[Last week,
the United Nations secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, decided to attend despite pressure from the United States and Israel . Egypt’s new president also said he would come to the
conference, although his country has long been estranged from Iran , and India ’s prime minister plans to bring a delegation of 250 people
in an attempt to advocate for more trade with Tehran .]
By Thomas Erdbrink
The message is clear. As Iran plays host to the biggest international conference the Islamic republic has
organized in its 33-year history, it wants to tell its side of the
long standoff with the Western powers, which are increasingly convinced that
Tehran is pursuing nuclear weapons.
The meeting of the so-called Nonaligned Movement, a group
formed during the cold war that considers itself independent of the major
powers, has so far proven to be something of a public relations success for Iran .
Last week, the United Nations secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, decided to attend despite pressure from the United States and Israel . Egypt’s new president also said he would come to the
conference, although his country has long been estranged from Iran , and India ’s prime minister plans to bring a delegation of 250 people
in an attempt to advocate for more trade with Tehran .
The announcements were seen as setbacks for efforts by the United States to isolate Iran and cripple it with sanctions.
“Two-thirds of the world’s nations are here in Tehran ,” Mohammad Khazaee, Iran ’s ambassador to the United Nations, told reporters on
Sunday. “Clearly this conference will be effective for us.”
He also said the United States had “exploited” the Sept. 11, 2001 , terrorist attacks to further its “hegemonic goals.”
Given that history, Iran says it has decided not to take any chances and has
launched a comprehensive security operation. More than 110,000 security forces
are controlling the streets, the deputy national police commander, Ahmad Radan,
told the Fars news agency over the weekend.
They are supported by 30 helicopters and nearly 3,000
patrol cars. There are roadblocks on all highways leading into Tehran , and at night there are checkpoints throughout the city.
“Despite the evil intentions of our enemies, our secret
service has taken all necessary measures in order to hold the nonaligned
meeting in an absolute secure environment,” Iran’s minister of intelligence,
Heydar Moslehi, told state news agency IRNA.
But the tight security might have another goal: to ensure Iran ’s narrative is not spoiled by its domestic political
difficulties, three years after the country was convulsed by antigovernment
protests that followed a disputed election and were quashed in a harsh
crackdown.
Foreign-based opposition Web sites called for renewed
rallies against the government during the summit meeting.
Like most countries given a chance at worldwide exposure —
witness London ’s Olympics — Iran is taking other steps to present its best face.
An army of gardeners and street cleaners have been sprucing
up main thoroughfares. One billboard reads: “Nonaligned Movement represents the
struggle against racism, colonialism, hegemony and foreign oppression.”
Floating above the city’s main Haft-e Tir square was a balloon carrying a
message: “Iran , a peaceful and kind nation.”
The government even took the unusual step of subsidizing
trips out of town for Tehran residents, to clear the city’s always-congested roads.
Despite the economic pain of recent sanctions, the government offered those
with fuel-subsidy cards an extra 30 liters of gasoline at reduced rates so they
could leave the city. Tehran ’s 12 million residents will also enjoy a five-day official
holiday starting Tuesday, when the leaders begin gathering.
State television has presented the meeting as a “turning
point,” after which Iran ’s importance will grow.
The vice president for international affairs, Ali Sa’idloo,
told state television that “Zionist” media had been censoring news about the
event because it was too positive.
Many Iranians said they were impressed with the fresh paint
jobs on buildings. But in an indication of the country’s economic setbacks,
some said they wished they had not been given five days off.
“I need money, so I need to work, but now we must stay
home,” said Ali Kamali, a bookbinder.
For Iran ’s most hard-line officials, such suggestions were unrealistic.
They hailed the summit meeting as a sign that the end of Western dominance was
near.
“Electing Iran as leader of the Nonaligned Movement shows that a global
resistance against America and the Zionists has taken shape,” Mohammad Reza Naghdi,
the commander of a paramilitary group, told the semiofficial Fars news
agency. “America better give up, as this is yet another sign of its
collapse.”
It is clear that the conference is helping Iran gets its message out.
On Sunday, some delegates were shown on state TV denouncing
terrorism as they stood in front of the nuclear scientists’ mangled cars.
@ The NewYork Times
[ “The Maoists prime objective is to create fissure in the Nepal Army. They have been assigned with this role after the peace agreement”, confidently claimed Bijukche and said further that, “The Maoists are not a nationalist force, instead they are India ’s ‘Trojan Horse’.”]
Narayan Man Bijukche Rohit termed
Nepal ’s Maoists
as India ’s
‘Trojan Horse’. The Trojan horse is a tale from
the Trojan War about the trick that allowed the Greeks to finally enter into
the city of Troy.
“I am not making comments without
proof,” he said confidently and added, “It was India
that supplied substandard Insas Rifles and Night vision helicopters to the
state and at the same time it was also supplying trucks full of modern arms and
artilleries to the Maoists”.
“The driver who was driving one
of the trucks is from my district of Bhaktapur,” he claimed and added, “The
then Defense Minister (India )
George Fernandez is directly involved in the incident.”
George Fernandez is the one, to
recall, who being a sitting minister of India
had taken China
as number one enemy. And he was supporting the Maoists.
“The Maoists prime objective is
to create fissure in the Nepal Army. They have been assigned with this role
after the peace agreement”, confidently claimed Bijukche and said further that,
“The Maoists are not a nationalist force, instead they are India ’s
‘Trojan Horse’.”
A new nomenclature indeed. But
doesn’t the June 2002 Nepal
Maoists-Indian Government Treaty justifies his claim?
“I advise the President to
immediately get rid of such a horse”, he claimed while addressing a press meet
organized by mobile team of Reporters’ Club in Bhaktapur, August 24, 2012 .
How the Maoists react to this
grave allegation will be no less interesting to observe.