Obama signs law barring Iran diplomat from serving UN post

Hamid Abutalebi suspected of taking part in 1979-1981 Tehran hostage crisis

US president Barack Obama signed a law today that effectively bars an Iranian diplomat from serving as an envoy at the United Nations. Photograph: Jonathan Ernst /Reuters
US president Barack Obama signed a law today that effectively bars an Iranian diplomat from serving as an envoy at the United Nations. Photograph: Jonathan Ernst /Reuters

US president Barack Obama signed a law today that effectively bars an Iranian diplomat from serving as an envoy at the United Nations because of suspicions he was involved in the 1979-1981 Tehran hostage crisis.

Mr Obama signed a law passed by the US congress that blocks any individual from entering the United States who has been found to have been engaged in espionage or terrorist activity against the United States or if that person may pose a threat to US national security.

The United States had already said it would not grant a visa to Iran's proposed UN ambassador, citing the envoy's links to the 1979-1981 hostage crisis. Obama had come under strong pressure not to allow Hamid Abutalebi into the country to take up his position in New York.

The US government objects to Mr Abutalebi because of his suspected participation in a Muslim student group that seized the US embassy in Tehran in November 1979 and held 52 Americans hostage for 444 days.

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The veteran Iranian diplomat has acknowledged that he acted as an interpreter for the militants who held the hostages.

The United States said a week ago it had told Iran it would not give Mr Abutalebi a visa. US officials privately said at the time they hoped Iran would quietly drop the issue and name a new envoy.

But Iran on Monday asked for a special meeting of a UN committee on the US decision, calling it a dangerous precedent that could harm international diplomacy.

Reuters