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  •      Trinidad News and Tobago News    
     Welcome to Breaking News
     Friday, July 30 2010 @ 12:41 AM AST

    No homosexuals in Iran, President boasts

    Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has clashed with the head of New York's Columbia University while making his controversial appearance at the campus, the BBC reported today.

    Columbia President Lee Bollinger described Mr Ahmadinejad as a "cruel dictator" who denied the Holocaust.

    In response, Mr Ahmadinejad called the remarks "an insult", adding that more research was needed on the Holocaust.

    He again defended Tehran's nuclear ambitions and said it had every right to pursue a peaceful programme.

    Washington accuses Iran of seeking to build a nuclear bomb and arming insurgents in Iraq - Tehran rejects the charges.

    Many Americans said the Iranian leader should not have been invited to speak at Columbia University.

    But his appearance was popular - crowds flocked to a large screen set up on university grounds, and tickets to the actual event were quickly snapped up. Mr Ahmadinejad's appearance sparked protests in New York, with demonstrators saying it provided a platform for hate.

    Mr Ahmadinejad has been denied a visit to the site of the 11 September attacks in New York in 2001, with US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice saying that "it would have been a travesty".

    "This is somebody who is the president of a country that is probably the greatest sponsor - state sponsor - of terrorism," Ms Rice told CNBC television.

    'Brazen'

    Mr Ahmadinejad was invited to Columbia University to address its students at the university's World Leaders Forum.

    He received a hostile welcome from Mr Bollinger, who described the Iranian leader as "a petty and cruel dictator".

    "You are either brazenly provocative or astonishingly uneducated," Mr Bollinger told Mr Ahmadinejad, referring to his denial of the Holocaust.

    In response, Mr Ahmadinejad said that Mr Bollinger's remarks were "an insult to information and the knowledge of the audience".

    The BBC's Jon Leyne, in New York, said Mr Ahmadinejad was visibly annoyed. At one point he demanded to know why raising issues about the Holocaust or the existence of Israel was not compatible with freedom of speech, our correspondent says.

    Mr Ahmadinejad has called in the past for an end to the Israeli state and described the Holocaust as a "myth".

    Addressing the Holocaust issue, Mr Ahmadinejad said he simply wanted more research to be done.

    He also said the issue was abused by Israel to justify what he said was its mistreatment of the Palestinians.

    'Evil has landed'

    Asked about executions of homosexuals in Iran, Mr Ahmadinejad replied: "In Iran we don't have homosexuals like in your country."

    Reacting to laughter and jeers from the audience he added: "In Iran we don't have this phenomenon, I don't know who you told this."

    The New York Daily News's front page headline on Monday read "The Evil Has Landed", while the New York Post described Mr Ahmadinejad as "Madman Iran Prez".

    Dozens of protesters gathered outside the university on Sunday, but Mr Bollinger defended the university's invitation, saying it was a question of free speech and academic freedom.

    The Iranian leader is in New York to attend the UN General Assembly, where he is due to speak on Tuesday.

    Our correspondent says Mr Ahmadinejad firmly believes he can convince global opinion and the American people of the rightness of his cause.

    ................................................................................................................
    Ahmadinejad questions 9/11, Holocaust

    By NAHAL TOOSI, Associated Press Writer

    NEW YORK - Iranian leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad defended Holocaust deniers and raised questions about who carried out the Sept. 11 attacks in a tense showdown Monday at Columbia University where the school's head introduced the visitor by calling him a "petty and cruel dictator."

    Ahmadinejad, appearing shaken by what he called "insults" from his host, sought to portray himself as an intellectual and argued that his regime had respect for reason and science. But the former engineering professor soon found himself drawn into the type of rhetoric that has alienated American audiences in the past.

    He provoked derisive laughter by responding to a question about Iran's execution of homosexuals by saying: "In Iran we don't have homosexuals like in your country ... I don't know who's told you that we have this."

    At times, however, he drew audience applause, such as when he bemoaned the plight of the Palestinians.

    But his first stab was at Columbia's president, Lee Bollinger, who said in his introduction of Ahmadinejad: "Mr. President, you exhibit all the signs of a petty and cruel dictator."

    Ahmadinejad said Bollinger's opening was "an insult to information and the knowledge of the audience here."

    "There were insults and claims that were incorrect, regretfully," Ahmadinejad added, accusing Bollinger of falling under the influence of the hostile U.S. press and politicians.

