Los Angeles Times

Iran suicide bombing kills elite troops

Attack in poor region near Pakistan leaves 27 dead and 13 injured. Sunni extremist group claims responsibi­lity.

- By Melissa Etehad and Ramin Mostaghim

TEHRAN — A suicide bombing killed 27 of Iran’s elite Islamic Revolution­ary Guard members and injured 13 others shortly after sunset Wednesday in the country’s southeast, according to state media.

The Sunni Muslim extremist group Jaish al-Adl claimed responsibi­lity for the attack on a bus carrying guard members who had just finished patrolling in Sistan and Baluchista­n province near the border with Pakistan.

Authoritie­s believe the attacker drove up next to the bus before detonating a car bomb, according to the semioffici­al Fars News Agency.

Jaish al-Adl came to prominence in recent years claiming to fight oppression against the Sunni minority in the southeaste­rn province.

An overwhelmi­ng majority of Iran’s population is Shiite Muslim, but about 9% of the nation is Sunni. Many in the minority sect live in the impoverish­ed outlying areas of Iran and say they face discrimina­tion, poverty and a lack of opportunit­y.

“The group has become pretty famous in Iran,” Ariane Tabatabai, an associate political scientist at Rand Corp., said of Jaish al-Adl. “What makes Wednesday’s attack unique is that it’s happening in the middle of the anniversar­y of the revolution, which is a time when Iran wants to showcase its military power.”

The attack came two days after thousands of Iranians commemorat­ed the 40th anniversar­y of the Islamic Revolution, which ousted a secular pro-Western monarchy and replaced it with the Islamic Republic.

It also came on the first day of a U.S.-led Mideast conference in Warsaw. Outside the conference, hundreds of demonstrat­ors called for a change of government in Iran. The protest was organized by the National Council of Resistance of Iran. The council is linked to the Mujahedin Khalq, an Iranian exile group that has long sought to topple the government in Tehran and enjoys support among some members of the Trump administra­tion.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif sought to link the attack with the conference in a tweet: “Is it no coincidenc­e that Iran is hit by terror on the very day that #WarsawCirc­us begins? Especially when cohorts of same terrorists cheer it from Warsaw streets & support it with twitter bots?”

Bahram Qasemi, a spokesman for the Foreign Ministry, condemned the suicide bombing and said officials and Iran’s military would “take revenge on the murderous terrorists.”

Jaish al-Adl, whose name means “Army of Justice,” is an offshoot of the still-active militant Jundallah separatist group from Sistan and Baluchista­n, Tabatabai said.

Jaish al-Adl is just one of several extremist groups in the province, Tabatabai said, with members of Iran’s armed forces patrolling there facing numerous terrorist attacks in recent years. The area is one of the most underdevel­oped parts of Iran, she said.

“There are few jobs and not many opportunit­ies, so it creates an environmen­t where terrorist groups can recruit people easily,” Tabatabai said.

Jaish al-Adl has targeted members of Iran’s armed forces for kidnapping­s or deadly attacks. The group has also demanded the government release its jailed members.

In 2013, authoritie­s hanged 16 people in retaliatio­n for the killing of 14 border guards who were ambushed near Pakistan.Fars said they were linked to groups hostile to Iran’s political system.

In 2014, Jaish al-Adl kidnapped five members of the Revolution­ary Guard in the same border region, according to state media. Four of the guards were released in Pakistan two months later, but the fifth had been executed, state media said. The group kidnapped 12 Iranian border guards in October, according to state media. Five were later freed, Fars reported.

The Revolution­ary Guard was formed by Shiite cleric Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini shortly after the 1979 revolution and is distinct from the regular military. In its early days, the guard was made up of destitute young men from urban areas who were used to clamp down on critics of the revolution.

The Revolution­ary Guard, numbering about 125,000 members, now plays a major political and economic role in Iran.

Special correspond­ent Mostaghim reported from Tehran and Times staff writer Etehad from Los Angeles.

 ?? Fars News Agency ?? A SUICIDE bomber attacked a bus carrying Revolution­ary Guard members, Fars News Agency said.
Fars News Agency A SUICIDE bomber attacked a bus carrying Revolution­ary Guard members, Fars News Agency said.

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