DUBAI, June 7 (Reuters) – A court in Iran has sentenced a man to death for killing two clerics and wounding a third in a knife attack at a holy Shi’ite Muslim shrine in April, the judiciary said on Tuesday.
“The revolutionary court sentenced him to death … and his lawyer has appealed. The case has been sent to the Supreme Court,” judiciary spokesperson Masoud Setayeshi told a news conference carried live on a state-run website.
Officials said the attacker was a 21-year-old ethnic Uzbek from Afghanistan with radical Sunni views. He was arrested after the stabbings at Iran’s largest Shi’ite Muslim religious complex in the northeastern city of Mashhad.
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Attacks on clerics and government officials have been rare in Iran after authorities tightened security measures and cracked down on opposition groups following a string of attacks and bombings that killed dozens of officials and clerics following the 1979 Islamic revolution.
However, a senior conservative cleric was slightly hurt after being attacked by a man with a knife after Friday prayers last week in the central city of Isfahan. Read full story
There have been weeks of unrest in Iran after a jump in food prices and amid public anger with government leaders and powerful clerics over a deadly building collapse last month that was widely blamed on corruption and lax safety measures. Read full story
(Reporting by Dubai newsroom; Editing by Robert Birsel)