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US 'Betraying' Ideals of Pope, Says Rafsanjani

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  • US 'Betraying' Ideals of Pope, Says Rafsanjani

    US 'Betraying' Ideals of Pope, Says Rafsanjani

    http://www.aina.org/news/2005049121507 .htm

    04-09-2005

    TEHRAN (AFP) -- Iran's former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani paid
    homage to John Paul II during Muslim prayers in Tehran yesterday and
    urged the Vatican to recall the Pontiff's ideal of Christianity which,
    he said, was being betrayed by the US.

    "His actions in favour of peace, his opposition to war - in
    particularly the war in Iraq - the denunciation of American crimes at
    Abu Ghraib prison conferred on John Paul II a greater international
    stature than that of his predecessors," said Rafsanjani, one of Iran's
    most influential personalities.

    The former president, widely expected to stand again in Iran's June
    presidential election, heads the Expediency Council - Iran's top
    political arbitration body.

    Rafsanjani also recalled the Pontiff's opposition to "heretical
    ideologies, communism and Marxism."

    The cleric, in his sermon to thousands of the faithful and broadcast
    on state radio, offered his condolences to the Christian world on
    the death of the Pope, adding: "Christianity and the Vatican would
    do well to recall these lessons."

    He said: "The precepts of Christ have disappeared from the Christian
    world."

    Rafsanjani, whose country was described as part of the "axis of evil"
    and alleged by US President George W Bush to support terrorism,
    charged: "In the name of the struggle against terrorism, (Americans)
    commit numerous crimes across the world. They impose (themselves)
    by force in international institutions and pillage the wealth of
    other peoples.

    "All this goes against Christ's ideals and (Christians) should tell
    the US that it dishonours Christ," he said.

    Reformist President Mohamed Khatami, in Rome for Pope John Paul's
    funeral, took a similar line in an interview with Italian daily
    Corriere della Sera.

    "For me, it is very important to pay a full tribute to John Paul II.
    He was a man of spirituality, ethics, justice. I hope that the road
    he paved will be pursued in the future," said Khatami.

    "Unfortunately, the current US leaders, more than their predecessors,
    resort to violence, to military means, to impose their own will.

    "They believe in a principle that is absolutely dangerous which
    generates terrorism - the pre-emptive strike which provides a simple
    pretext to launch a military intervention."

    Meanwhile, the speaker of Iran's parliament, Gholam-Ali Hadad-Adel,
    joined Iran's tiny Roman Catholic community for a requiem mass.

    Several thousand faithful crammed into Tehran's small brick-built
    Saint Joseph's Cathedral to hear Bishop Ramzi Garmo remember the
    Pope's commitment to "peace and dialogue between the civilizations
    and religions."

    Hadad-Adel said he had decided to attend the service as a "sign of
    the Iranian people's sympathy with their Catholic compatriots."

    Iran counts some 10,000 Catholics among a Christian community of
    80,000, a tiny minority in the overwhelmingly Muslim nation of 67mn
    people. Most of the rest are Armenians or Assyrians.

    Assyrian MP Younatan Botkilia attended yesterday's mass along with
    Iran's chief rabbi, Yusef Cohen Hamedani, and Jewish MP Maurice
    Motamed.
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