A member of the Judiciary and Legal Commission of Iran's parliament has denounced Interpol for succumbing to US and Israel pressures over the AMIA case.
Ezzatollah Yusefiyan said it is clear that imposing pressure on Interpol is against international rules and regulations, ISNA reported.
The lawmaker termed Interpol a disciplinary authority prosecuting international criminals which has gained a good reputation in the past.
"In the AMIA case, the judge was dismissed for taking a bribe from the Zionist regime, hence Interpol has lost all face in this case," Yusefiyan added.
He said that the AMIA was not a case that fell under Interpol's jurisdiction and the ruling it issued was politicall.
Interpol has recently added four Iranians to its most-wanted list for a 1994 bombing that killed 85 people at a Jewish center in Argentina. PressTV
Update
Executive Order Amended to Immunize INTERPOL In America
Cocaine rabbi is spared jail
Eminent rabbi Baruch Chalomish, 54, who has a personal fortune of 7million, admitted one count of possessing cocaine and was found guilty of a further count of possession after a six-day trial.
Judge Michael Henshell, sentencing him at Manchester Crown Court, imposed a six month supervision order, ordered him to complete 60 days of community work and pay court costs of 3,899.22.
The rabbi was an "eminent and leading" member of Manchester's Jewish community who stuffed money-filled envelopes through the letterboxes of those less fortunate, his trial heard last month.
He also spent 1,000 a week on "the best cocaine in town" and partied alongside GPs and surgeons while paying prostitutes for sex.
The father-of-three threw himself into drugs and sex following the sudden death of his first wife, the jury heard.
On January 5 police raided a city-centre apartment in Manchester used for cocaine parties.
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