WORLD / Middle East |
Iran airs second British's apology(Agencies)Updated: 2007-03-31 09:15 Iran aired television footage on Friday of another British sailor "confessing" to trespassing in its waters, escalating a dispute over Tehran's seizure of 15 navy personnel, as the EU deplored Tehran's action. EU foreign ministers at a meeting in Germany deplored the seizure of the Britons as a breach of international law and threatened to take measures if they were not released soon.
Prime Minister Tony Blair voiced his "disgust" at the latest broadcast of the captive Britons and Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett said she saw no sign that Iran was seeking to solve the crisis. "We've got to pursue this with the necessary firmness and determination but also patience," Blair said. Tehran has so far refused to bow to mounting world pressure to release the 14 men and one woman seized in the northern Gulf a week ago and now being held in a secret location. Britain insists they were on a routine anti-smuggling patrol in Iraqi waters under a UN mandate but Iran says they were in its territorial waters. "I would like to apologise for entering your waters without any permission," the Royal Navy serviceman, identified as Nathan Thomas Sommers, said in an interview broadcast on Iran's Arabic-language Al-Alam television. The interview was interspersed with images of the sailor sitting with two of his comrades, including the only woman, Faye Turney, smiling, and with bowls of fruit and flowers in front of them. Turney's latest letter, released by Iranian authorities in London, calls for British troops to withdraw from Iraq. Paul Beaver, a leading defence expert, said Turney's pullout call suggested
the letters were written under duress. "She knows that as a serving member of
the armed forces she has no public opinion on that," he explained.
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