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TEHRAN, Iran, Sept. 3, 2006

Dr Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, President of the Islamic Republic of Iran
(AP) Iran said
Sunday it would sponsor a conference in the autumn questioning the extent of the
Holocaust, dismissing it as exaggerated, in a provocative move timed during a
visit by U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan.
The decision came as Annan raised concerns with Iranian officials over an
exhibition of cartoons about the Holocaust in Iran's capital, Tehran. In
critical comments, he stressed that the Holocaust was "an undeniable historical
fact."
Hard-line President Ahmoud Ahmadinejad has called the Nazis' slaughter of 6
million Jews a myth and said Israel should be wiped off the map or moved to
Germany or the United States. His remarks prompted a global outpouring of
condemnation.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi said both opponents and proponents
of the existence of the Holocaust could participate in the conference.
"God willing, a conference on the Holocaust will be held in the autumn. The
Holocaust is not a sacred issue that one can't touch," he told reporters. "I
have visited the Nazi camps in Eastern Europe. I think it is exaggerated."
Asefi did not disclose where the Holocaust conference would be held, nor who
would attend. Iran first raised the possibility of the conference in January.
Annan brought up the exhibit, which opened in response to Muslim outrage over
the Prophet Muhammad caricatures, in talks Saturday with Foreign Minister
Manouchehr Mottaki, said Annan's spokesman Ahmad Fawzi.
Annan told Mottaki "we should avoid anything that incites hatred" according to
Fawzi.
The Holocaust cartoon exhibit opened last month at Tehran's Caricature House,
with 204 entries from Iran and abroad.
The cartoons were submitted after the exhibit's co-sponsor, the Hamshahri
newspaper, said it wanted to test the West's tolerance for drawings about the
Nazis' mass murder of European Jews during World War II. The entries on display
came from nations including United States, Indonesia and Turkey.
Annan on Sunday reiterated his displeasure over the exhibition and implicitly
criticized Iran for its attitude to the Holocaust.
"I think the tragedy of the Holocaust is an undeniable historical fact and we
should really accept that fact and teach people what happened in World War II
and ensure it is never repeated," he told reporters after meeting Ahmadinejad.
Israel lashed out at the Iranian leadership for subscribing to what it termed
"Holocaust denial."
"This is not about the Holocaust, this is about Holocaust denial. In the past
such Holocaust denial was the prerogative of the neo-Nazis and ultraright
racists. It's surely a pity that we have a leadership representing a country in
the family of nations has officially adopted these obscene ideas," said Israeli
Foreign Ministry spokesman Mark Regev.
Ahmadinejad has waged a campaign against Israel since he took office in August
last year, with his inflammatory rhetoric deepening Tehran's international
isolation.
Israel considers Iran a threat and has refused to rule out military force to
destroy Iran's nuclear program. Iran has said its nuclear activities are
intended only to generate electricity, but Western countries suspect the country
is trying to build an atomic bomb.
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©-free 2006 Adelaide Institute