Cunning Clerics 285
Well, the two British embassy staff arrested by the Iranian government are to be put on trial.
Guardians Council chief Ahmad Jannati said: “Naturally they will be put on trial, they have made confessions.”
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“In these incidents, their embassy had a presence, some people were arrested,” Ayatollah Jannati told the thousands of worshippers at Friday prayers, according to news agencies.
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Ayatollah Jannati added: “After the election, the enemy could not stand people’s joy. The enemy made an effort to poison the people. They had planned a velvet revolution before the election.”
He said the UK foreign office had warned of possible “street riots” around the 12 June election and had advised its nationals to avoid public places.
This is a shrewd move by the Guardian council. The implication of British involvement in the riots seems to us to be an attempt to excuse the riots as the wicked interfering hand of foreign powers, rather than the protests being at the whim of the Iranian people.
One excerpt from the article caused us amusement:
Historians says the distrust between the UK and Iran stems from the 1800s, when Iran – then Persia – was forced to concede territory to Russia in a treaty drafted by a British diplomat.
Thank God (sic) for the BBC’s official historians. I now feel enlightened.