Iran Lays Kerman Victims to Rest, Vows Revenge

Members of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) carry a 4-year-old Afghan girl who was killed in the Kerman explosion (AP)
Members of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) carry a 4-year-old Afghan girl who was killed in the Kerman explosion (AP)
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Iran Lays Kerman Victims to Rest, Vows Revenge

Members of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) carry a 4-year-old Afghan girl who was killed in the Kerman explosion (AP)
Members of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) carry a 4-year-old Afghan girl who was killed in the Kerman explosion (AP)

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi and Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Commander Hossein Salami vowed revenge during the funeral of the victims of the Kerman attack.

About 100 people were killed in Kerman on Wednesday at a memorial for al-Quds Force Commander Qassem Soleimani, who was killed in a US airstrike in Baghdad in early 2020.

On Thursday, ISIS claimed responsibility for the two explosions, saying two militants detonated explosive belts in the crowd that gathered at the cemetery in the southeastern Iranian city of Kerman on Wednesday.

- Arrests in five governorates

Interior Minister Ahmed Vahidi announced the arrest of some individuals in connection with the deadly twin bombing.

Speaking on state television, Vahidi reported that "good clues" helped identify the persons involved in the attack without mentioning their nationalities or places of arrest.

An hour later, the official IRNA news agency quoted Iran's Deputy Interior Minister for Security Affairs, Majid Mirahmadi, saying the country's intelligence forces had identified and arrested "different individuals" in five provinces who were linked to the "terrorist attack" and had backed up the operations.

- Accusing the US and Israel

Also at the ceremony, Commander Hossein Salami vowed Iran would "take revenge for the terrorist attack."

Salami addressed ISIS militants, asserting that: "We will find you wherever you are," and the terrorist organization acts as an "agent" of the US and Israel.

He indicated that the US was defeated in Iraq, Afghanistan, Lebanon, Syria, and Yemen at the hands of Soleimani, adding that Washington was unable to achieve its goals of imposing sanctions on Iran.

Meanwhile, Raisi said the initiative is in the hands of Iran's powerful forces, who will determine the time and place to take revenge on the enemy.

Raisi claimed that the US, after creating the "usurping Israeli regime in the region by misusing the name of the Jews, sought to implement the current of ISIS," but Soleimani did a great job and disrupted the enemy's plan."

He said the "end of the Al-Aqsa Flood will also be the end of the Zionist regime."

State television broadcast footage shows crowds of families in Kerman crying for their loved ones in front of coffins wrapped in the Iranian flag.

The mourners chanted: "Revenge... Revenge,Death to America," and "Death to Israel," according to Reuters.

The Iranian Emergency Organization said the death toll reached 89 people, including 12 children.

- Delicate timing

Iran usually accuses Israel and the US of supporting anti-Iranian armed groups, which have carried out attacks in the past.

In October 2022, ISIS claimed responsibility for a bloody attack at a shrine in Shiraz, southern Iran, which killed 15 people, weeks after the Mehsa Amini protests broke out across the country.

Last August, gunmen again attacked the shrine Shiraz, killing three civilians.

In 2017, ISIS also claimed responsibility for two bombings that targeted the parliament headquarters and the shrine of Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic.

Iranian members of ISIS carried out the attacks.

- Doubts about ISIS's responsibility

The Tasnim Agency, affiliated with the IRGC, wrote that the Zionist entity, after carrying out the Kerman attack, ordered ISIS to claim responsibility to escape the consequences of the attack.

The agency referred to the ISIS statement, saying the terrorist organization would say Persia or Khorasan when referring to Iran. It noted that the organization never published blurred pictures of those who carried out suicide attacks.

ISIS has never been more than 30 minutes late in publishing adoption statements, according to Tasnim, noting that the organization publishes a photo of the operative and the adoption statement immediately after the attack.

ISIS's method of carrying out attacks is to threaten first, issue a fatwa, carry out the operation, and then publish a statement claiming responsibility.

- Conspiracy theory

Iran Supreme Leader representative and Friday prayer preacher in Tehran, Ahmed Khatami, vowed the perpetrators would face a painful fate.

