Quds Force Colonel Assassinated in Tehran

 A photo published moments after the assassination of a leader in the Revolutionary Guard, east of Tehran (IRNA)
A photo published moments after the assassination of a leader in the Revolutionary Guard, east of Tehran (IRNA)
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Quds Force Colonel Assassinated in Tehran

 A photo published moments after the assassination of a leader in the Revolutionary Guard, east of Tehran (IRNA)
A photo published moments after the assassination of a leader in the Revolutionary Guard, east of Tehran (IRNA)

In a rare assassination, a colonel in the Quds Force, the foreign arm of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, was killed by unknown gunmen who attacked his car outside his home in the east of the capital, Tehran, according to Iranian official media.

According to Tasnim news agency, affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard, the slain officer was identified as Hassan Sayyad-Khodayari.

“He was assassinated in his car outside his personal residence,” said the agency, adding that Sayyad-Khodayari’s wife was the first to find his body.

The Guard -- the ideological arm of Iran's military -- described the man as a “defender of the sanctuary,” a term used for anyone who works on behalf of Iran in Syria or Iraq.

One of the witnesses told the Revolutionary Guards' Fars News Agency that they heard a loud sound of a motorbike moving away from the scene, adding that he reached Sayyad-Khodayari car, who was breathing his last, and called the ambulance teams immediately.

In contrast to the Tasnim Agency, the Revolutionary Guard said in an official statement that the killed officer was Colonel Sayyad Khodai.

The Guard described the targeting of Khodai as a “terrorist operation,” accusing what it called “elements linked to global arrogance” of being behind it.

The Guard said they launched an investigation to identify the “aggressor or aggressors.”

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

The assassination came within a short time after the Guard’s intelligence service announced the discovery and arrest of members of an Israeli spy network, according to the government's ISNA news agency.

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

The killing of Khodai is the most high-profile murder inside Iran since the November 2020 killing of top nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh.



Human Rights Watch Says Israeli Airstrike on Iranian Prison was an 'Apparent War Crime'

Evin Prison (File photo: Reuters)
Evin Prison (File photo: Reuters)
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Human Rights Watch Says Israeli Airstrike on Iranian Prison was an 'Apparent War Crime'

Evin Prison (File photo: Reuters)
Evin Prison (File photo: Reuters)

Human Rights Watch alleged Thursday that an Israeli airstrike on a notorious Iranian prison was “an apparent war crime”, while also accusing Tehran of harming and disappearing prisoners after the attack.

Israel struck Evin Prison in Tehran, one of Iran's most notorious detention facilities for political activists and dissidents, on June 23, during its 12-day war with the Islamic Republic, Reuters reported.

The strikes during visiting hours hit Evin Prison’s main southern entrance, another northern entrance and other areas of the complex, destroying buildings that had medical facilities and prison wards.

The Iranian authorities initially said at least 71 people were killed during the airstrike, among them civilians including inmates, visiting relatives, and prison staff. Iranian media later raised that number to 80. It was unclear why Israel targeted the prison.

Human Rights Watch said the attack was “unlawfully indiscriminate” and that there was no evidence of an advance warning or a military target before striking the prison complex, which it estimates holds over 1,500 prisoners.

“To make matters worse, Israeli forces put at grave risk prisoners who were already victims of Iranian authorities’ brutal repression,” said Michael Page, the rights group’s deputy Middle East director.

Human Rights Watch says prisoners were subject to “ill-treatment and violence” both as they were being taken out of the prison following the attack and as they were returned.

Calls to Iranian authorities were not immediately returned on Thursday, a public holiday in the country. The Israeli military also did not respond to an immediate request for comment on the Human Rights Watch reports.

After the attack, Iranian authorities evacuated and transferred the prisoners to two other facilities in Tehran province and said on August 8 that they were gradually returned. Iranian state media said the prisoners were transferred peacefully and without any conflict.

But relatives and Human Rights Watch said some political prisoners were beaten with batons and “electric shock weapons” for resisting wearing handcuffs and protesting prison guards separating death-row inmates.

The group said some of the prisoners have disappeared, including Swedish-Iranian doctor, Ahmadreza Djalali, who is at risk of execution. The rights group says Iran had refused to give them any information about his whereabouts.

“Iranian authorities should not use Israel’s strikes on Evin prison as another opportunity to subject prisoners, including those who should never have been in prison in the first place, to ill-treatment,” said Page.

The war in June, which killed about 1,100 people in Iran and 28 in Israel, started after Israeli jets struck key nuclear and military facilities. Iran then launched a barrage of missiles over Israel.