Iranian president frees, meets British 
sailorshttp://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070404/ts_nm/iran_britain_dc_46

                                 By Edmund Blair and Parisa Hafezi   55 minutes 
ago 
     
   TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad freed 15 British 
sailors and marines on Wednesday, offering Britain a "gift" in a surprise 
announcement that ended a 13-day crisis which rattled world financial markets. 
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Ahmadinejad told a news conference broadcast round the world he was willing to 
forgive the sailors, seized off the Shatt al-Arab waterway on March 23, even 
though Britain was not "brave enough" to admit it had made a mistake and they 
had strayed into Iranian territory.
 "Under the influence of the Muslim Prophet, (   [input]   [input]   [input]   
[input]   [input]   [input]   [input]   Iran) forgives these 15 people and 
gives their freedom to the British people as a gift," Ahmadinejad said towards 
the end of the 90-minute news conference.
 Speaking later in Downing Street, British Prime Minister    [input]   [input]  
 [input]   [input]   [input]   [input]   [input]   Tony Blair welcomed the 
sailors' release and said Britain bore the Iranian people no ill will.
 "Throughout we have taken a measured approach, firm but calm, not negotiating 
but not confronting either," he told reporters.
 "To the Iranian people I would simply say this: we bear you no ill will... The 
disagreements we have with your government we wish to resolve peacefully 
through dialogue."
 Ahmadinejad's announcement, made with a dramatic flourish, pulled oil prices 
down from recent highs. U.S. stock futures and the dollar rose on relief at the 
peaceful end to the crisis.
 The dispute centered on where the Britons were when they were seized. Britain 
says they were in Iraqi waters on a routine U.N. mission. Tehran says they 
strayed into its territorial waters.
 After his announcement, a smiling Ahmadinejad met several of the sailors, 
dressed in smart suits, shaking hands with them and exchanging a few words 
through an interpreter.
 "We are very grateful for your forgiveness," one of the British sailors told a 
joking Ahmadinejad, who appeared to relish the moment of political theatre. "I 
would like to thank yourself and the Iranian people."
 The captives were expected to be taken to the British embassy in Tehran and an 
Iranian official source said they would leave the capital by plane on Thursday. 
They were expected to arrive in Britain around 1100 GMT.
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 The White House said    [input]   [input]   [input]   [input]   [input]   
[input]   [input]   President George W. Bush welcomed the release, as did EU 
president Germany.
 Nick Summers, the brother of Nathan Summers, one of the captives, was 
jubilant. "It is brilliant news. I am very happy with it," he told Sky News.
 Relatives of other captives also expressed their joy.
 Before making his announcement, Ahmadinejad awarded a medal to the naval 
commander who captured the sailors and strongly criticized Britain, making it 
look as if he might not free the Britons.
 Iranian and British officials had negotiated over the past 48 hours to find a 
diplomatic solution to a crisis that had added to tension over Iran's disputed 
nuclear program, the subject of    [input]   [input]   [input]   [input]   
[input]   [input]   [input]   U.N. Security Council sanctions.
 Ahmadinejad, under the spotlight of world attention, also said he was willing 
to consider reestablishing ties with the United States if that country "changed 
its behaviour," but did not expand on his remark. 
 He again defended his country's right to develop nuclear technology and 
threatened to retaliate for sanctions imposed on Iranian banks. 
 The United States said that if Iran wanted to change its relationship with 
Washington it would have to suspend uranium enrichment, part of its nuclear 
program. 
 Iran's official news agency said Blair's adviser Nigel Sheinwald had spoken to 
Ali Larijani, secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council, on Tuesday 
night, breaking high-level diplomatic ice. 
 The Shatt al-Arab waterway, where British and Iranian naval vessels operate 
daily, remains an area of potential conflict. 
 Analysts said that while Ahmadinejad may hope for praise in the West, Britain 
and the United States are likely to maintain diplomatic pressure, separating 
the sailors' freedom from issues like Iran's nuclear program. 
 (Additional reporting by Lin Noueihad in Dubai, David Clarke, Katherine 
Baldwin, Paul Majendie and Jeremy Lovell in London)




Bismillah, FYI 
Peace,Curtis Sharif
Houston, Texas
 
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