Britain touts reopening of its embassy in Iran

TEHRAN, Iran -- Britain reopened its embassy in Tehran on Sunday in a sign of newly thawed relations since the nuclear deal between Iran and world powers.

British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond attended the reopening ceremony and witnessed the raising of the Union Jack over the compound. The embassy had been closed since November 2011, when it was stormed by demonstrators protesting the imposition of international sanctions against the Islamic Republic.

"Maintaining dialogue even under the most difficult conditions is crucially important," Hammond said during a joint news conference with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif. "So reopening the embassy in Tehran and the Iranian embassy in London is not just an important symbol. It's an important practical channel for being able to engage on the very many issues that are of concern and the very many issues that we have shared interests."

Zarif welcomed the reopening of the British Embassy, saying it showed Iran's regional and global significance.

"This will be a new start in the relations of Iran and Britain, which has seen several ups and downs over the past years. Today, we have entered a new stage of ties based on mutual respect, policy of constructive interaction and dialogue," he said.

But despite the mutual optimism on display, the reopening was greeted with skepticism and hostility in some corners. The semi-official Fars news agency, which is considered close to Iran's conservative camp, published an article with the headline: "Den of fox reopened."

A similar ceremony took place at the Iranian Embassy in London. Several Iranian and British dignitaries, including former Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, were seen entering the embassy Sunday morning, but it was unclear exactly when the embassy will formally resume operations.

Terrorism, regional stability and the spread of the Islamic State extremist group in Syria and Iraq are among the challenges Britain and Iran should be prepared to work together on, Hammond said. But he added that he also expected the two nations to continue having their share of public disagreements. The embassy building still bears some anti-British graffiti from the November 2011 protests.

"We are clear-eyed about what the future offers us: big opportunities. But we know that there will be areas where we continue to disagree, and sometimes disagree strongly. We won't shirk from that," he said. "The important thing is that now we have a channel to talk to each other, and we will be talking about all the issues whether we agree with each other or not."

Hammond was accompanied by a small British trade delegation to discuss possible trade opportunities, the Foreign Office added.

The British Embassy would initially have a small number of staff members with limited consular services, but officials expect to upgrade it to full ambassador status in coming months.

Iranian hard-liners oppose the improved relations with London. Many of them had called the British Embassy the "epicenter of sedition" when they attacked it in 2011. They accused the country and its media, including the BBC, of fomenting unrest and encouraging rioters in Iran after disputed 2009 presidential elections.

Conservative lawmaker Esmaeil Kowsari said reopening the British Embassy opens the path for London's "penetration" into Iran.

"Given concerns over efforts by the enemy to penetrate into Iran after the nuclear deal, it was not appropriate that the British Embassy in Tehran is reopened," the hard-line daily Kayhan quoted him as saying.

Kowsari called on Iran's security and intelligence agencies to carefully watch British Embassy operations and "prevent conspiracies by the British government before they are carried out."

About 50 demonstrators approached the British Embassy to hold a protest hours after it reopened, according to an Associated Press photographer who was present at the scene. The protesters shouted common Iranian chants such as "death to the U.S." and "death to Britain," but also chanted "death to the compromiser," in an apparent reference to President Hassan Rouhani, who supports the nuclear deal.

Iranian police confronted and dispersed the protesters, and at least 10 people were arrested, according to the rajanews website.

Information for this article was contributed by Sylvia Hui of The Associated Press.

A Section on 08/24/2015

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