Iranian in Berlin demonstrated today in front of the Japanese embassy in Germany to protest against a programmed visit to Japan, by the mullahs’ president Hassan Rouhani scheduled for tomorrow Friday 20 December.
In a letter addressed to the ambassador, demonstrators urged the Japanese government to cancel the visit by Rouhani, who is supposed to meet the Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. They said Rouhani was responsible for “crimes against humanity”, so his visit to the country should not take place especially a few weeks after the brutal suppression of Iran protests by government forces in Iran.
The letter to the Japanese ambassador reads as follows:
“We – representative of the Iranian community in Germany – are protesting here in front of the Japanese embassy telling your government: Rouhani is responsible for crimes against humanity. And asking: Cancel his visit to Japan / Hold him accountable.
Japan’s welcoming of Hassan Rouhani, the criminal president of the mullahs’ regime, following the massacre of defenseless protesters, will only embolden the religious fascism in Iran to intensify its criminal crackdown at home, and export terrorism and warmongering to the region and the world.
During the nationwide uprising in November, the clerical regime murdered 1,500, wounded 4,000, and arrested 12,000 protesters, subjecting them to torture.
Receiving Rouhani, who personally and publicly called for the suppression of protesters, will add insult to injuries suffered by the Iranian people and the families of the victims. This move arouses outrage and indignation throughout the world.
In the past four decades, Rouhani has been directly involved in the ruling regime’s crimes, including 120,000 political executions, export of terrorism and warmongering to the region, efforts to obtain nuclear weapons, production of ballistic missiles, and the plunder of the Iranian people’s national wealth. Rouhani deserves to be arrested and brought to justice for committing crimes against humanity, instead of being welcomed in Japan.”