Khatami added that ISIS is an agent of the US and Israel, noting that the terrorists received treatment in Israel when they were injured in Syria.

Meanwhile, former head of the National Security and Foreign Relations Committee, Heshmatollah Falahatpisheh, told the ILNA agency that Iran is facing a new terrorist war against the US and Israeli intelligence services, Mossad.

He indicated that when they face a problem, they carry out actions against Iran, especially since the US and Israelis received a blow from Soleimani.

- “ISIS - Khorasan Province”

More details about the authors of the attack and their motives could not be immediately established.

However, Aaron Zelin, an expert with the Washington Institute for Near East Policy think tank, said he would not be surprised if the attack was mounted by the Islamic State branch based in neighboring Afghanistan, known as ISIS-Khorasan, or ISIS-K.

Zelin told Reuters that Tehran accused ISIS-K of being behind many foiled plots in the last five years. Most of those arrested were Iranians, Central Asians, or Afghans from the Afghanistan-based affiliate's network rather than from the group's Iraq and Syria network.

A Taliban crackdown has weakened ISIS-K inside Afghanistan, forcing some members to move to neighbouring states, but the group has continued plotting operations outside the country, according to US officials.

In Washington, White House spokesman John Kirby told reporters the United States was in no position to doubt Islamic State's claim that it was responsible for Wednesday's attack.

The US stressed Wednesday that it was not involved in any way in the two bombings.

The State Department rejected any accusations against Washington or Tel Aviv being involved in the attack, considering it "ridiculous."

The Israeli government did not comment on the attack.



Landslides and Flash Floods on Indonesia’s Java Island Leave 17 Dead and 8 Missing 

In this photo released by Indonesia's National Disaster Management Agency (BNPB), rescuers carry the body of a victim of flash flood in Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia on Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025. (BNPB via AP) 
In this photo released by Indonesia's National Disaster Management Agency (BNPB), rescuers carry the body of a victim of flash flood in Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia on Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025. (BNPB via AP) 
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Landslides and Flash Floods on Indonesia’s Java Island Leave 17 Dead and 8 Missing 

In this photo released by Indonesia's National Disaster Management Agency (BNPB), rescuers carry the body of a victim of flash flood in Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia on Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025. (BNPB via AP) 
In this photo released by Indonesia's National Disaster Management Agency (BNPB), rescuers carry the body of a victim of flash flood in Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia on Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025. (BNPB via AP) 

Indonesian rescuers recovered the bodies of at least 17 people who were swept away in flash floods or buried under tons of mud and rocks that hit hilly villages on the country’s main island of Java, officials said Tuesday. Eight people were missing.

Torrential rains on Monday caused rivers to burst their banks, tearing through nine villages in Pekalongan regency of Central Java province, as mud, rocks and trees tumbled down on mountainside hamlets, said Bergas Catursasi, who heads the local Disaster Management Agency.

He said rescue workers by Tuesday had pulled out at least 17 bodies in the worst-hit village of Petungkriyono, and rescuers are searching for eight villagers who are reportedly still missing. Eleven injured people managed to escape and were rushed to nearby hospitals, Catursari said.

Television reports on Tuesday showed police, soldiers and rescue workers used excavators, farm equipment and their bare hands to sift through the rubble looking for the dead and missing in devastated villages, while others carried victims on bamboo stretchers or body bags to ambulances or trucks.

“Bad weather, mudslides and rugged terrain hampered the rescue operation,” Catursari said, adding that people who were fishing in the river and those who were taking shelter from the rain were swept away by flash floods.

National Disaster Management Agency spokesperson Abdul Muhari said flash floods swept away villagers and vehicles passing through devastated villages and triggered a landslide that buried two houses. The disaster also destroyed two main bridges connecting villages in Pekalongan district.

Seasonal rain from about October to March frequently causes flooding and landslides in Indonesia, an archipelago of 17,000 islands where millions of people live in mountainous areas or near fertile floodplains.

Last month, a landslide, flash floods and strong winds hit the Sukabumi district of West Java province, killing 12 people. In November a landslide and flash floods triggered by heavy downpours hit Indonesia’s North Sumatra province, leaving 20 dead and two missing. A landslide in the region also hit a tourist bus that killed nine people.