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Iran marks US
embassy seizure, brushes off threats
TEHRAN—Thousands of Iranians chanted “Death to America” and vowed not to
yield to U.S. pressure over Iran’s nuclear program at a demonstration on
Sunday marking the 28th anniversary of the seizure of the American
embassy.
Students burned the Stars and Stripes outside the leafy compound in
downtown Tehran that once housed the U.S. mission stormed by radical
students on November 4, 1979, almost 10 months after the U.S.-backed
shah left into exile.
“The crowd shows that pressures from abroad cannot weaken our national
will and Islamic unity,” said Abdollah Salehi, a 22-year-old Tehran
University student. “Sanctions will not lead to any result.”
The United States severed diplomatic ties with the Islamic Republic in
1980, a few months after the seizure. Now, the two foes are embroiled in
a row over Iran’s atomic plans, which Washington says are aimed at
building atomic bombs.
Tehran insists its plans are peaceful but its failure to allay
suspicions has prompted the U.N. Security Council to impose two rounds
of limited sanctions on Iran. Washington is pressing for a third round
of sterner measures. “We are not afraid of sanctions,” read one banner.
Another read “We will not compromise with America even for a moment,”
quoting Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader. Washington
insists it wants diplomacy to end the standoff but has not ruled out
military action if that route fails.
“We came here to show America that it cannot do a damn thing and the
Iranian nation will destroy them if they invade our country,” said
Mostafa Jafarizadeh, 16.
Interior Minister Mostafa Pourmohammadi said the crowd had gathered to
“pay homage to this great and glorious event” of the takeover in which
52 Americans were held for 444 days. In a speech, he said Iran would not
give up its atomic programme. Some teenagers, however, were enjoying
time out from class.
“It’s worth coming just to be out of school for a couple of hours,” said
Alireza, 15, who only gave his first name. Bahman, 14, playing on the
sidelines of the crowd with some schoolmates, said he had been brought
by this teachers.
Some of the student leaders who took over the U.S. embassy are now among
Iran’s most liberal pro-reform politicians. President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, a leader of one student faction 27 years ago, at first
opposed the U.S. embassy seizure. He proposed taking over the Soviet
embassy instead, leading hostage-takers say.—Agencies
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