Iran's judiciary said Tuesday arrests have been made for the accidental shootdown of a Ukrainian passenger plane that killed all 176 people on board just after takeoff from Tehran last week.
The announcement came amid an upswell of anger and protests
by Iranians in recent days over the downing of the jetliner last Wednesday and
apparent attempts by senior officials in Iran to cover-up the cause of the
crash.
Iran, which initially dismissed allegations that a missile
had brought down the plane, acknowledged only on Saturday — three days after
and in the face of mounting evidence — that its Revolutionary Guard had shot
down the plane by mistake as the force braced for a possible military
confrontation with the United States.
The remains of the plane crash |
Judiciary spokesman Gholamhossein Esmaili said “extensive
investigations have taken place and some individuals are arrested.” His
statement on the judiciary's website did not say how many individuals had been
detained or name them.
Iran's president on Tuesday also called for a special court
to be set up to probe the incident.
"The judiciary should form a special court with a
ranking judge and dozens of experts," President Hassan Rouhani said in a
speech televised in Iran. “This is not an ordinary case. The entire the world
will be watching this court.”
Rouhani called the incident "a painful and
unforgivable” mistake and promised that his administration would pursue the
case “by all means.”
“The responsibility falls on more than just one
person," he said, adding that those found culpable “should be punished.”
“There are others, too, and I want that this issue is
expressed honestly,” he said, without elaborating.
Iran shot down the plane as its forces were on alert for
possible U.S. retaliation after Iran launched ballistic missiles on two
military bases housing U.S. troops in Iraq. No one was hurt in that attack,
which was carried out in response to the stunning killing of Revolutionary
Guard Gen. Qassem Soleimani in an American airstrike in Baghdad.
While Rouhani pointed to mistakes and negligence, he also
repeated the government's line that the tragedy was ultimately rooted in U.S.
aggression.
“It was the U.S. that made for an agitated environment. It
was the U.S. that created an unusual situation. It was the U.S. that threatened
and took our beloved (Soleimani),” he said.
Rouhani called the government's admission that Iranian
forces shot down the plane a “first good step.”
He added that Iranian experts who retrieved the Ukrainian
plane's flight recorder, the so-called black box, have sent it to France for
analysis.
The plane, en route to the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv, was
carrying 167 passengers and nine crew members from several countries, including
82 Iranians, 57 Canadians — including many Iranians with dual citizenship — and
11 Ukrainians, according to officials. There were several children among the
passengers, including an infant.
Gen. Amir Ali Hajizadeh, the head of the Guard’s aerospace
division, said over the weekend his unit accepts full responsibility for the
shootdown. He said when he learned about the downing of the plane, “I wished I
was dead.”
The incident raised questions about why Iran did not shut
down its international airport or airspace the day it was on alert for U.S.
military retaliation.
The shootdown and the lack of transparency around it has
reignited anger in Iran at the country’s leadership. Online videos appeared to
show security forces firing live ammunition and tear gas to disperse protests
in the streets.
Also Tuesday, Iran's judiciary said that 30 people had been
detained in the protests, and that some were released, without elaborating
further. An Iranian film director who'd called for protests in Tehran's Azadi,
or Freedom, Square is among those released.
Iranian authorities briefly arrested British Ambassador Rob
Macaire on Saturday evening. He's said he went to a candlelight vigil to pay
his respects for the victims of the Ukrainian plane shootdown and left as soon
as the chanting began and it turned into a protest.
Iran’s Foreign Ministry summoned the British ambassador on
Sunday to protest what it said was his presence at an illegal protest. Britain,
in turn, summoned Iran’s ambassador on Monday “to convey our strong objections”
over the weekend arrest.
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