Argentina Court Blames 'Terrorist State' Iran for 1990s Attacks
©(Ali BURAFI / AFP)
A court in Argentina called Iran a "terrorist state" on Friday for its role in two deadly terror attacks against the Israeli embassy and Jewish Centre in the 1990s. 

Over three decades after deadly attacks in Buenos Aires targeted Israel's embassy and a Jewish center, an Argentinian court placed the blame on Thursday on Iran and declared it a "terrorist state," according to local media.

The ruling, cited by press reports, said that Iran had ordered the attack in 1992 on Israel's embassy and the 1994 attack on the Argentine Israelite Mutual Association (AMIA) Jewish center.

The court also implicated the Iran-backed Shiite movement Hezbollah and called the attack against the AMIA – the deadliest in Argentina's history – a "crime against humanity," according to court documents cited by media reports.

"Hezbollah carried out an operation that responded to a political, ideological and revolutionary design under the mandate of a government, of a State," Carlos Mahiques, one of the three judges who issued the decision, told Radio Con Vos, referencing Iran.

In 1992, a bomb attack on the Israeli embassy left 29 dead. Two years later, a truck loaded with explosives drove into the AMIA Jewish center and detonated, leaving 85 dead and 300 injured.

The 1994 assault has never been claimed or solved, but Argentina and Israel have long suspected that Lebanon's Shiite Hezbollah group carried it out at Iran's request.
Iran Denies Any Involvement

Prosecutors charged top Iranian officials with ordering the attack. Tehran has denied any involvement.


Argentina has the largest Jewish community in Latin America, with some 300,000 members.

It is also home to immigrant communities from the Middle East – from Syria and Lebanon in particular.

The judges ruled on Thursday that the AMIA attack was a crime against humanity, and put blame on then-president Ali Akbar Hashemi Bahramaie Rafsanjani as well as other Iranian officials and Hezbollah members.

The decision was welcomed by the president of the Delegation of Israelite Associations of Argentina (DAIA), Jorge Knoblovits.

He told Radio Mitre the ruling "is very important, because it enables the victims to go to the International Criminal Court."

Former Argentine president Carlos Menem, who died in 2021 and was the president at the time of both attacks, was tried for covering up the AMIA bombing, but ultimately acquitted.

His former intelligence chief Hugo Anzorreguy was sentenced to four-and-a-half years in jail for his role in obstructing the probe.

With AFP
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