India Rejects Claims of Delay in Signing Iran Condolence Book

India's Ministry of External Affairs has firmly rejected claims that it delayed signing the condolence book for the late Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei. Spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal stated Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri signed the book on March 5, the very first day it was opened at the Iranian Embassy in New Delhi. The Iranian Embassy had kept the book open for three days and later expressed gratitude to the Indian people and officials for their solidarity. The MEA urged commentators to be better informed before making public remarks on such diplomatic matters.

Key Points: India Denies Delay in Signing Condolence for Iran's Khamenei

  • India rejected claims of a 5-day delay
  • Foreign Secretary signed on the first day
  • Condolence book was open for three days
  • Iranian Embassy thanked Indian dignitaries
3 min read

Ill-informed comments best avoided: India rejects claims about delay in signing condolence book at Iranian Embassy

MEA clarifies Foreign Secretary signed book on first day, calls out "ill-informed" commentary on diplomatic protocol.

"Such ill-informed comments are best avoided. - Randhir Jaiswal, MEA Spokesperson"

New Delhi, March 12

India on Thursday categorically rejected claims that it took five days to sign the condolence book for late Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei at the Iranian Embassy in New Delhi, terming such statements as "ill-informed".

Addressing a weekly media briefing on Thursday, Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal mentioned that Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri signed the condolence book on the first day of the opening of the book and urged commentators to update themselves on important matters before making remarks in public.

"Let me clarify the issue for you and for everybody here. As you are aware, Foreign Secretary signed the condolence book at the Iranian embassy on behalf of the Government of India. He did so on 5th March itself, which was the first day of the opening of the book. It would do well for commentators to first update themselves on important matters before they choose to speak in public. Such ill-informed comments are best avoided."

Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri, on behalf of the Government of India, signed the condolence book at the Iranian Embassy in New Delhi on March 5 and offered condolences on the death of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Misri met Iranian Ambassador to India Mohammad Fathali and offered condolences over the demise of Khamenei.

Khamenei was killed in an epochal attack by the US and Israel on February 28, marking an inflexion point in the 46-year Shia-theocratic rule.

Across Iran, days of national mourning began immediately, accompanied by public declarations of continued resistance and unity in the face of what the government called an act of aggression.

In response to the profound loss felt by the Iranian people and supporters worldwide, the Iranian Embassy in New Delhi had invited members of the Indian public, members of the diplomatic community, and anyone wishing to express sympathy to visit the premises and sign the condolence book. The condolence book remained open for three days - March 5, March 6 and March 9.

On March 11, the Iranian Embassy in India expressed gratitude to the people of India, government officials, political parties, religious leaders, scholars, academics, and members of the media who visited the Embassy to sign the condolence book and expressed their sympathies with the people of Iran.

The Embassy shared a video on X which showed several leaders, officials and people visiting the Embassy to offer condolences on Khamenei's death.

"The Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Iran expresses its sincere appreciation and gratitude to the great people of India, government officials, political parties, religious leaders, scholars, academics, and members of the media who visited the Embassy to sign the condolence book opened on the occasion of the martyrdom of Ayatollah Khamenei, the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic, and expressed their sympathy with the people of Iran. Their valued presence and heartfelt expressions of solidarity are deeply appreciated," the Embassy posted on X.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
This is a diplomatic gesture, and India handled it with the required sensitivity and timeliness. It's unfortunate that a simple act of condolence gets politicized. We should respect protocols.
A
Aman W
While I'm glad the record is set straight, the MEA's tone feels a bit sharp. A simple correction would suffice. "Ill-informed comments are best avoided" sounds like a scolding. We are a democracy, after all.
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Sarah B
Interesting to see the Iranian Embassy's gracious thank you note. It shows the gesture was appreciated. India's foreign policy often walks a tightrope, and this seems to have been handled well.
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Vikram M
Baseless rumours again! Why create a controversy where none exists? Our officials did their duty on day one. This is about basic humanity and condolence, not politics. Shame on those spreading fake news.
K
Kriti O
The important thing is that India expressed solidarity with the people of Iran in their time of loss. The rest is just noise. Our long-standing relationship with Iran is crucial, especially for energy security.

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