Move comes two days after the United States and Great Britain to impose economic sanctions against Iran's controversial nuclear program
Iranian Parliament retaliated against Western economic sanctions against the Islamic Republic with the approval of a bill to reduce Tehran's diplomatic relations with Great Britain.
Iranian MPs voted overwhelmingly Wednesday to reduce Iran's relations with London from ambassadorial level to that of charge d'affaires.
change came two days after the U.S. Iran and Britain has led the financial sector with new punitive measures on the nuclear program of the Islamic regime.
chancellor, George Osborne, said Monday that Britain could cut ties with Iranian banks, including the Central Bank of Iran (CBI), to limit access to the funding regime International for their nuclear activities. The United States said that the oil sanction Iran and the petrochemical industry, and companies affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard or those involved in its nuclear program.
reaction, 228 members of the Iranian parliament issued a statement condemning the movement in Britain Wednesday.
"The British government has shown once again the depth of the hatred and enmity towards the Islamic Republic system of the Republic worse than the devil and took another step towards being an enemy Ad ... sanctions on the Central Bank, "the statement said.
state news agency reported the head of the parliamentary committee on national security and foreign policy, Alaeddin Boroujerdi, called the government of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to expel the British ambassador in Tehran , Dominick Chilcott.
"policy of Great Britain is a normal and hostile relations with the government does not make sense," he said.
The Guardian Council, a body of clerics and lawyers charged with veto any parliamentary legislation has yet to approve today's decision before it can legisltate.
- Chilcott took office as the new ambassador to Tehran a few weeks ago, after months of tension between the two capitals. The British Embassy has received its share of the entrepreneur, Jane Marriott.
- The British Ministry of Foreign Affairs said it would be "very unhappy" if Irandecided to cut ties with the United Kingdom. "We are aware of the Consultative Assembly" [Iranian Parliament] the decision to vote on whether the relationship with the United Kingdom pending. It is too early to say what will happen, " said a spokesman for the FCO.
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