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Germany mulls travel limits for Iran's president |
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Thursday, 15 December 2005 |
By Louis Charbonneau
BERLIN, Dec 15 (Reuters) - German officials are weighing up
imposing some form of travel restriction on Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad after his denials that the Holocaust happened, a senior
foreign ministry official said on Thursday. Some six millions Jews were
killed by the Nazis during World War Two. Publicly denying that the
Holocaust happened, as Ahmadinejad has done twice, is a crime in
Germany.
In an interview with German WDR television, Gernot Erler, a state
secretary at the foreign ministry, said the ministry was discussing
whether Ahmadinejad should be allowed to enter Germany.
"We are considering whether some kind of travel restrictions could possibly be applied here," Erler said.
The Iranian president told a crowd in the southeastern city of Zahedan
on Wednesday that the killing of millions of Jews by the Nazis was a
legend, reiterating comments which drew international condemnation last
week.
In October, Ahmadinejad said the Jewish state should be "wiped off the map."
Erler said any retaliatory steps needed to be carefully considered to
ensure they did not undermine efforts by France, Britain and Germany to
persuade Iran to give up what Washington and the European Union fear is
an atomic weapons programme.
"It would make no sense ... to completely isolate this country, because
then, for example, a negotiated solution would no longer be possible,"
Erler said.
Iran denies wanting nuclear energy for anything other than the peaceful generation of electricity.
RETALIATION
Speaking in a parliamentary debate, Foreign Minister Frank-Walter
Steinmeier condemned Ahmadinejad's remarks and said: "The government in
Tehran must understand that the patience of the international community
is not endless."
Chancellor Angela Merkel is expected to seek support from other EU
leaders at a summit in Brussels to take the issue to the United
Nations. Erler described the hardline president's remarks as "a
deliberate provocation aimed not only at the Arab world but also
internally in order to gain legitimacy."
EU leaders may issue a joint condemnation in Brussels, followed by a
formal protest delivered by the ambassadors of Germany, France and
Britain -- the 'EU3' -- in Tehran.
"A third possibility would be the temporary recall of European
ambassadors from Iran. That would be a dramatic step and would signal
the threat that a complete severing of diplomatic ties is a
possibility," Erler said.
For the time being, the EU3 have no plans to cancel talks with Iranian nuclear negotiators due later this month.
Erler confirmed that on Dec. 21 senior diplomats from Germany, France
and Britain would meet Iranian negotiators to see if talks between the
EU trio and Tehran can be revived.
The talks collapsed in August when Iran resumed uranium processing
activities at a plant in Isfahan that had been mothballed under a
November 2004 deal between the EU3 and Iran known as the Paris
Agreement.
Iran has vowed never to give up its right to a full atomic programme,
including the most sensitive part of the fuel cycle, uranium
enrichment, which can yield fuel for power or bombs. |