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New York Police Twitter initiative backfires UN committee takes no action on Iran envoy's visa ban
(35 minutes later)
A New York police public relations exercise in which members of the public were asked to share photos of themselves positively interacting with police officers has backfired. A UN committee has taken no action against the US refusal to grant a visa to Iran's newly appointed permanent representative in New York.
It was part of a police push to engage with New Yorkers on social media. The chairman of the Committee on Relations with the Host Country said there had been a "discussion", and that the issue would remain on its agenda.
However, the response was a deluge of negative images including pictures of alleged police brutality and of demonstrators being arrested. Iran says the US has violated its legal obligations and set a dangerous precedent by barring Hamid Aboutalebi.
A police spokesman said the department did not regret the initiative. The US says he has links to students who seized its Tehran embassy in 1979.
"Do you have a photo w/a member of the NYPD? Tweet us & tag it #myNYPD. It may be featured on our Facebook," the department posted on its NYPD News Twitter feed. Mr Aboutalebi insists that he acted merely as a translator on a couple of occasions, an account corroborated by some of the students.
Correspondents say that the intention was to promote a low-cost public relations campaign, but the results were discouraging. Among the photos they received were: No evidence has been published showing he was used regularly or took part in interrogations of the 52 Americans held hostage for 444 days.
One image showing police hitting a protester was accompanied by the comment: "Here the #NYPD engages with its community members, changing hearts and minds one baton at a time." 'Positive developments'
Despite, the onslaught of criticism, an NYPD spokeswoman said the initiative had been good for the city. Last week, Iran's deputy permanent representative to the UN, Hossein Dehghani, requested an urgent meeting of the Committee on Relations with the Host Country, which includes 19 member states.
"We are doing it to get our messages out to the communities," Stephen Davis told the New York Post. After considering the issue on Tuesday, the committee's chairman, Nicholas Emiliou of Cyprus, told reporters that it remained on the agenda and it would "revert to it if necessary".
"We will not be deterred from our social media objective." "I expect to have positive developments on that in the near future."
Mr Dehghani told the committee that Mr Aboutalebi was a "seasoned and well-known career diplomat", and that the US decision to deny him a visa "flagrantly contravenes" the 1947 Headquarters Agreement, under which the US is generally required to grant visas without regard to where they come from, according to a copy of his remarks.
The US representative reportedly said it took its responsibility as a host country very seriously but expressed longstanding concerns about Mr Aboutalebi's admitted role in the hostage crisis, stressing that it was intolerable that someone who had deprived American diplomats of protection should be given diplomatic protection in the US.
On Friday, President Barack Obama signed into law a bill passed by Congress that would bar anyone from entering the US as a permanent representative to the UN if they have engaged in espionage or terrorist activity and still pose a threat to national security.