HOLOCAUST DENIAL DU'JOUR
Iran’s Interior Minister, speaking to the gullible West at an immigration conference in Greece, says “president” Ahmadinejad’s vile remarks about the Holocaust were simply “misunderstood.”
Iran Interior Minister Mostafa Pourmohammadi told The Associated Press that Ahmadinejad’s comments were “misunderstood” by the West. Speaking on the sidelines of an Athens, Greece, immigration conference, Pourmohammadi said: “Actually the case has been misunderstood. (Ahmadinejad) did not mean to raise this matter.” Ahmadinejad “wanted to say that if others harmed the Jewish community and created problems for the Jewish community, they have to pay the price themselves. People like the Palestinian people or other nations should not pay the price (for it).” “A historical incident has occurred. Correct or not correct. We don’t want to launch research or carry out historical investigation about it,” he said without elaborating.
Meanwhile, back in Iran, the Foreign Minister is telling the truth: “Holocaust denial is government policy.”
Tehran, 16 Dec. (AKI) - Iran’s foreign minister Manouchehr Mottaki said Friday that remarks made earlier this week by the country’s president that the Nazi mass murder of Jews during World War II was a “myth” was the official Iranian government’s position on the issue. “The words of [president] Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on the Holocaust and on Israel are not personal opinions, nor isolated statements but they express the view of the [Iranian] government,” Mottaki said. Ahmadinejad made the Holocaust remarks on Wednesday while it was in October he said Israel should be “wiped off the map.”
“The Palestinians or Islamic nations can not be forced to pay for the injustices the Europeans believe they committed against the Jews,” the minister said speaking at Tehran airport after a visit to Pakistan.
“The Europeans have to understand that the current Iranian government doesn’t have any intention to play the role of someone who listens without having the right to reply,” he said adding that if Europe wants to have relations with Iran “it has to learn to listen to our opinions and take them into account.”
Europe’s dialogue with Iran, Mottaki said - apparently referring to negotiations by Britain, France and Germany to persuade Iran to shelf its uranium enrichment plans - can only take place in “a climate which is not influenced by Zionism”.
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