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Tirana's Korrieri Brings Bad Luck To Teheran

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  • Tirana's Korrieri Brings Bad Luck To Teheran

    TIRANA'S KORRIERI BRINGS BAD LUCK TO TEHERAN
    by Ardian Ndreca

    55 Pesedhjetepese Newspaper
    Oct 10 2007
    Albania

    Last Sunday, on 7 October the Korrieri newspaper published a strange
    interview with the Iranian Ambassador to Tirana, in which the Tehran
    representative sang his government's praises and listed its successes.

    In the morning of the following day, in the Tehran University campus
    several hundred students met Mr Mahmud Ahmadinezhad with whistles
    and calls: Death to the dictator, Ahmadinezhad is like Pinochet,
    and so forth.

    This shows that Korrieri is a bird of bad omens.

    Certainly, we have fresh memories of the statements by ambassadors
    of former communist Albania, who lauded to the skies the successes
    of Enver Hoxha [former Albanian communist dictator] and his clique,
    making them the laughing stock of the whole world which knew the sort
    of rascals they and those who ordered them from Tirana were.

    The whole world, including those who put their microphones and their
    newspaper columns at the disposal of the Iranian obscurantist dictator,
    had a fit of laughter that day.

    It is not the first time that this has happened with Ahmadinezhad.

    The world press and international organizations know that he and
    his regime have little familiarity with freedom, but the Korrieri
    journalist - a poor fool! - was not aware of it as none of his
    questions dealt with the essentials of Iran's position in the world.

    For his part, the ambassador proved to be an utter ignoramus as he
    was unable to avoid even the commonest of traps. So unaware was he
    of the real state of things as to declare that it was no problem for
    Iran if Albania joined the European Union, but ultimately he woke up
    to the reality when he was asked whether Berisha backed Iran's nuclear
    policy, or whether Bush's Albanian visit created a problem for Iran.

    We learned little about the vilayet [province] the journalist came
    from.

    Certainly, it is ridiculous for a Persian diplomat to be checkmated
    by an ordinary newspaperman, but as a Latin saying goes, 'mala tempora
    current' [we live in bad times].

    However, the truth is rather different.

    Iran tortures and kills old and young alike for such 'crimes' as
    unseemly dress, indecent painting (of women, not walls), or opposition
    to the policy of the pasdaran [Iranian revolutionary guard corps];
    Iran kills the Kurds and other ethnic minorities for political motives;
    Tehran's legislation is reminiscent of the Middle Ages; in Iran there
    is no freedom of the press or speech; public and secret torture is
    applied there, and amputations are normal penalties; women enjoy no
    rights: their existence is worth half of men's, they can inherit only
    half of what otherwise would belong to them. According to Hoseyn Ali
    Montazeri, a Khomeini follower, in 1988 criminal fanatics hanged some
    Iranian women after torturing and raping them.

    As Amir Taheri noted in the Wall Street Journal, a wave of terror,
    the most savage since 1988, is sweeping over Iran now. It has some
    150,000 people sitting in its prisons, and Ahmadinezhad has issued
    orders to build 33 new ones.

    Korrieri stays silent about all these monstrosities, because perhaps
    it does not know of them, but it does know - as one gathers from the
    interview - that Persian was the second language in Elbasan some 200
    years ago.

    The wretched journalist might have asked the ambassador what punishment
    would have been meted out to Omar Khayyam if he was alive, as the poet
    sang to wine and women: would he have been shot, or hanged, or simply
    given 50 lashes? Or he might have asked how come that Persia was the
    second language in Elbasan and then why it was no longer used. This
    is rather surprising, since until the 20s and the 30s some 90 per
    cent of Albanians were illiterate, so one is prompted to ask where
    on earth these illiterates learned Persian 200 years ago.

    We understand full well the malice of both the interviewers and those
    who stand behind him. And although we have been among those few who
    have asked Mr. Berisha to leave the Islamic Conference for good,
    the hypocrisy of the political force which Korrieri represents is
    disgusting.

    The 'comrades' clung to power from 1997 to 2005, enriched themselves
    to unimaginable proportions, but did not take the trouble to get
    Albania out of the Islamic Conference.

    In those days the Tirana government was some sort of a filial of the
    Athens government, but it did not say a single word about Iran. All
    of us know those interested in presenting Albania as being linked to
    Iran and other states like it.

    Our neighbours, who have not yet been able to free themselves of their
    primitive feelings, want us to look like dangerous barbarians as much
    as possible and they are ready to pay for that. The Albanian market
    is full of people who, regardless of their little worth, are ready
    to sell themselves. These can be found in the left-wing parties,
    but a lot of them can be found in the right-wing parties too.

    Certainly, it was no coincidence that the Turks seized a ship laden
    with weapons a sovereign state such as Albania had sold to Armenia.

    Only a poor fool can mistake Azerbaijan for Albania and hence consider
    the selling of weapons to Armenia unacceptable.

    Still - let us repeat - Korrieri was a bird of bad omen for the
    Iranian regime. Before giving an interview, an Iranian ambassador
    must put some dry garlic in his pockets for luck, at least to cover
    up the heavy smell of hypocrisy.

    However, if the democratically-minded youth of the noble Indo-European
    people of Iran continue what they have already started, I am afraid
    the ambassador of the Iranian dictatorial regime will no longer give
    us the pleasure of reading his interviews full of deep learning and
    supposed Attic salt.
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