Iran holds funeral for senior commander killed in Iraq

State TV said the funeral for Brig. Gen. Hamid Taqavi was held in a Guard compound in Tehran.

State TV said the funeral for Brig. Gen. Hamid Taqavi was held in a Guard compound in Tehran.


Iran held a funeral on Monday for a senior Revolutionary Guard commander who was killed during a battle against the Islamic State extremist group in Iraq.

State TV said the funeral for Brig. Gen. Hamid Taqavi was held in a Guard compound in Tehran. He will be buried in his hometown Ahvaz in southwestern Iran on Tuesday.

The Guard said Sunday that Taqavi was “martyred while performing his advisory mission” in Samarra, a town north of Baghdad that is home to a major Shiite shrine. He is the highest ranking Iranian officer known to have been killed abroad since the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s, in which he fought.

Ali Shamkhani, the secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, told mourners at the funeral that Taqavi had died defending Iran from extremists, the semi-official Fars news agency reported.

“Some ask, what is the link between Taqavi and Samarra? The answer is very clear. If Taqavi and his colleagues do not give blood in Samarra, we should give blood” in Iran, he said.

Shamkhani said Taqavi was a veteran Guard member who had close contacts with the Iraqi armed opposition when the country was ruled by Saddam Hussein.

Predominantly Shiite Iran says it has sent military advisers to assist Syria and Iraq in battling Sunni-led rebels and extremist groups, but has denied sending combat forces.

Iran says it has played a key role in pushing back the Islamic State group following the extremists’ summer blitz, in which they captured much of northern and western Iraq. But Tehran insists its officers are only providing military advice and training.

Further violence

In a separate incident, “armed bandits” killed three Guard members in an ambush Sunday near Iran’s southeastern border with Pakistan, state TV reported. In the past Iranian forces have clashed with Sunni rebels and smugglers along the porous frontier. In October, four Iranian border guards were killed near the border by unidentified gunmen.

Meanwhile in Iraq, officials said a suicide attack on a funeral north of Baghdad killed at least eight mourners.

A police officer said the suicide bomber blew himself up Monday inside a funeral tent in an agricultural area outside the mainly Sunni town of Taji. Another 20 mourners were wounded.

Two medical officials confirmed the casualty figures from the attack. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to release the information.

No one has claimed responsibility for attack, but it bore the hallmarks of the ISIS group, which frequently targets Sunnis allied with the Shiite-led government.


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