Britain Withdraws All Embassy Staff from Iran

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  • W460
  • W460

Britain was Wednesday evacuating its diplomatic staff from Iran following the storming of its embassy by Iranian protesters the day before, which sparked international condemnation.

The Foreign Office in London confirmed information from EU diplomats in the Iranian capital that the British staff was being withdrawn.

"In light of yesterday's events and to ensure their ongoing safety, some staff are leaving Tehran," a Foreign Office spokesman said.

A first group of embassy employees was already at Tehran airport about to be flown to Dubai, one European diplomat told Agence France Presse. He and other diplomats said all the British embassy staff was leaving.

The British diplomats had spent the night in the security of various EU embassies, notably the French mission.

The evacuation was decided after Iranian protesters, some chanting "Death to Britain", overran Britain's two diplomatic compounds in Tehran for several hours Tuesday, tearing down the British flag and trashing embassy offices.

The protesters were reflecting official anger at Britain's decision last week to cut all relations with Iran's financial sector as part of a raft of new sanctions unveiled in coordination with the United States and Canada.

The storming of Britain's embassy sparked international condemnation, including a strongly worded statement from the U.N. Security Council.

U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon said during a trip to South Korea he was "shocked and outraged to hear of the incident in Tehran in which demonstrators entered the British embassy, briefly abducted embassy staff and damaged property."

Even Russia -- Iran's closest major ally -- condemned the incursions as "unacceptable"

It took diplomatic police several hours to free six diplomats sequestered by hundreds of protesters inside a building in Britain's diplomatic compound in the north of the capital, the Fars news agency reported.

Inside the embassy in the city center, several protesters scattered documents and set them alight, witnesses told AFP. One protester was seen looting a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II.

Iran's foreign ministry expressed "regret" over the incident, but some Iranian officials were defiant, blaming the dramatic scenes on Britain's stance towards their country.

Parliament speaker Ali Larijani said the U.N. Security Council's condemnation was "hasty," state television reported.

He said "a number of students angered by the British government's behavior" had carried out their actions because of "decades of domineering moves by the British in Iran."

The head of parliament's security and foreign policy committee, Alaeddin Boroujerdi, told state news agency IRNA: "Iran respects all international laws and the Vienna Convention (on the protection of embassies) and this issue must in no way cause concern for other diplomats and embassies."

He, too, downplayed the storming of the embassy as "a manifestation of the students' high emotions."

Britain, though, called the acts "a very serious failure by the Iranian government." Britons were warned against non-essential travel to Iran and the few in the country were advised to stay indoors.

The United States -- which cut off diplomatic ties to Iran after students stormed its own embassy in 1979, taking 52 Americans hostage for 444 days -- also expressed alarm.

President Barack Obama said the storming of the embassy was "not acceptable" and that "all of us are deeply disturbed."

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called it "an affront not only to the British people but also to the international community."

Tuesday's demonstration had been organized days earlier, when the Iranian parliament passed a law to expel Britain's ambassador in retaliation for London's new sanctions.

Britain and the United States have been leading Western moves to step up pressure on Iran over its nuclear program, which they fear is being used as cover for the development of a weapons capability.

The looting of the British embassy and compound came ahead of an EU foreign ministers' meeting on Thursday that is expected to unveil new sanctions against Tehran over its nuclear program.

Iran has repeatedly denied its nuclear program has a military component, and has warned it will respond to any military attack by raining missiles on Israel and Turkey.

Comments 3
Default-user-icon Gebran Sons for Cedar Revolution II in 2013 (Guest) 30 November 2011, 09:20

Who those Basij are kidding? Iran criminal regime and its Grand Inquisitor can only take pride in transforming a Great civilization into N Korean-type brainless mobs led by a leadership that is an embarrassment to civility, dignity and human rights. Like all tyrants, Iranian regime has stole the country enormous natural riches to build rockets, pursue its nuclear nirvana, export radicalism and instability, and import all forms of oppressions and intimidations. Despite laughable rhetoric of greatness and popular support that we heard before from other tyrants like Khadafi and Assad, the massive public disdain of this regime was evident in Green Revolution I, and in 2013 no one should be surprised if the freedom seekers of Green Revolution II will build a statue of liberty in the middle of Tehran Azadi Square as Chinese student did in Tiananmen Square. All tyrants pretend to be different but they are ultimately the same and will face same tragic end before freedom shines again!

Thumb libnani 30 November 2011, 16:56

Although I don't like Iran's government or their supporters, I understand these guys. Britain and the Western world is what divided the Arabs and Muslims and poisoned us with nationalism. Nationalism brought political parties that have worse morals than the devil (baath party of Syria, all the ones that massacred people in the civil war, Hezbollah, etc). Since these countries put Lebanon and other Arab countries in hell, we should disassociate with them. Also, they are getting mad for storming their embassy? Then we should be even angrier for storming our COUNTRIES and sending them to hell! And for supporting the dictators that blocked our progress for years and years!

Default-user-icon TITUS (Guest) 30 November 2011, 18:56

The Iranian criminal regime will pay for this and all its other transgressions very heavily indeed... !! All the free world countries should pull out their embassadors and kick the representatives of this rogue regime from hell out of their respective countries for the next phase that will follow...