Middle East

Iran says only Salman Rushdie and supporters to blame for attack

Tehran also denied knowing or having any connection to the stabbing the novelist.

Tehran, Iran –Iran claims Salman Rushdie and his followers are to blame in an attempt to distance itself from the New York attack that left the writer severely injured.

“We consider no one except [Rushdie] and his supporters deserving of blame or even condemnation” for the attack, Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani told reporters during a news conference on Monday.

Kanani added that Rushdie “exposed himself to public indignation” through insulting holy Islamic values and “crossing the red lines of 1.5 billion Muslims”.

“No one has a right to blame the Islamic Republic of Iran” for the attack, he said, vehemently denying reports that Tehran has had any links with the attacker, 24-year-old Hadi Matar, who pleaded not guilty in court a day after the assault.

The spokesman also accused the West, especially the United States, of exercising “double standards” when supporting freedom of expression, and said Rushdie’s undermining of Islamic values cannot be supported from religious, moral, human, or legal standpoints.

Rushdie, 75, was attacked as he prepared to give a lecture. His agent Andrew Wylie said the author sustained “severe” injuries but has been taken off the ventilator and has the ability to speak.

Rushdie, a 1988 book The Satanic Verses that many Muslims consider blasphemous, had been subject to death threats for over 30 years. The book was banned in Iran as well as India and Pakistan.

In 1989, Iran’s then-supreme leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, issued a religious edict calling for Rushdie’s death. Ayatollah Ayatollah Al Khamenei, his successor, said that the fatwa was in force as recently as 2019.

Asked on Monday about the Iranian comments that Rushdie and his followers were to blame for the attack, Ned Price, the US State Department spokesman, said it was “despicable, it’s disgusting”.

“It’s no secret that the Iranian regime has been central to the threats on his life,” said Price.

The British government called it “ludicrous” to suggest that Rushdie might bear any responsibility for the attack on himself.

“Clearly it’s ludicrous to suggest that Salman Rushdie was in any way responsible for this abhorrent attack on him,” an official spokesman said. “This was not just an attack on him, it was an attack on the right to free speech and expression, and the UK government stands both by him and his family. But equally we will stand in defence of free speech around the world.”

Iranian media and newspapers have hailed the attack and praised the assailant in recent days, with ultraconservative Keyhan – whose chief is appointed by Khamenei – writing, “Bravo to this courageous and duty-conscious man who attacked the apostate and depraved” Rushdie.

Meanwhile, state-run news website IRNA said at least one other person had tried to kill Rushdie following Khomeini’s religious ruling.

IRNA said Mustafa Mahmoud Mazeh, who died after a bomb he was priming for Rushdie prematurely exploded in London in 1989, was “the first martyr” on the path of killing Rushdie. The outlet published a picture of a shrine in Tehran dedicated to Mazeh.

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