Iranian Cleric Stabbed in Apparent Road Rage Incident in Qom

An Iranian cleric was stabbed Saturday during an apparent road rage incident in the city of Qom. (IRNA)
An Iranian cleric was stabbed Saturday during an apparent road rage incident in the city of Qom. (IRNA)
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Iranian Cleric Stabbed in Apparent Road Rage Incident in Qom

An Iranian cleric was stabbed Saturday during an apparent road rage incident in the city of Qom. (IRNA)
An Iranian cleric was stabbed Saturday during an apparent road rage incident in the city of Qom. (IRNA)

An Iranian cleric was stabbed Saturday during an apparent road rage incident in the city of Qom, state media said, days after the fatal shooting of a leading cleric.

After crashing and injuring two pedestrians, the driver jumped out of his car and attacked “one of the victims who was a cleric” with a knife, Qom police chief Amir Mokhtari said, quoted by the official news agency IRNA.

The three, including the driver who had injured himself with the knife, were rushed to hospital, where the cleric remained in intensive care, Mokhtari said, adding the motive for the attack was unclear.

It comes days after Abbas Ali Soleimani, member of the Assembly of Experts that selects Iran’s supreme leader, was shot dead at a bank in Babolsar city, in the northern province of Mazandaran.

The assailant was arrested and interrogated after Wednesday’s fatal shooting, officials said at the time, adding that it was not considered a “security or terrorist” incident.

Soleimani, 75, was previously a representative of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

He had also been the imam who led the weekly Friday prayers in the cities of Kashan, in Isfahan province, and Zahedan in the southeastern province of Sistan-Baluchistan.

Under the constitution, the 88-strong Assembly of Experts is mandated with supervising, dismissing and electing the supreme leader.

Also on Wednesday, another cleric was targeted in a car-ramming in the capital, according to police who said the driver was being pursued by security forces.

No more details have been made available about the attack.



UK Lawmaker Duffield Quits Labor in Protest at PM Starmer

FILE PHOTO: Rosie Duffield attends a rally in Canterbury, Britain December 1, 2019. Picture taken December 1, 2019. REUTERS/Simon Dawson/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Rosie Duffield attends a rally in Canterbury, Britain December 1, 2019. Picture taken December 1, 2019. REUTERS/Simon Dawson/File Photo
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UK Lawmaker Duffield Quits Labor in Protest at PM Starmer

FILE PHOTO: Rosie Duffield attends a rally in Canterbury, Britain December 1, 2019. Picture taken December 1, 2019. REUTERS/Simon Dawson/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Rosie Duffield attends a rally in Canterbury, Britain December 1, 2019. Picture taken December 1, 2019. REUTERS/Simon Dawson/File Photo

British lawmaker Rosie Duffield quit the ruling Labor Party on Saturday in protest at Prime Minister Keir Starmer's approach to child poverty and his acceptance of tens of thousands of pounds of free clothing and hospitality from political donors.
In her resignation letter, a copy of which she gave to The Sunday Times newspaper, Duffield accused Starmer of "sleaze, nepotism and apparent avarice," adding: "I am so ashamed of what you and your inner circle have done to tarnish and humiliate our once proud party."
Starmer, who was Britain's top prosecutor before entering parliament, said on Sept. 20 he would stop accepting donations to pay for clothing for him and his wife, Reuters reported.
Duffield said she would continue to represent the city of Canterbury in southeast England as an independent lawmaker. She has been a member of parliament since 2017 and voted against Starmer becoming leader in 2020.
Starmer led the Labor Party to a sweeping victory in a July 4 election, but opinion polls suggest his personal popularity has fallen sharply with voters since he entered office.
Duffield was among 53 Labor lawmakers who abstained in a vote this month on Starmer's proposal to remove a 200 pound($267) annual fuel subsidy from 10 million pensioners.
She also criticized Starmer for not reversing a Conservative decision to end extra welfare payments for poor families with more than two children.
Duffield told The Sunday Times that her resignation was not driven by her past disagreements with Starmer over policy towards transgender issues and how these affected women.