Rebels claim suicide blasts in Iran

A woman lights candle during a Shi'a Ashura religious festival in Khorramabad, 490km from Tehran. The mosque bombing claimed the lives of 39 people and left more than 100 others - including women and children - injured.

A woman lights candle during a Shi'a Ashura religious festival in Khorramabad, 490km from Tehran. The mosque bombing claimed the lives of 39 people and left more than 100 others - including women and children - injured.

Published Dec 15, 2010

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Tehran - Two suicide bomb attacks killed 39 people outside a mosque during a Shi'a religious ceremony in south-eastern Iran on Wednesday, a strike Jundollah rebels said was retaliation for the execution of their leader in June.

In a statement on its website, the Sunni Muslim group said it was responsible for the bombings outside the Imam Hussein Mosque in Chabahar, which also wounded more than 100 people.

“At least 39 people were martyred after two suicide bombings targeted Shi'a mourners in front of a mosque in the town of Chabahar,” Fariborz Ayati Firouzabadi, head of the Coroner's office in the province.

The bombings killed many children and women, who attended a Shi'a religious ceremony to commemorate the death of Prophet Mohammad's grandson Hussein, state television reported, adding that the death toll was expected to increase.

The poor province of Sistan-Baluchistan, near Iran's border with Pakistan and Afghanistan, has been the scene of unrest with the mainly Sunni population claiming discrimination by the Shi'a authorities.

Iran's Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad-Najjar told state television that the attackers had links to neighbouring Pakistan and that an investigation was under way.

“A group of terrorists who were trained in Pakistan carried out the bombings... We have informed Pakistani officials as well,” he said.

Jundollah meanwhile said the attack was in retaliation for the execution of its leader Abdolmalek Rigi.

“This operation was in revenge for the execution of the leader of the movement Abdolmalek and other martyrs of Jundollah who were savagely hanged,” the group said on its website.

It carried the names and photographs of two young men identified as the suicide bombers and said they targeted the “regime's mercenaries and Revolutionary Guards”.

US President Barack Obama, who has sought to engage diplomatically with Iran while pushing through tougher sanctions on Tehran over its disputed nuclear programme, condemned what he said was a “disgraceful and cowardly act”.

“The murder of innocent civilians in their place of worship during Ashura is a despicable offence, and those who carried it out must be held accountable,” he said in a statement.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon also condemned the “abhorrent terrorist act” and offered his condolences, according to a statement released by his press office.

Iran has faced a string of blasts in past months, including two in June that killed 27 people in the same province. Jundollah had also claimed responsibility for that attack.

Bombings and clashes between security forces, ethnic Baluch Sunni insurgents and drug traffickers have increased in recent years in the area. - Reuters

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