Iran Says Pakistan Is Harboring Rebels By The New York Times
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Chief Ahmadreza Radan also said the authorities had detained 40 people who were seeking to create a disturbance in the city after the bombings, the semiofficial ILNA news agency reported.
Iran's deputy police chief accused Pakistan on Saturday of providing a haven for members of an armed rebel group that has claimed responsibility for the deadly twin suicide bombings last week in front of a mosque in the southeastern city of Zahedan.
Chief Ahmadreza Radan also said the authorities had detained 40 people who were seeking to create a disturbance in the city after the bombings, the semiofficial ILNA news agency reported.
The arrests appeared to be part of a crackdown in the Sunni-dominated province of Sistan-Baluchistan, where the rebel group, Jundallah, has been operating. Iran is predominantly Shiite.
Without naming Pakistan specifically, he issued a tough warning to "neighbors on the eastern borders" of Iran.
"The Islamic Republic considers it its right to deal with insurgents who disappear into the other side of the border," Chief Radan was quoted as saying.














