Argentines urge Iran to surrender AMIA bombing suspects
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                  Argentines urge Iran to surrender AMIA bombing suspects

                  People hold portraits of victims of the terrorist bombing attack against the Argentine Israelite Mutual Association (Amia). Photo: Juan Mabromata in Buenos Aires, AFP Copyright 2011

                  Argentines urge Iran to surrender AMIA bombing suspects

                  20.07.2011, Israel and the World

                  Relatives of victims of a 1994 bombing that leveled the seven-story Jewish charity building demanded Monday that Iran hand over officials suspected of masterminding the attack.
                  Eighty-five people were killed and 300 wounded when a bomb blast destroyed the Argentine Israelite Mutual Association (AMIA° building in Buenos Aires. Monday marked 17 years since the attack, the worst terror strike on Argentine soil, which justice officials believe Tehran ordered.
                  "We don't need solidarity and condolences," said Sergio Burstein, a member of a group representing bombing victims.
                  "If you really want this case to be resolved, just hand over the eight fugitives wanted for alleged responsibility in the AMIA bombing," he said, addressing authorities in Tehran.
                  If the legal case has made little progress, "it is due to the resistance of a government like Iran that protects, rewards and celebrates terrorism as a state policy," he said.
                  President Cristina Kirchner and several cabinet members were at Monday's anniversary event.
                  The current AMIA president, Guillermo Borger, publicly thanked Kirchner for her presence at the ceremony, "but it is not enough," he said.
                  Marina Degtiar, who was at the event, said she hoped Iran's offer "was not an opportunistic move given today's anniversary."
                  "On one hand I want to hope that this is genuine," said Degtiar. "But on the other I wonder -- why now after 17 years?"
                  Around 300,000 Jews live in Argentina, the largest community in Latin America.
                  Iran has denied involvement in the plot but for years refused to collaborate with the Argentine probe.
                  However on Saturday, a Foreign Ministry statement from Tehran said that Iran is "ready for a constructive dialogue" in the case and to cooperate with Argentina.
                  Argentine Foreign Minister Hector Timerman on Sunday said that, if the offer is followed through, "it would mean a singular and very positive step forward."
                  Timerman told reporters Monday said he was evaluating Iran's offer.
                  The bombing was allegedly carried out by members of the Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah on Tehran's orders. Hezbollah has also denied any involvement in the attack.
                  Argentina has issued warrants for the arrest of Ahmed Vahidi, who is currently Iran's minister of defense, along with five other Iranians and a Lebanese accused of planning and carrying out the bombing.
                  Earlier, in 1992, the Israeli embassy in Buenos Aires was hit by a car bomb that killed 29 people and wounded 200.

                  EJP