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Main elements behind bombing killed: Iran Guards
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"Main elements" behind bombing killed: Iran Guards
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TEHRAN |
Sun Sep 26, 2010 11:11am EDT
TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards said on Sunday they had killed the "main elements" behind a bomb attack in northwest Iran, the semi-official Fars news agency reported.
Fars quoted Mohammad Pakpour, head of the corps' ground forces, as saying the Guards had killed many of those behind the "terrorist act," which took place in the city of Mahabad.
"They were identified and chased by the Guards," he was quoted as saying. "On Saturday many of them ... were killed in an operation."
He gave no further details about those that were killed.
Iranian Intelligence Minister Heidar Moslehi said on Thursday that the group behind Wednesday's blast, which killed 12 people and injured 80, had been arrested.
Iranian authorities blame the blast, which took place during an annual military parade, on "anti-revolutionary" militants backed by the country's arch foes, the United States and Israel.
"Investigations showed that the Zionist regime's (Israel) intelligence agents were behind the blast," Pakpour said.
"Mossad with the help of America ... sent this terrorist group to Iran to carry out this bloody crime."
No group has claimed the responsibility of the blast that occurred during the "Sacred Defense" celebrations, an annual ceremony for the Iranian armed forced to commemorate Iran's eight-year war with Iraq in the 1980s.
Iranian media have often reported clashes between the elite Revolutionary Guards and Kurdish guerrillas said to be members of Party of Free Life of Kurdistan (PJAK), an offshoot of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) which took up arms in 1984 for an ethnic homeland in southeast Turkey and northwest Iran.
Several armed groups hostile to the establishment are active in Iran, including Kurdish separatists in the northwest, Baluch militants in the southeast and some Arabs in the southwest.
The Sunni Muslim Jundollah Baluch militant group, which Iran says has linked to al Qaeda, is the most active. It claimed a double suicide attack that killed 28 people, including Revolutionary Guards, on July 15 in revenge for the execution of its leader.
(Writing by Parisa Hafezi, Editing by Noah Barkin)
World
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