    Appearing agitated at times, Iran's president often declined to offer the simple answers the audience sought, responding instead with his own questions or long discursions about history and justice.

    Bollinger opened by aggressively taking on Ahmadinejad's past statements about the Holocaust.

    "In a December 2005 state television broadcast, you described the Holocaust as the fabricated legend," he said. "One year later, you held a two-day conference of Holocaust deniers."

    Bollinger said that might fool the illiterate and ignorant.

    "When you come to a place like this, it makes you simply ridiculous. The truth is that the Holocaust is the most documented event in human history," he said.

    Ahmadinejad denied he had questioned the existence of the Holocaust.

    "Granted this happened, what does it have to do with the Palestinian people?" he said.

    But Ahmadinejad went on to say that he was defending the rights of European scholars, an apparent reference to a small number who have been prosecuted under national laws for denying or minimizing the Holocaust.

    "There's nothing known as absolute," he said.

    Asked why he had asked to visit the World Trade Center site — a request denied by New York authorities — Ahmadinejad said he wanted to express sympathy for the victims of the Sept. 11 attacks.

    Then he appeared to question whether al-Qaida was responsible, saying more research was needed.

    "If the root causes of 9/11 are examined properly — why it happened, what caused it, what were the conditions that led to it, who truly was involved, who was really involved — and put it all together to understand how to prevent the crisis in Iraq, fix the problem in Afghanistan and Iraq combined," Ahmadinejad said.

    Bollinger drew strong criticism for inviting Ahmadinejad to Columbia and had promised tough questions in his introduction. But the stridency of his attack on the Iranian leader took many by surprise.

    "You are either brazenly provocative or astonishingly uneducated," Bollinger told Ahmadinejad about the leader's Holocaust denial. "Will you cease this outrage?"

    Bollinger's introduction was "very harsh," said Hamid Dabashi, a professor of Iranian studies at Columbia University.

    "Inviting him and then turning around and alienating and insulting an entire nation whose representative this man happens to be is simply inappropriate," Dabashi said.

    In Iran, Ahmadinejad's appearance at Columbia could be seen on Arabic satellite channels and state television's Arabic-language service, but it did not appear on channels that broadcast in Farsi, the language of Iran.

    During his prepared remarks, the Iranian president did not address Bollinger's accusations directly, instead launching into quotes with the Quran and criticism of the Bush administration and past American governments, from warrant-less wiretapping to the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan.

    He said the Holocaust has been abused as a justification for Israeli mistreatment of the Palestinians.

    "Why is it that the Palestinian people are paying the price for an event they had nothing to do with?" Ahmadinejad asked.

    He closed his prepared remarks with a terse smile, to applause and boos, before taking questions from the audience.

    Ahmadinejad claimed women have tremendous rights in Iran and insisted his country does not believe in nuclear weapons.

    Asked about his country's nuclear intentions, he insisted the program is peaceful, legal and entirely within Iran's rights, despite attempts by "monopolistic," "selfish" powers to derail it. "How come is it that you have that right, and we can't have it?" he added.

    President Bush said Ahmadinejad's appearance at Columbia "speaks volumes about, really, the greatness of America."

    He told Fox News Channel that if Bollinger considered Ahmadinejad's visit an educational experience for Columbia students, "I guess it's OK with me."

    But conservatives on Capitol Hill were critical. Sen. Joseph Lieberman, an independent from Connecticut, said he thought the invitation to Ahmadinejad was a mistake "because he comes literally with blood on his hands."

    Thousands of people jammed two blocks of 47th Street across from the United Nations to protest Ahmadinejad's visit to New York for the opening of the U.N. General Assembly session. Organizers claimed a turnout of tens of thousands. Police did not immediately have a crowd estimate.

    The speakers, most of them politicians and officials from Jewish organizations, proclaimed their support for Israel and criticized the Iranian leader for his remarks questioning the Holocaust.

    "We're here today to send a message that there is never a reason to give a hatemonger an open stage," New York City Council Speaker Christine Quinn said.

    Hundreds of protesters also assembled at Columbia. Dozens stood near the lecture hall where Ahmadinejad was scheduled to speak, linking arms and singing traditional Jewish folk songs about peace and brotherhood. A two-person band nearby played "You Are My Sunshine."

    Signs in the crowd displayed a range of messages, including one reading: "We refuse to choose between Islamic fundamentalism and American imperialism."

    ___

    Associated Press writers Karen Matthews and Aaron Clark contributed to this report.

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