Assassination of Ali Sayyad Shirazi
On 10 April 1999, 6:45 a.m local time, Ali Sayyad Shirazi, the deputy chief of staff of the Iranian Armed Forces, was assassinated while leaving his home for work.[3] He was killed by an Mojahedin-e Khalq (MEK) assailant, an Iranian opposition group, who was disguised as a street cleaner and handed Shirazi a letter just before shooting him.[3] BackgroundThere had been several attacks on senior officials in Iran in the months before Sayyad Shirazi's assassination, among them a senior judge, Ali Razini, the head of Iran's largest charity organisation, and Mohsen Rafighdoost, who were injured during separate assassination attempts.[4] According to a spokesman for Mojahedin-e Khalq, an Iranian opposition group which advocates the end of Iran's clerical regime,[1] several of the group's units had carried out the killings in northern Tehran.[3] Mojahedin-e Khalq claimed the responsibility for the assassination of Asadollah Lajevardi, a former Iranian chief prosecutor and head of Iran's Prisons Organization, who was assassinated on 23 August 1998.[1] Ali Sayyad Shirazi had personally commanded several of Iran's major offensives in the Iran–Iraq War, earning him the nickname "Iron Man".[4] AssassinationAli Sayyad Shirazi was fatally shot by an unknown assailant while leaving home for work. He was taken to Farhang hospital where he was pronounced dead at 54.[5] The assailant was disguised as a municipality street sweeper.[6] According to witnesses, Sayyad Shirazi received three bullets.[5] His son, Mahdi, who was present at the assassination scene, described the incident:[7]
Shirazi was assassinated in retribution for his role in Operation Mersad during the Iran-Iraq War, where the MEK forces were defeated by Iranian forces under his command.[6] According to Rahim Safavi, commenting 11 years after Sayyad Shirazi's death, the assassination operation was allegedly carried out at Saddam Hussein's order.[8] A MEK spokesman said that Shirazi had been targeted because for "purging and executing military personnel and for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of child soldiers during the Iran-Iraq War, when he commanded Iran's ground forces."[9] PerpetratorShahin Gobadi, the spokesman for MEK in Paris, told the Associated Press in Cairo via a telephone call that "the group's units inside Iran were responsible for the killing."[1] Zahra Ghaemi was described by the Iranian media as being in the charge of the assassination team.[10] AftermathShirazi's funeral was held the day after his assassination. Iranian supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, was present at Shirazi's funeral.[8] According to Shirazi's son, Mahdi, the assassination file was being prosecuted by a court in France, and he was summoned in 2009 by the court to detail the incident.[11] References
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