The Boston Globe

Islamic State says it’s behind Iran attack

Bomb kills 84 at leader’s memorial

- By Vivian Yee, Hwaida Saad, and Eric Schmitt

The Islamic State claimed responsibi­lity Thursday for the bombing attack that killed 84 people in Kerman, Iran, a day before, during a memorial procession for General Qassem Soleimani, according to a post on the extremist group’s official Telegram account.

The extremist group called the attack a “dual martyrdom operation” and described how two militants approached a ceremony at the tomb of Soleimani and detonated explosive belts strapped to their bodies “near the grave of the hypocrite leader.”

The general, a widely revered and feared Iranian military officer who was the architect of an Iranian-led and -funded alliance of Shiite groups across the Middle East, was assassinat­ed four years ago in a US drone attack.

The Islamic State, a Sunni organizati­on, considers its mission to kill apostate Muslims, including Shiites. Iran, a majority-Shiite country, is led by a theocratic government in which Shiite clerics are in charge.

In a statement, the Islamic State identified the two attackers as Omar al-Mowahid and Sayefulla al-Mujahid. The group is composed of local affiliates across the Muslim world, but it did not specify the which regional organizati­on was behind the bombings.

The bombing in Iran was the latest bloody episode in the Islamic State’s targeting of Iran, which it considers an irredeemab­le sectarian foe — one that, along with a US-led coalition, had a hand in defeating the group in Syria and Iraq. It was Soleimani who built a network of Shiite militias there to repel the group and personally directed efforts to fight it.

The Islamic State, whose affiliate in Afghanista­n, ISISKhoras­an, has repeatedly threatened Iran over what it says is its polytheism and apostasy, has claimed responsibi­lity for several previous attacks on Iran.

The most recent came in October 2022, when a gunman killed 13 people at a shrine in the city of Shiraz. An Islamic State statement claiming responsibi­lity for that attack said it had aimed to kill Shiites — framing the shootings as the continuati­on of an ancient clash between Sunnis and Shiites, whose religious schism goes back to a seventhcen­tury dispute over the rightful heir to the Prophet Muhammad.

Thursday’s statement used the same derogatory term for Shiites, roughly translated as “rejectioni­sts” or “refusal infidels,” as in the 2022 statement.

The Shiraz shooting followed twin attacks in June 2017 in Tehran, where gunmen opened fire inside parliament and suicide bombers simultaneo­usly struck near the mausoleum of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Iran’s former supreme leader and founder of Iran’s clerical state, killing 17. The group also claimed a September 2018 attack in the city of Ahvaz, where gunmen shot at a military parade, killing 25.

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