Iran warns it will ‘avenge’ killing of Guards colonel

Iran warns it will ‘avenge’ killing of Guards colonel

Iran warns it will ‘avenge’ killing of Guards colonel

Iran warns it will ‘avenge’ killing of Guards colonel

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President Ebrahim Raisi warned on Monday that Iran will avenge the killing of a Revolutionary Guards colonel who was shot dead in Tehran.

Assailants on motorcycles fired five bullets at Colonel Sayyad Khodai as he sat in his car outside his home on Sunday.

Iran blamed “elements linked to global arrogance,” the Islamic republic’s term for the US and its allies, including Israel.

It was the most high-profile killing inside Iran since the November 2020 murder of top nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh.

Raisi said: “I insist on the serious pursuit (of the killers) by security officials, and I have no doubt that the blood of this great martyr will be avenged.

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“There is no doubt that the hand of global arrogance can be seen in this crime,” he added, echoing the Guards’ assertion before he traveled to Oman where he was to meet Sultan Haitham bin, Tariq.

A memorial service for Khodai was scheduled in Tehran at 5:00 pm local time (1230 GMT) on Monday.

The funeral will take place at 8:00 am (0330 GMT) on Tuesday in Imam Hossein Square in central Tehran, the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corp said in a statement.

The ideological arm of Iran’s military, the Guards described Khodai as a “defender of the sanctuary”, a term used for those who work on behalf of Iran in Syria or Iraq.

Iran maintains significant political influence in both countries and has backed President Bashar al-Assad’s regime in Syria’s grinding civil war.

State television noted that Khodai was “known” in Syria, where Iran has acknowledged deploying “military advisers”.

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– ‘Criminal act’ –

 

The official news agency IRNA said Khodai was killed by five bullets as he returned home Sunday at around 4:00 pm.

The agency published pictures showing a man slumped over in the driver’s seat of a white car, with blood around the collar of his blue shirt and on his right arm. He was strapped in with his seat belt, and the front window on the passenger side had been shot out.

The Fars news agency reported that the state prosecutor had visited the scene of the killing and ordered the “quick identification and arrest of the authors of this criminal act”.

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The Guards said they had arrested several “thugs linked to the intelligence agency of the Zionist regime,” as Iran calls its enemy Israel.

A statement said the suspects had been involved in a series of crimes, including “robberies, kidnappings, and vandalism”.

“The dimensions of this assassination are being investigated,” said the spokesman for the joint chiefs of staff of the Iranian armed forces, General Abolfazl Shakarji.

Khodai’s killing came as negotiations between Iran and world powers to restore a frayed 2015 nuclear deal have stalled since March.

One of the main sticking points is Tehran’s demand to remove the Guards from a US terrorism list — a request rejected by Washington.

The 2015 agreement granted Iran sanctions relief in exchange for limits on its nuclear program, preventing Tehran from developing an atomic bomb, which it has always denied wanting.

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However, the nuclear agreement was left hanging by a thread after then-US President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew from it in 2018 and reimposed harsh economic sanctions on Tehran, prompting Iran to begin withdrawing from its own commitments.

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