©Firemen and police officers search for wounded people after a bomb exploded at the Argentinian Israelite Mutual Association (AMIA in Spanish) in Buenos Aires on July 18 1994. © Ali Burafi/AFP
Argentina has asked Interpol to arrest Iran's interior minister over the 1994 bombing of a Jewish community center in Buenos Aires that killed 85 people, the foreign ministry said Tuesday.
The Iranian minister, Ahmad Vahidi, is part of a delegation from Tehran currently visiting Pakistan and Sri Lanka, and Interpol has issued a red alert seeking his arrest at the request of Argentina, the ministry said in a statement.
On April 12, a court in Argentina placed blame on Iran for the 1994 attack against the AMIA Jewish community center in Buenos Aires and for a bombing two years earlier against the Israeli embassy, which killed 29 people.
The 1994 assault has never been claimed or solved, but Argentina and Israel have long suspected that Hezbollah carried it out at Iran's request.
Prosecutors have charged top Iranian officials with ordering the attack, though Tehran has denied any involvement.
The court also implicated Hezbollah and called the attack against the AMIA—the deadliest in Argentina's history—a "crime against humanity."
In their ruling this month the Argentine judges examined the geopolitical context at the time of the attacks and found they corresponded with foreign policy positions towards Iran under Argentina's then-president Carlos Menem (1989-1999).
The attacks' "origin lies mainly in the unilateral decision of the government—motivated by a change in our country’s foreign policy between late 1991 and mid-1992—to cancel three contracts for the supply of nuclear equipment and technology concluded with Iran," the court concluded.
In 2006 Argentine courts requested the extradition of eight Iranians including Rafsanjani and Vahidi, who served as defense minister when Mahmud Ahmadinejad was president.
A prosecutor named Alberto Nisman opened an investigation in 2015 when Kirchner was in the final year of her second term.
Just before he was due to testify before Congress, Nisman was found dead with a gunshot to the head. The cause of death—suicide or murder—remains a mystery.
With AFP
The Iranian minister, Ahmad Vahidi, is part of a delegation from Tehran currently visiting Pakistan and Sri Lanka, and Interpol has issued a red alert seeking his arrest at the request of Argentina, the ministry said in a statement.
On April 12, a court in Argentina placed blame on Iran for the 1994 attack against the AMIA Jewish community center in Buenos Aires and for a bombing two years earlier against the Israeli embassy, which killed 29 people.
The 1994 assault has never been claimed or solved, but Argentina and Israel have long suspected that Hezbollah carried it out at Iran's request.
Prosecutors have charged top Iranian officials with ordering the attack, though Tehran has denied any involvement.
The court also implicated Hezbollah and called the attack against the AMIA—the deadliest in Argentina's history—a "crime against humanity."
Decades-Long Probe
In their ruling this month the Argentine judges examined the geopolitical context at the time of the attacks and found they corresponded with foreign policy positions towards Iran under Argentina's then-president Carlos Menem (1989-1999).
The attacks' "origin lies mainly in the unilateral decision of the government—motivated by a change in our country’s foreign policy between late 1991 and mid-1992—to cancel three contracts for the supply of nuclear equipment and technology concluded with Iran," the court concluded.
In 2006 Argentine courts requested the extradition of eight Iranians including Rafsanjani and Vahidi, who served as defense minister when Mahmud Ahmadinejad was president.
A prosecutor named Alberto Nisman opened an investigation in 2015 when Kirchner was in the final year of her second term.
Just before he was due to testify before Congress, Nisman was found dead with a gunshot to the head. The cause of death—suicide or murder—remains a mystery.
With AFP
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