Iranian Police Arrest Two More Suspects after Tehran Terrorist Attacks


Iranian Police Arrest Two More Suspects after Tehran Terrorist Attacks

TEHRAN (Tasnim) – The Iranian police managed to arrest two terrorist suspects in the western province of Kermanshah in connection with two recent terror attacks in Tehran, which was claimed by Daesh (ISIS or ISIL) terrorist group.

The Law Enforcement forces in Kermanshah Province have arrested two people in Ravansar who are said to be involved in the terrorist attacks in the Iranian parliament and the mausoleum of Imam Khomeini, the late founder of the Islamic Republic.

The Security Police of Kermanshah Province have identified and arrested the terror suspects, the police said.

In another anti-terror operation in Kermanshah Province on Thursday night, the polices forces had managed to seize 92 handguns from inside a car in Salas-e Babajani.

The arrest came after Iran’s Intelligence Ministry released the pictures and first names of five perpetrators of two terrorist attacks.

In a statement on Thursday, the ministry identified the five gunmen as Qayyoum, Abu Jihad, Ramin, Serias, and Fereydoun, without announcing their surnames.

According to the statement, the five attackers were terrorists with criminal backgrounds who were linked to “Wahhabi and Takfiri groups.”

After joining the Daesh (also known as ISIL or ISIS) terrorist group, the five men had left Iran and were engaged in the terrorist group’s operations in Iraq’s Mosul and Syria’s Raqqa, it added.

The five gunmen had returned to Iran in August 2016 for a terrorist operation under the command of Abu Aysheh, a ranking commander of Daesh, with the purpose of carrying out attacks in Iran’s religious cities, the statement said.

They had fled Iran after their cell was disbanded at the time and their ringleader, Abu Aysheh, was killed, it added.

On Wednesday morning, the five terrorists launched simultaneous attacks on Iran’s parliament building in downtown Tehran and on the mausoleum of Imam Khomeini, south of the city.

The assailants attacked the parliament buildings in the morning. Equipped with AK-47 assault rifles, handguns, grenades and suicide vests, the gunmen killed security guards and ordinary people before holding people hostage in the upper floors of the building.

They were all killed by the security forces after an operation that took several hours.

In the other attack at the shrine of Imam Khomeini, one suicide bomber blew himself up while the second one was killed in an exchange of gunfire.

The death toll from Wednesday's incidents in Tehran grew to 17, while more than 40 others have been wounded.

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