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Iran Leader Ducks Events In Armenia, Returns Home

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  • Iran Leader Ducks Events In Armenia, Returns Home

    IRAN LEADER DUCKS EVENTS IN ARMENIA, RETURNS HOME

    Reuters, UK
    Oct 23 2007

    YEREVAN (Reuters) - Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad failed to
    show up for two scheduled events in a visit to Armenia and returned
    home on Tuesday, but Tehran denied Armenian reports that he had cut
    short his trip.

    "The presidents agreed last night that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad needed
    to cut short his visit," the chief spokesman for Armenian President
    Robert Kocharyan told reporters.

    "Ahmadenijad had urgent reasons to end his visit ahead of time,"
    he added.

    Iran's official IRNA news agency quoted Ahmadinejad's top adviser,
    Mojtaba Samareh-Hashemi, denying any change in plan. "The visit by
    President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the Iranian delegation to Armenia
    is going ahead as scheduled," he said.

    Following those remarks, state television reported Ahmadinejad's
    arrival in Tehran without further comment.

    Ahmadinejad had been due to visit the memorial of victims of what
    Tehran describes as the genocide of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire
    in 1915 and address the national parliament.

    He was also due to meet members of the Iranian community in Yerevan
    and visit a mosque.

    But Kocharyan's office insisted the visit had been cut short.

    "Ahmadinejad failed to appear today at either venue he was expected
    to visit," a presidential spokeswoman said by telephone. "As far as
    we know he has left."

    Russia's Itar-Tass news agency quoted Armenian government officials as
    saying the reason for Ahmadinejad's early departure were "unexpected
    developments in Iran and urgent meetings he has to hold at home". Tass
    did not elaborate.

    Iran's chief negotiator Ali Larijani resigned on Saturday just days
    before crucial talks in Rome due on Tuesday with the European Union
    foreign policy chief Javier Solana on Tehran's nuclear program.

    The West suspects Iran of working on its own atomic bomb and wants
    it to halt the nuclear program. Tehran says its nuclear program is
    peaceful and vows to go ahead with it.

    Washington has been pressurizing European allies to support a new
    set of U.N. sanctions against Iran.

    Analysts say the departure of moderate Larijani reflects a rift over
    tactics between him and Ahmadinejad.
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