Tension
rises as Britain condemns Iran TV pictures of detainees
AFP/Al-Alam
TV
A video grab off the Iranian Arabic-language television station Al-Alam
shows British servicewoman Faye Turney, who was among the British
sailors seized last week at gunpoint by Iran in northern Gulf waters.
AFP
TEHRAN
Petroleumworld.com 03 29 07
Iran on Wednesday showed the first pictures of 15 detained British
navy personnel after Britain froze contacts between the two in an
escalating dispute over the captives.
Britain angrily condemned the images of the eight sailors and seven
marines shown by Iranian television, in which the only woman among
them apparently admitted that the group had trespassed into Iranian
waters.
Iran said Faye Turney, 26, would soon be released but there was no
easing of tensions between London and Tehran over the crisis now almost
one week old.
The footage included pictures of Turney in a black headscarf, but
also a letter she had written to her family.
The Britons were pictured having a meal, and Turney, the mother of
a three-year-old girl, said: "Obviously we trespassed in the
waters."
Iran has insisted the Britons were in Iranian waters when detained
last Friday.
"They were friendly, very hospitable, very thoughtful. Nice people,"
she said of her captors.
In a letter to her family released by the Iranian embassy in London,
Turney also said "I have written a letter to the Iranian people
to apologise for us entering into their waters."
She ended: "Please don't worry about me. I'm staying strong.
Hopefully it won't be long until I'm home to get ready for Molly's
birthday party" -- a reference to her three-year-old daughter.
The report did not say when or where the footage was filmed and the
authenticity of the letter could not immediately be confirmed.
An Iranian foreign ministry spokesman told AFP that Turney would be
freed "within a day or two."
But Britain reacted angrily to the images. "It is completely
unacceptable for these pictures to be shown on television," a
Foreign Office spokesman told AFP in London.
"There is no doubt that all personnel were seized in Iraqi waters
and were entitled to be there."
Amid mounting tensions, heightened by US navy exercises in the Gulf,
Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett announced the freeze in government-to-government
contact in a statement to the British parliament.
"We need to focus all our bilateral efforts during this phase
on the resolution of this issue," she said. "We will therefore
be imposing a freeze on all other official bilateral business with
Iran."
Britain also revealed evidence that it said showed the 15 were in
Iraqi waters when detained.
Iran rejected this and played down Britain's decision to freeze contacts
with Tehran, saying ties were already "cold and inactive,"
the official news agency IRNA quoted a foreign ministry source as
saying.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair emphasised his country's determination
in the dispute.
"It is now time to ratchet up the diplomatic and international
pressure" on Tehran, Blair told lawmakers, adding that "there
was no justification whatever" for the detention of the sailors.
"It was completely unacceptable, wrong and illegal," he
said.
The prime minister said Britain was in contact with "all our
key allies" over the dispute in order to "step up the pressure"
on the Iranian government.
Speaking for the European Union, German Chancellor Angela Merkel called
Iran's action "unacceptable" and renewed a call for the
soldiers' release.
"The British have our full solidarity here," she said.
NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer also called for their
immediate release.
The
captives have been held at a secret location but Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan said at an Arab summit in Saudi Arabia that diplomats
from his country might be allowed access to them.
British military chiefs used maps and GPS coordinates to affirm that
the navy personnel were 1.7 nautical miles (3.15 kilometres) within
Iraqi waters at the northern end of the Gulf. It gave the coordinates
as 29 degrees 50.36 minutes north and 48 degrees 43.08 minutes east.
The Iranian embassy in London insisted that the British personnel
had "illegally entered" up to 500 metres (550 yards) within
Iranian territorial waters.
But the embassy said it was "confident the two governments are
capable of resolving this security case through their close contacts
and cooperation."
London argues that the captured personnel were conducting "routine"
anti-smuggling operations when they were seized at gunpoint.
There has been speculation that Tehran could use the British personnel
either to trade for five Iranians being held by US forces in Iraq
or for concessions over Iran's controversial nuclear programme.
Beckett said Wednesday that Iran had denied any such motivation.
The United States, which has already voiced "concern and outrage"
over the incident, denied that an unusual exercise involving two US
aircraft carrier strike groups in the Gulf was aimed at raising tensions
with Iran.
Washington said it was to reassure friends and allies.
In
New York meanwhile, oil prices surged to six-month highs as Britain
froze ties with Iran and rumours grew of a possible military clash
between the West and the Islamic Republic.
New York's main oil futures contract, light sweet crude for delivery
in May, jumped 1.15 dollars to close at 64.08 dollars a barrel.
AFP
28 2006 GMT 03 07
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