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Tehran: Iran President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, said on Wednesday that the Holocaust was a myth, reiterating a view that has caused international uproar and drawn a rebuke from the United Nations Security Council.
Ahmadinejad had first suggested that the killing of six million Jews by the Nazis was a legend last week, drawing international condemnation.
"They have fabricated a legend under the name 'Massacre of the Jews', and they hold it higher than God himself, religion itself and the prophets themselves," he told a crowd in the southeastern city of Zahedan on Wednesday.
Ahmadinejad, a former Revolutionary Guardsman who was elected president in June, called Israel a "tumor" which must be "wiped off the map", provoking a diplomatic storm and stoking up fears about Iran's atomic ambitions.
Washington has accused Tehran of seeking nuclear weapons. Iran in turn has denied any nuclear ambitions.
European diplomats say Ahmadinejad's Holocaust comments make it harder for them to negotiate directly with Iran over the country's nuclear program.
Israel's Foreign Ministry said Ahmadinejad's comments on Wednesday showed Iran's "rogue regime" was acting outside acceptable international norms.
"The combination of extremist ideology, a warped understanding of reality and nuclear weapons is one that nobody in the international community can accept," said spokesman Mark Regev.
Historians have reflected that Ahmadinejad sees himself as a popular, pan-Islamic leader in the mold of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in the aftermath of the 1979 Islamic revolution.
Ahmadinejad accused the Israeli government and its allies of hypocrisy and reiterated his view that Israel should be moved from "dear Palestine" to Europe, America or Canada.
"If your civilization consists of unjust acts, oppression and poverty for the majority of the globe to provide your own people welfare, then we shout at the top of our voices that we hate your frail civilization," he added.
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