Iran blocks US ‘virtual embassy’

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Iran blocked America’s “virtual embassy” website hours after it was launched by the US State Department.

“In accordance with the cybercrime law, access to this website is not possible,” read a notice to anyone inside Iran trying to visit iran.usembassy.gov.

The “Virtual Embassy Tehran” website — which makes clear it does not offer consular services – is an attempt by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to give Iranians a sympathetic view of the United States, which is referred to as “the Great Satan” by Tehran’s ruling elite.

The US has had no diplomatic relations with Iran since its embassy in Tehran was stormed in 1979 – the year of the Islamic Revolution – and its staff held hostage for 444 days.

Washington has since sought to isolate Iran, leading international sanctions against nuclear activities it believes are aimed at making the atom bomb, a charge Tehran denies.

The website was launched one week after British diplomats fled Iran after their embassy was stormed by radical youths, bringing Tehran’s relations with Europe to a new low.

Tehran blames the West for seeking to overthrow its Islamic system, and its control of the Internet aims to stop Iranians accessing foreign sites that offer views that do not concur with its own tightly controlled media.

The semi-official Fars news agency commented on the blocking of the U.S. website, saying, “A decisive reaction by Iranian authorities has neutralised another sly plot by the Americans.”

Iranians will still be able to access the site by using a virtual private network, software that can subvert the government filter and is essential for the millions of Facebook users in the Islamic state.

In Washington, the State Department said it was aware the website had been blocked but believed Iranians would still have access it through certain channels.

The Iranian action was roundly condemned by the White House. The President’s spokesman said in a statement: “Through this action, the Iranian government has once again demonstrated its commitment to build an electronic curtain of surveillance and censorship around its people.

“The Iranian government’s systematic efforts to deny information to its citizens—to control what the Iranian people see and hear—is doomed to fail in a 21st century when technology is empowering citizens around the globe.”

Telegraph

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