Police Chief Killed by Gunmen in Iran's Balochistan

Riot police officers ride motorcycles in the street in Tehran (Reuters)
Riot police officers ride motorcycles in the street in Tehran (Reuters)
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Police Chief Killed by Gunmen in Iran's Balochistan

Riot police officers ride motorcycles in the street in Tehran (Reuters)
Riot police officers ride motorcycles in the street in Tehran (Reuters)

An Iranian policeman and his wife were shot dead on Sunday by unknown gunmen in Balochistan province, bordering Pakistan and Afghanistan, according to Iranian media.

Governor of Saravan Saeed Tajlili told Tasnim News Agency that Lieutenant Colonel Ali-Reza Shahraki had been assassinated inside his car at a crossroad in Saravan.

State-owned IRNA agency announced that Shahraki's wife was seriously injured in the attack and later succumbed to her injuries.

The governor asserted that an investigation was launched to identify the perpetrators.

The attacks, whose motives remain unclear, have recently increased in the country.

Balochistan is a Sunni-majority province in southeastern Iran and has been one of the hotbeds of tension over the past months in the wave of protests that began last fall after the death of a Kurdish woman, Mahsa Amini, in police custody.

The most significant number of deaths during the protests occurred in Balochistan. Residents have complained for years of persecution and deprivation for ethnic and sectarian reasons.

According to the Oslo-based Iran Human Rights organization, 134 demonstrators have been killed in various cities of Balochistan province, and at least 21 protesters are at risk of execution.

Balochistan is still one of the volatile areas in Iran, although the authorities have managed to quell the protests to a large extent.

Friday prayers and the sermons of the most prominent Sunni cleric, Abdul Hamid Ismaeelzehi, became the focus of protests.

Ismaeelzehi insists in his speeches to hold those responsible for the shooting accountable, especially on "Bloody Friday," when about 90 demonstrators were killed in Zahedan city.

Local news site Haalvsh reported that the security services arrested Sunni cleric Abdul Aziz Omarzahi, a professor at Dar al-Uloom in the Makki Mosque in Zahedan.

The Tasnim news agency, affiliated with the Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), stated that Omarzahi was an influential figure in the riots.

Meanwhile, local sources reported that at least six people were executed in Zahedan prisons on charges of retribution and drug trafficking.

Last year, the province recorded 174 executions of Baloch nationals, equivalent to 30 percent of Iran's total, according to Iran Human Rights.

The organization indicated in its annual statistics that 121 people were executed in the province on charges of drug trafficking, and 52 people faced retribution sentences, including three women.



G7 Statement will Not Mention ICC Warrant for Netanyahu

Protesters wave an Israeli flag and hold placards as they stand behind a banner reading, "Crime Minister" and demonstrate against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu just before his corruption trial opens, outside his residence in Jerusalem May 24, 2020. The placard in Hebrew reads, " Indictment: favorable coverage = lying to the public" REUTERS/Amir Cohen/File Photo
Protesters wave an Israeli flag and hold placards as they stand behind a banner reading, "Crime Minister" and demonstrate against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu just before his corruption trial opens, outside his residence in Jerusalem May 24, 2020. The placard in Hebrew reads, " Indictment: favorable coverage = lying to the public" REUTERS/Amir Cohen/File Photo
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G7 Statement will Not Mention ICC Warrant for Netanyahu

Protesters wave an Israeli flag and hold placards as they stand behind a banner reading, "Crime Minister" and demonstrate against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu just before his corruption trial opens, outside his residence in Jerusalem May 24, 2020. The placard in Hebrew reads, " Indictment: favorable coverage = lying to the public" REUTERS/Amir Cohen/File Photo
Protesters wave an Israeli flag and hold placards as they stand behind a banner reading, "Crime Minister" and demonstrate against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu just before his corruption trial opens, outside his residence in Jerusalem May 24, 2020. The placard in Hebrew reads, " Indictment: favorable coverage = lying to the public" REUTERS/Amir Cohen/File Photo

A joint statement of Group of Seven foreign ministers is set to avoid mentioning the International Criminal Court's (ICC) arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, despite an effort by the Italian hosts to find a common position on it.

Italy, which currently chairs the G7, said on Monday it wanted to try to forge a common position about the ICC arrest warrant at a two-day meeting it hosted in the spa town of Fiuggi and which ended on Tuesday.

A draft of the final statement due to emerge from the discussions, reviewed by Reuters, did not directly name the ICC and its decisions.

"In exercising its right to defend itself, Israel must fully comply with its obligations under international law in all circumstances, including International Humanitarian Law," it said.

"We reiterate our commitment to International Humanitarian Law and will comply with our respective obligations," the statement added, stressing "that there can be no equivalence between the terrorist group Hamas and the State of Israel".

Last week, the ICC issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu and his former defence chief Yoav Gallant, as well as a Hamas leader, Ibrahim Al-Masri, for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity in the Gaza conflict.

The move was strongly criticized by the United States but other states including Britain and Italy did not rule out that they could make an arrest if Netanyahu visited their countries.

Israel condemned the ICC decision as shameful and absurd. Hamas praised it as a step towards justice.