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		Iran buries slain Revolutionary Guards colonel, vows revenge
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		[May 24, 2022] DUBAI 
		(Reuters) - Iran held a funeral procession on Tuesday in the centre of 
		the capital Tehran for Revolutionary Guards Colonel Hassan Sayad Khodai, 
		who was shot dead by two people on a motorcycle, and his commander vowed 
		to avenge the attack.
 State television showed crowds surrounding a truck carrying Khodai's 
		casket, wrapped in Iran's flag and strewn with flowers. Mourners held 
		portraits of Khodai, who was gunned down in broad daylight in front of 
		his home in central Tehran on Sunday.
 
 "Iran's response to any threat or action will be harsh. But we will 
		determine when and how it will be and in what circumstances. We will 
		definitely take revenge on our enemies," Revolutionary Guards commander 
		Hossein Salami told reporters.
 
 Iran has blamed such attacks on Israel. Foreign Ministry spokesperson 
		Saeed Khatibzadeh said U.S. support was making Israel more brazen.
 
 "There is no doubt that the overt and covert support of ...the United 
		States plays an important role in increasing the audacity of the 
		occupying regime (Israel)," Foreign Ministry spokesperson Saeed 
		Khatibzadeh told state media.
 
 Separately, state television said the Guards had arrested members of a 
		network of "thugs" recruited by Israeli intelligence to carry out 
		sabotage and attacks in Iran.
 
 
		
		 
		The Israeli Prime Minister's office, which oversees intelligence agency 
		Mossad, has declined to comment on the events in Tehran.
 
 Israeli media said Khodai headed a unit of the Quds Force - the 
		Revolutionary Guards' overseas arm - planning attacks on Israelis 
		abroad.
 
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			Mourners hold pictures of Colonel Sayad Khodai, a member of Iran's 
			Islamic Revolution Guards Corps, in Tehran, Iran, May 24, 2022. 
			Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS 
            
			
			
			 
            Khodai was a "defender of the shrines," Iranian state 
			media said on Sunday, referring to military personnel or advisers 
			who Iran says fight on its behalf to protect Shi'ite sites in Iraq 
			or Syria against groups such as Islamic State. 
 The forces have played a key role in backing Syrian President Bashar 
			al-Assad, Tehran's ally.
 
 The killing comes at a time of uncertainty over the revival of 
			Iran's 2015 nuclear deal with world powers after months of stalled 
			talks.
 
 At least six Iranian scientists and academics have been killed or 
			attacked since 2010, several of them by assailants riding 
			motorcycles, in attacks believed to have targeted Iran’s nuclear 
			programme, which the West says is aimed at producing a bomb.
 
 Iran denies this, saying the programme has peaceful purposes, and 
			has denounced the killings as acts of terrorism carried out by 
			Western intelligence agencies and Mossad. Israel has declined 
			comment on such accusations.
 
 (Reporting by Dubai Newsroom; Editing by Frank Jack Daniel)
 
            
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