India names three Iranian suspects of an attack against an Israeli diplomat

 

Three Iranians have been named by Indian police as the main suspects in an attack on an Israeli diplomat in New Delhi in February, reports said on Thursday.

The men entered the country on tourist’s visas and left after the bombing in the center of the Indian capital which badly wounded a female worker at the Israeli embassy, the Times of India reported.

The report, citing anonymous police and intelligence agency sources, said police had warrants for the men and their names would be given to the Iranian government.

The Indian Express said that India would seek help from Interpol, the international police organization, to track down the suspects.

Last week, police made their first arrest in the case as they detained a Delhi-based Indian freelance journalist who worked part-time for Iran’s news agency IRNA.

On February 13, a hitman on a motorbike attached a magnetic bomb to the back of an Israeli embassy car carrying the Israeli diplomat as she went to pick up her children from school.

Malaysia to extradite Bangkok suspect

Meanwhile, Malaysian authorities on Thursday applied for a court order to extradite to Thailand an Iranian man suspected of involvement in an alleged bomb plot against Israeli diplomats in Bangkok.

Masoud Sedaghatzadeh was arrested at Kuala Lumpur’s international airport on February 15, a day after the alleged plot was exposed by an apparently unintended blast at a Bangkok house occupied by three Iranian suspects.

He had arrived in Malaysia the night before on a flight from Thailand.

Sedaghatzadeh denied involvement in the botched Bangkok bomb case as he appeared before a Kuala Lumpur court for the extradition application.

“Why am I here? I don’t have anything to do with the case,” he said in Farsi, speaking to the court through an interpreter.

Malaysia was acting on a Thai extradition request, said Kamal Baharin Omar, head of extraditions with the attorney-general’s office.

A decision may be weeks away and the government has asked for a month delay until the next hearing, saying it was awaiting further evidence from Thai authorities backing the extradition request.

The next hearing was set for April 16.

Sedaghatzadeh’s lawyer, Mohamad Nashir Hussin, said the application was invalid as there was no extradition treaty between the two neighbors and the government based its request on an “old” 1911 treaty that he said was outdated.

But Kamal said the Thai request was valid.

Sedaghatzadeh is one of three Iranian men detained in a case that saw tensions spike between arch-foes Iran and Israel following earlier bomb attacks targeting Israeli embassy staff in India and Georgia.

Israel has accused Iran of orchestrating a terror campaign, a charge angrily denied by Tehran.

One of the Bangkok suspects had his legs blown off as he hurled an explosive device at police while fleeing the blast in the Thai capital.

Sedaghatzadeh has said he is a car parts dealer who came to Malaysia on business, while his lawyer said his client had visited Thailand for a “short holiday.”

He was seeking transit to Iran when he was arrested, Malaysian authorities have said.

Source: alarabiya
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