to the United Nations that it has not yet condemmed the murder of an Iranian nuclear scientist.
The regime is complaining that the major power are also refusing to take a stand against the terrorist murder, saying that exposes the double standard of the West when it comes to terrorism.
Actually, the spokesman at the US State Department con-demned the murder only hours after it occurred November 29.
But that has not gone reported inside Iran, presumably as a re-sult of censorship.
The regime has said several times that it has captured “elements” involved in the assassination who have confessed to having been put up to the crime by US and Israeli intelligence and trained “in a neighboring country.”
It has not said how many people it has arrested, yet alone identified them by name, but it has acknowledged it does not hold the actual killers who rode up on motorcycles and slapped magnetic bombs onto the car carrying Majid Shahriari, who died in the attack, and onto a second car carrying Fereydun Abbasi-Davani, who survived that explosion.
At the UN, Iranian Ambassador Mohammad Khazaee said, “The Islamic Republic expects this organization to condemn such acts of terrorism in line with its obligations and take efficient steps to eradicate terrorism in all its forms.” The United Nations dose not normally comment on individual acts of terrorism, which occur on average more than once a day, and it dose not have any enforcement authority to eradicate terrorism.
In frequent comments, the Iranian authorities continue to say that the fact that Abbasi-Davani’s name appears on the UN list of 27 sanctioned people in Iran’s link to the bombing.
It does not mention the fact that Shahriari’s name does not appear on the list.