Larijani Accuses Ahmadinejad of 'Treason' for Attacking the Regime

Sadiq Larijani (Tasnim)
Sadiq Larijani (Tasnim)
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Larijani Accuses Ahmadinejad of 'Treason' for Attacking the Regime

Sadiq Larijani (Tasnim)
Sadiq Larijani (Tasnim)

Head of Iranian judiciary, Sadiq Larijani, criticized former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for his recent statement against Iran's Religious Leader Ali Khamenei. Ahmedinejad accused Khamenei of betraying the revolution to subvert the regime by trying to evade judicial rulings issued against him.

Without naming him, Larijani asked Ahmadinejad to resort to legal methods to challenge verdicts issued against him.

Ahmadinejad criticized Khamenei for his direct role in appointing Larijani. The president of the judiciary is not accountable to the government or parliament because according to the Iranian constitution, the Religious Leader is the only person who can hold the Head of Iranian judiciary accountable.

"To whom we complain, even the leader says that Larijani cannot be held accountable for the judiciary and says he is not interfering in his work," Ahmadinejad said earlier.

Last week Ahmadinejad said in a statement posted on his website that brothers Ali and Sadiq Larijani, presiding the judiciary and the parliament, are seeking to attain the positions of supreme leader and president.

Larijani accused the former Iranian president of attacking the judiciary, regime and Religious Leader after judicial rulings that were not in his favor. He called on Ahmedinejad to resort to courts to protest the verdicts.

Larijani indicated: "We do not say that the judiciary is not subject to criticism, but vandalism is different than criticism." He pointed out that those who "destroy the regime are betraying Islam and revolution."

Larijani asked officials on the Ahmedinejad case to "stand firm and pursue the legal process". He also said that the judiciary system will publish some details about the accusations against Ahmadinejad later.

Larijani warned of "Western attempts, especially the US and its regional allies" of infiltrating into Iran.

Based on these warnings, Larijani revealed a new approach of the Iranian judiciary in attempts to contain civil activists when he warned against "espionage under the guise of civil activity."

Last week, following the controversy over the death of environmental activist and sociology professor Kavous Seyed Emami, Iranian authorities announced that he had been detained by Iran Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) intelligence for spying on Iran's missile activities.

The death of Emami at the Evin prison sparked controversy in Iran, where parliamentarians called for an investigation into the circumstances of his death.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani announced that three officials had been assigned to investigate the case.

Tehran's prosecutor, Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi criticized reports doubting the "suicide" of Emami.

"The Revolutionary Guard cannot be held accountable for the case of Emami," Deputy Speaker Ali Mutahri said on Saturday.

Former chief of staff Hassan Firouzabadi said the arrests of environmental activists happened because they sent samples of lizards in Iran.

"We found out that their skin attracts atomic waves and that they were nuclear spies who wanted to find out where inside the Islamic Republic of Iran we have uranium mines and where we are engaged in atomic activities," he claimed.

Political activist Saeed Hajarian criticized Firouzabadi saying he does not know the most basic security standards because he provides an excuse for the West and Israel that Iran is carrying out nuclear activities in the deserts of central Iran, including nuclear tests.



Tehran Confirms Top Revolutionary Guard Commander Dies of Injuries

Iran’s top commander Ali Shadmani (IRNA) 
Iran’s top commander Ali Shadmani (IRNA) 
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Tehran Confirms Top Revolutionary Guard Commander Dies of Injuries

Iran’s top commander Ali Shadmani (IRNA) 
Iran’s top commander Ali Shadmani (IRNA) 

Iran said on Wednesday that a senior commander of the elite Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), Ali Shadmani, had died of wounds sustained last week during the Israeli strikes.

On June 17, the Israeli military said it killed Shadmani in a strike on a “command center in the heart of Tehran.”

Israel described the Iranian commander as a wartime chief of staff and most senior military commander.

At the time, Iran had denied the Israeli claims.

Shadmani had taken his position on June 13, following the death of his predecessor, Gholam Ali Rashid, in the first bombings conducted by Israel.

On Wednesday, Iran’s Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters, which Shadmani led, vowed “severe revenge” for what it called the “criminal act” by Israeli forces, announcing the commander had died from injuries sustained in the attack, according to the IRNA state news agency.

The news agency said Iran will hold on Saturday state funerals for senior military commanders, including Shadmani, and top scientists killed during the war with Israel.

Earlier, the Israeli army’s Spokesperson’s Unit announced that based on precise intelligence and a “sudden opportunity,” Ali Shadmani, Iran’s wartime chief of staff and one of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s closest confidants, was killed overnight in a targeted airstrike in central Tehran. It added that the targeted killing of Shadmani marks another critical blow to Iran’s military command structure.

In the opening salvo of the Israeli operation against Iran, several other senior Iranian figures were also reported killed, including IRGC commander Hossein Salami, Chief of Staff Mohammad Bagheri, and IRGC intelligence head Mohammad Kazemi, along with multiple senior commanders and nuclear scientists.

Iran will hold on Saturday state funerals for senior military commanders and top scientists killed during the country’s 12-day war with Israel, official media said.

“The national funeral ceremony for... commanders and scientists martyred in the Zionist regime’s aggression will be held on Saturday from 8:00 am (0430 GMT)” in Tehran, official news agency IRNA reports, a day after the warring sides had agreed to a ceasefire.

It said the funeral of Hossein Salami, the head of Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), who was killed on June 13, will take place on Thursday in Isfahan.

The Iran-Israeli war killed at least 610 people and wounded 4,700 in Iran and 28 people in Israel, according to official figures.