Shoes
and cheers: Rouhani gets mixed reception after phone call with Obama
Iranian hard-liners hurled shoes and eggs at President Hassan Rouhani’s car after his arrival in Tehran, following his historic phone conversation with Barack Obama – as the country appeared split over Tehran’s potential rapprochement with the West.
RT,
28
September, 2013
Both
opponents and supporters gathered outside Tehran's Mehrabad Airport
on Saturday as Rouhani returned home from his trip to the UN General
Assembly in New York.
Up
to 100 hard-line Islamists chanted “Death to America” and “Death
to Israel” and some of them pelted the presidential motorcade with
eggs and shoes – a gesture considered a serious insult in Islamic
culture.
“When
Mr Rouhani became president, Obama signed an order imposing new
sanctions against Iran on cars and other things, with his own
handwriting,” said one of protesters, as quoted by AP. “This is a
clear sign that [Americans] are in no way seeking talks, but
unfortunately this [phone conversation] happened.”
The
small contingent of police present at the airport could not prevent
demonstrators “from attacking Iran's president,” tweeted Thomas
Erdbrink, Tehran bureau chief for the New York Times. He said that
Rouhani was trying to keep smiling as his security guards tried to
“shield him off with an umbrella, then pulled him into car and
drove off.”
The
hardline protesters were outnumbered by about 200 to 300 Rouhani
supporters, who appeared at the site to cheer the president and
welcome his diplomatic efforts to ease Tehran’s international
isolation and get sanctions against republic lifted. They greeted him
with placards, thanking him for seeking peace instead of
confrontation.
“I
think the younger generation is happy that the first contact [between
Iran and the US] is being established after 30 years,” one of the
Rouhani supporters said. “I think it's very positive for us, as we
are under such a pressure, sanctions, et cetera.”
Police
reportedly separated the rival demonstrators.
During
his trip to the United States, Rouhani had a 15-minute phone talk on
Friday with President Obama, breaking over three decades of silence
between the two nations. Compared to his predecessor Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, the recently-elected Iranian leader also softened his
tone on the country’s controversial nuclear program.
Upon
his arrival in Iran, Rouhani said that he told Obama that Tehran’s
nuclear program was “not only a right of the Iranian nation and a
matter of development, but also – and more importantly – it is a
matter of national pride for the Iranian people.” He told
journalists that Obama said that he acknowledged the nuclear rights
of the Islamic republic.
According
to Rouhani, he also told Obama that “with the window that the
Iranian people have opened, there is not much time left for talks
with the P5+1 and resolving the nuclear issue and that this matter
should be speeded up.” The US president replied that he shared that
view and would ask Secretary of State John Kerry to hasten the
process
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