Britain calls on Iran to release naval patrol

UK: Iran's ambassador to London, Rasoul Movahedian, was summoned to the British foreign office yesterday and asked to explain…

The Iranian ambassador to the UK, Rasul Mouahedian-Attar,
entering the foreign office in central London, where he was
summoned by British foreign secretary Margaret Beckett last night.
Mrs Beckett said the British patrol detained by Iran had been
inside Iraqi waters.
The Iranian ambassador to the UK, Rasul Mouahedian-Attar, entering the foreign office in central London, where he was summoned by British foreign secretary Margaret Beckett last night. Mrs Beckett said the British patrol detained by Iran had been inside Iraqi waters.

UK:Iran's ambassador to London, Rasoul Movahedian, was summoned to the British foreign office yesterday and asked to explain an incident, in which a British patrol conducting a routine search of traffic in the Shatt al-Arab waterway was surrounded by Iranian vessels and detained.

Margaret Beckett, the foreign secretary, said the British patrol had been inside Iraqi waters "in support of the government of Iraq to stop smuggling" and that the Iranian envoy "was left in no doubt that we want them back".

The Iranian government had made no comment on the incident by late last night, but a US navy official, Commander Kevin Aandahl, said Iran's revolutionary guard naval forces had broadcast a brief radio message saying the British had been detained because they were operating inside Iranian waters and that they had not been harmed.

The crisis comes at a time of high tension between Iran and the West, with the UN Security Council due to vote today on new sanctions against Iran over its refusal to halt uranium enrichment for its nuclear programme.

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The 15 sailors and marines from the frigate HMS Cornwall were all believed to be safe last night, and their next of kin had been informed. Their two "ribs" (rigid inflatable boats) had been watched by a British navy helicopter as they boarded a large dhow carrying vehicles and as they were then surrounded by six Iranian patrol boats and taken into Iranian waters.

"We know that there was no fighting, there was no engagement of weapons or anything like that; it was entirely peaceful," said Commodore Nick Lambert, commander of the Cornwall, the leading ship in the taskforce whose main mission is to protect Iraqi oilfields and exports from criminals and terrorists.

Commodore Lambert said he hoped the incident was the result of a misunderstanding. "There is absolutely no doubt in my mind that they were in Iraqi territorial waters. Equally, the Iranians may well claim that they were in Iranian territorial waters," he said.

Britain's ambassador to Iran, Geoffrey Adams, repeated Britain's demands to Iranian officials in Tehran, but by late evening there had been no clear response, the absence of many officials during the Norouz holiday contributing to the confusion. - (Guardian service)