‘I love Australian people’: Iran ambassador speaks out

Iran’s Ambassador, while defending the security advice of the Prime Minister, insists that he loves Australia despite being deported from the country.
Iran’s Ambassador of Australia Ahmad Sadeghi was seen in front of the embassy on Thursday and shook journalists before the upcoming exit.
Mr. Sadeghi said that the national spy agency Asio’s Iranian revolution guard was a reliable proof that Corp’s Corp had at least two attacks on Jewish institutions in Sidney and Melbourne through criminals.
Orum I love the people of Australia, goodbye, ”he said to journalists in his first public interpretations since his deportation on Thursday.
However, when asked if the Australian government’s decision was wrong, he replied, “No comments”.
Anthony coincided with his defense of his decision to leave Albanian.
Laws are also being prepared to list Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps as a terrorist organization.

However, Albania, two years ago after the recommendations from the Ministry of Interior, the organization could not list the organization as a terrorist group under the opposition in the parliament came under fire.
In his statement to the Parliament, he said, ım My Intelligence Committee, which is from 2017 to 2020, was called to call the IRGC to list the IRGC. ”
“The government decided to change the criminal law and then to list a terrorist organization.
“For any reason, he did not want the coalition government (list the IRGC as a terrorist organization). In fact, we had sages of the reason.”
Following the deportation of the ambassador, the community leaders said that the Iranian heritage Australians were facing verbal harassment and intimidation.

Australian Iranian Vice President Kambiz Razmara, the local diaspora, the regime on the women’s rights movement after 2022 since 2022 wanted the deportation of the ambassador.
The authority reported that Australia’s Iranian community is limited to the actions of Iranian officials.
Razmara, “Iran diaspora, Iran is important that we are against what is important,” he said.
“The Iranian diaspora is here in general, because they are looking for freedom of freedom and social harmony, expression and democracy, so everything we are against determined.”
David Andrews from the National Security College of the National University of Australia said the government took the right step after the “insidious, unfavorable” work on Iran’s “insidious, unfavorable” studies on destabilizing the Australian society.

On the relationship between Australia with Iran, Mr. Andrews said that Canberra could diplomacy on behalf of his friends and allies who had no mission in Tehran in the past.
“(Extraction) Potentially puts this role at a little risk,” he said.
Australia should expect some retaliation.
“People with a risk of use as a political pawn or bilateral citizenship passing through Iran or people with Australians can be used as a leverage or a species in response to this action, Andrews said.
“There is no one to try to repair these ties very actively.”

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