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TEHRAN, Oct. 28 (Xinhuanet) -- Thousands of Iranians on
Friday took to the street to protest against Israel, while President Mohmoud
Ahmadinejad defended his remarks that Israel should be wiped off as just and
right.
The demonstrators, chanting anti-Israel and
anti-US slogans and holding banners, rallied in big cities such as the capital
Tehran and Qom on the occasion of the Quds (Jerusalem) Day designated by Ruholla
Khomeini, late founding father of the Islamic Republic, to boost the Islamic
world's unification on the support to Palestine.
Among
demonstrators in Tehran were Ahmadinejad and other ranking officials including
Expediency Council Chairman Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, Judiciary Chief Mahmoud
Hashemi Shahroudi, Secretary of Supreme National Security Council Ali
Larijani.
State media reported that several Iranian
embassies abroad also issued separate statements to express their supports for
the demonstrators at home, calling on all Muslims in the world to observe the
Quds Day and protest against Israel.
The high-profiled
nationwide protest was underlaid by the country's anti-Israeli spirit fueled by
Ahmadinejad's hardline comments on Wednesday that Israel "should be wiped away
from the map" and the recognition of Israel was "surrender and defeat of Islamic
world".
The hardline message, which sounded unusually
tough against the somewhat softened stances of Iranian officials in recent
years, has drawn immediate and hard-worded denouncement of the European Union,
the United States, Japan, Russia as well as several other
countries.
Even UN Secretary General Kofi Annan also
said on Thursday that he was dismayed by Ahmadinejad's
words.
Soon after the Quds Day demonstrations,
Ahmadinejad defended his anti-Israel remarks as just and right, saying that his
words "are the same as those of the Iranian nation".
In an exclusive interview with the official IRNA news agency, Ahmadinejad
slammed the Israeli policy as ambitious, saying "they (the Israelis) are free to
say but their words lack any credit.
They are rude,
falsely thinking that the whole world should be subordinate to
them."
"The oppressed Palestinians are martyred by
Zionists, their properties are looted, their houses are bombarded and they are
assassinated, but the Zionists expect that no one should object them,"
Ahmadinejad stressed.
Later in the day, Rafsanjani,
who took the turn of leading the Friday prayer in Tehran, warned in his sermon
that Israel was "fuelling the flames of Islamic resistance in Palestine and
throughout world".
Rafsanjani praised the Palestinians
as the most oppressed people who survived "numerous conspiracies" of Israel and
tolerated massive pressure, saying that brave resistance of the Palestinians was
also the "cornerstone of great movements of the Islamic
world".
However, Rafsanjani focused his bombardment on
the Israeli government, stressing that the main concern of Tehran was "the
existence of the Zionist regime" and Iranians indeed respected and had no
problems with "the pious and real Jews".
Iran holds a
sympathetic attitude towards the fight for independence of the Palestinians and
refuses to acknowledge the Israeli state, terming the Israeli government as
enemy of the whole Islamic world. Enditem |