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Iranian Embassy siege

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The Iranian Embassy Siege of 1980 was a siege of the Iranian embassy in London after it had been taken over by Iranian Arab separatists. The siege was ended when British special forces, the Special Air Service (SAS), stormed the building in Operation Nimrod. The incident brought the SAS to the world's attention as the whole episode was played out in front of the media.[1]

Embassy capture

At 11:30 on 30 April 1980 a six-man team calling itself the Democratic Revolutionary Movement for the Liberation of Arabistan (DRMLA), captured the embassy of the Islamic Republic of Iran in Prince's Gate, South Kensington in central London.

Initially their demands were for the autonomy of an Arab-majority petroleum-rich region in southern Iran known as Khuzestan (the Arabistan of the group's name); later they demanded the release of ninety-one of their comrades, alleged political prisoners of the Iranian government, held in jails in Iran.

Twenty-six hostages were taken (including PC Trevor Lock, the police constable on official protection duty at the main entrance and a visiting BBC radio journalist) when the men first stormed the building, but five were released over the following few days. Police negotiators attempted to mollify the radicals with supplies of food and cigarettes, and on the third day a statement by the group was broadcast on the BBC following threats to kill a hostage. The unit's Iraqi handler had promised the group that the Jordanian ambassador would intervene to provide safe passage, but when it became clear this was not going to happen, the situation in the embassy deteriorated.

On the sixth day of the siege the group killed a hostage, press attaché Abbas Lavasani, and threw his body outside. This marked an escalation of the situation and prompted Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's decision to proceed with the rescue operation. The order to deploy a unit of the Counter Revolutionary Warfare (CRW) wing of the SAS had been given in the first few hours of the siege. When the first hostage was shot, the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, David McNee passed a note to the Ministry of Defence, stating this was now a "military operation".

Media contingents had been camped outside the SAS barracks Stirling Lines in Hereford since the siege began. However the CRW team had been off base at a training exercise and remained in the field until called upon. Thus the media were unable to follow the SAS to the embassy.

However news teams were camped outside the embassy. A unit from the British news organisation ITN, using recently-introduced ENG camera equipment, managed to establish a viewpoint at the rear of the embassy. It was images from this vantage point that showed the SAS raid on the building live on television after their correspondent had been 'tipped off'.

SAS assault

In preparation for storming the building, the landing paths of planes into Heathrow Airport were lowered and British Gas began noisy drilling in an adjoining street to provide noise cover as the SAS moved into position. Prior to the attack the kidnappers and hostages had been observed through fibre-optic probes that had been inserted through the shared wall of an adjoining building. Microphones were used to eavesdrop from the building next door. The raid had been rehearsed in a mock-up of the building in a nearby British army barracks in central London.

The assault started at 19:23 hours on 5 May 1980 (a Bank Holiday Monday)[1] at the rear of the building with the detonation of an explosive charge in a stairwell, twenty-three minutes after the dead hostage had been thrown from the building. Simultaneously, electrical power was cut to the building. Some SAS troopers entered the embassy from the roof, using explosive devices to blow in the window frames. Stun grenades were used to disorient the kidnappers during the attack and the SAS troopers were armed with Heckler & Koch MP5 submachine guns.[1]

Five of the six kidnappers were killed and nineteen hostages were saved. One of the kidnappers was later found to have been shot 27 times. One hostage was killed by a kidnapper during the attack.[1] One of the SAS men, Fijian staff-sergeant "Tak" Takavesi, became tangled in his abseiling gear on his entry to the building. Before he could be cut free, a fire started by a stun grenade and fueled by the curtains on the windows reached the sergeant, and he suffered minor burns. However, Takavesi carried on with the operation despite his injuries.

After the assault ended, the last surviving gunman tried to hide as a hostage, but was identified by a real hostage.[1] One SAS soldier was about to take him back into the building presumably to be shot; however, the soldier was prevented when it was pointed out that the world's media were watching.[1]

Aftermath

There was some controversy over the killing of a few of the kidnappers, especially Shai and Makki. They were guarding the Iranian hostages, and towards the end of the raid the hostages persuaded the men to surrender. Hostages witnessed them throw down their weapons and sit on the floor with their hands on their heads (weapons being thrown out of a window and a white flag were seen by video cameras outside).

Dadgar, a hostage at the time (confirmed by two other hostages) said (of the SAS):

"They then took the two terrorists, pushed them against the wall and shot them. They wanted to finish their story. That was their job." ...[they might have] "had something in their pockets but certainly had no weapons in their hands at the time."[1]

At a coroner's inquest the SAS were cleared of summary execution by a jury. One of the soldiers said that he thought Makki was going for a gun, and another said he thought Shai had a grenade and shot him in the back of the neck.

Margaret Thatcher and her husband Denis paid a visit to the SAS at Regent's Park barracks after the incident to thank them. "Tom", one of the SAS soldiers present, said of a later meeting with Denis Thatcher:

"He had a big grin on his face and said, 'You let one of the bastards live.' We failed in that respect."[1]

Fowzi Nejad was convicted for his part in the siege, and was sentenced to life imprisonment. He became eligible for parole in 2005. With the date of his parole nearing, commentators noted that the British government may be unable to deport him to Iran on his release, as he may face torture or execution there, and could be forced to grant him political asylum. PC Trevor Lock, on guard at the embassy when it was taken, condemned this, but one of the hostages, Dadgar, told the BBC:

"I personally forgive him, yes. I think he has been punished – fair enough."[2][3]

The news coverage thrust journalist Kate Adie into the limelight. It was also a breakthrough for women journalists in general, as until that time warzones and other hotspots were the preserve of male reporters. As that afternoon's BBC duty reporter, Adie was on the scene as the SAS stormed the embassy. The BBC interrupted coverage of the World Snooker Championships and Adie reported live and unscripted to one of the largest news audiences ever, whilst crouched behind a car door. At forty-five minutes, this was the longest "newsflash" (ITN called it an 'open-ender') on British television to date.[citation needed]

See also

External links

References

Sources

  • BBC documentary "SAS Embassy Siege", directed by Bruce Goodison, produced by Louise Norman (Best Historical Documentary, Grierson Awards 2003).
  • The 1982 movie Who Dares Wins was based on this incident.
  • Michael Asher "The Regiment: The Real Story of the SAS", Penguin/Viking (2007)

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