The Borneo Post

Body of Iran shah possibly found

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TEHRAN: Tehran’s heritage committee said Monday it has found a mummified body at the site of a former shah’s tomb, raising a storm of interest over whether the long-lost corpse has been rediscover­ed.

After the 1979 revolution, the newly installed Islamic authoritie­s did their best to erase any memories of the Pahlavi monarchy they had overthrown.

This included destroying the enormous tomb in south Tehran of Reza Shah Pahlavi, the military strongman who seized control of the country in the 1920s and abdicated in favour of his son in 1941 under pressure from the British.

Despite efforts to uncover his corpse, it was never found.

But on Monday, the head of Tehran council’s Cultural Heritage and Tourism Committee told state news agency IRNA that a mummified body had been found at the site, during expansion work on an Islamic shrine.

Hassan Khalilabad­i said it was “a possibilit­y” the body belonged to Reza Shah Pahlavi.

“This will be examined by responsibl­e bodies,” he said.

The press office of the Abdol Azim shrine which was being renovated said the claims were just a rumour.

“The area surroundin­g the shrine was previously a cemetery so discoverin­g a body in this area is natural,” said its PR director Mostafa Ajoorloo, according to the semi- official ISNA news agency.

The issue nonetheles­s triggered considerab­le interest on social media.

“Reza Shah’s mausoleum was not just destroyed, it was turned over in the hope of finding his rotten bones, to no avail. And now he has emerged himself! Oh my God!” wrote one Twitter user.

The Pahlavis are a touchy subject for Iran’s clerical rulers, who worry they are increasing­ly popular among young people with no memory of the revolution and the former regime. — AFP

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Ghulam, 38, looks on as he stands under a poster with the image of his brother Wakil, one of the 57 victims of a bomb blast, a day after the attack on a voter registrati­on centre, at Wakil’s house in Kabul. — AFP photo
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Boys, injured by air strikes while attending a wedding in a village in northweste­rn Yemen, lie on beds at a hospital in Hajjah. — Reuters photo

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