Sunday, May 8, 2011

Bahrain expels Iranian diplomatic tit for tat move (AFP)

TEHRAN (AFP)-Iran on Sunday called on the Bahraini diplomat to leave the Islamic Republic of reprisal is one of the diplomats in Manama, the official expulsion of the country, the IRNA news agency reported.


"After expelling diplomats, in particular, one of our reprisal, attache, Embassy of Bahrain's is to be summoned and told that one of the diplomats from the embassies of Iran, Bahrain will leave the Government's inconsistent and incomprehensible actions," Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said.


"The responding to the legitimate demands of the population is guaranteed by the Governments of the stability and permanence of the repression of peaceful protests, while at the same time and only aggravates the crisis and the actions of the illogical and deepen the wounds," he said.


Iran on Wednesday recalled its Ambassador to Bahrain, "the Protest, the Government of Bahrain for its people," after the killing in Manama from Tehran to remember its Ambassador, the vines of Iran "a blatant interference" in its affairs.


Tehran said Manama had made a "strategic error" by asking the forces to the Gulf, a small Kingdom, the pro-democracy protests, a success when you try to get rid of.


Defense Minister Ahmad Vahidi told the official IRNA news agency Sunni Muslim Shiite majority to close but the Bahrain adopted a "strategic and political" blunder that cost would be its "legitimacy."


At least three people died when security forces firing TEAR GAS and orphaned sinalakay months old pro-democracy camp, Central Pearl Square roundabout, the capital of Bahrain on Wednesday.


Hundreds of people, was seriously wounded in the unrest and the Government has been accused of closing of the international law away from hospitals and doctors, assaulting the wounded who tried to tend to the crimes.


And the rulers of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and urged other Gulf States to contribute to the security forces, a move which infuriated Iran and caused outrage from the mainly Shiite opposition in the small island-State.


Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi, his Turkish counterpart Ahmet Davutoglu on Sunday with the phone, the apparent "the necessity of foreign troops to leave Bahrain," which is also home to the US fifth fleet, IRNA said.

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