Iran summons Swiss envoy over US court ruling
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Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs in downtown Tehran
Iran has summoned the Swiss Ambassador to Tehran, Giulio Haas, to object to a controversial ruling by the US Supreme Court over Iranian frozen assets.
In a meeting on Tuesday, Director General for the Americas at Iran’s Foreign Ministry Mohammad Keshavarz-Zadeh handed over two official notes to the Swiss envoy, who represents the US interests in Tehran, in protest at the ruling that almost two billion dollars in frozen Iranian assets must be paid to the families of victims of a 1983 bombing in the Lebanese capital of Beirut.
On April 20, the court ruled that about USD 2 billion in frozen Iranian assets must be turned over to American families of people killed in the 1983 bombing of a US Marine Corps barracks in Beirut and other attacks blamed on Iran. The Islamic Republic has denied any role in the attack.
The money confiscated under the US court ruling belongs to the Central Bank of Iran (CBI). The assets have been blocked under US sanctions.
Keshavarz-Zadeh said the Supreme Court's decision was "a clear and blatant violation of mutual contractual obligations" and the US international legal obligations as well as the "immunity of jurisdiction" for properties and assets of the government of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said on Monday that the US court ruling is “highway robbery” and emphasized that Tehran would retrieve the sum anyway.
Keshavarz-Zadeh also reprimanded a local New York court's verdict that groundlessly accused Iran or Iranian nationals of playing a role in the September 11, 2001 attacks without presenting any proof.
He said such claims are “ridiculous” and go contrary to international norms on the jurisdictional immunity of governments.
EA