
was seeking the detention of Rafsanjani and eight others. The official 
spoke on condition of anonymity in keeping with traditional court 
practice here in such cases.

The July 1994 bombing of the Jewish cultural center here killed 85 
people and injured more than 200 others. Investigators say an 
explosives-packed van was driven up to the building and detonated.

Iran's government has vehemently denied any involvement in the attack 
following repeated accusations by the Jewish community and other leaders 
here.

Baharvand called the effort a "huge propaganda" campaign against his 
country, adding Iran was "a scapegoat for the shortcomings of the 
countries that are not able to find the real perpetrators of this act."

"These are baseless allegations against my country," he added.

Two special prosecutors on Oct. 25 urged Canicoba Corral to seek 
international and national arrest orders for Rafsanjani, who was Iran's 
president between 1989 and 1997 and is now the head of the Expediency 
Council, which mediates between parliament and the clerics in ruling the 
country.

Alberto Nisman, the lead prosecutor, said last month that the decision 
to attack the center "was undertaken in 1993 by the highest authorities" 
of the Iranian government at the time, and that the actual attack was 
entrusted to Hezbollah.

Nisman also asked Canicoba Corral to detain several other former Iranian 
officials, including former intelligence chief Ali Fallahijan, former 
Foreign Minister Ali Ar Velayati, two former commanders of Iran's 
Revolutionary Guards, two former Iranian diplomats and a former 
Hezbollah security chief for external affairs.

A botched investigation into the case by Judge Juan Jose Galeano was 
halted in 2004 by federal courts and a special investigation unit was 
created.

Galeano was removed from the case and later stripped of his judgeship.

Nisman said in November 2005 that investigators believed a 21-year-old 
Lebanese Hezbollah militant had been identified as the suicide bomber.

The attack on the seven-story Jewish center, symbol of a Jewish 
population numbering more than 200,000, was the second of two attacks 
targeting Jews in Argentina during the 1990s.

A March 1992 blast destroyed the Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires, 
killing 29 people in a case that has also been blamed on Hezbollah.

Some speculated the bombing was inspired by Argentina's support for the 
US-led coalition that expelled Iraq from Kuwait during the Gulf War in 
the early 1990s. Others said Argentina's Jewish community, one of the 
largest in Latin America, represented an obvious target for Israel's 
opponents.

Although Jewish community leaders and others have suspected the 
involvement of Middle East terrorists, a lack of progress in tracking 
down the masterminds has made families of the victims increasingly bitter.

Israeli Ambassador Rafael Eldad told the independent news agency Diarios 
y Noticias that the judge's step was a "very significant" development 
and expressed hope it would help resolve the case.

+++



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