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UK holds Iran ex-envoy over Argentina blast ( 2003-08-22 09:23) (Agencies) Iran's former ambassador to Argentina was arrested by British police on Thursday in connection with the 1994 bombing of a Buenos Aires Jewish center which killed 85 people, Scotland Yard said.
Last week, a judge in Argentina issued an arrest warrant through Interpol for Soleimanpour, 47, and seven other Iranian officials in connection with the car bomb attack in which about 200 people were also injured. Israel and Washington -- which has branded Iran part of an "axis of evil" states that sponsor terrorism -- have long said they suspected Iranian-backed Middle Eastern guerrillas were behind the attack. Iran has fiercely denied any involvement. Police said Soleimanpour was arrested on a warrant alleging that "on or before July 7, 1994, (he) did conspire with other persons to murder persons at the (AMIA Center)." He is believed to have been living in the northern English city of Durham since February last year, when he entered the country on a student visa to study at Durham University. Iran withdrew its ambassador to Argentina after being implicated by the Argentine government shortly after the bombing, but Tehran still retains a mission in Buenos Aires. There was no immediate reaction from Tehran to the arrest, but last week it condemned the Argentinian orders to arrest the eight Iranian officials as part of "international Zionism's plan to manipulate Argentina." Argentina's 300,000-strong Jewish community is the biggest in Latin America and the seventh largest in the world. Two years before the AMIA attack, the Israeli embassy in Buenos Aires was bombed, killing 29 people. Marta Nercellas, the lawyer representing the AMIA center in Buenos Aires, said she was confident Britain would extradite Soleimanpour, who she believed did not have diplomatic immunity. "He participated in a very concrete way in organizing the attack. The (Iranian) embassy in Argentina was used as the base from which they gathered intelligence information that had to do with the massacre," Nercellas told Argentine television. "This is going to allow us to make progress in finding the international connection."
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