Iran: No arrests yet made for Hamas chief’s killing, reports otherwise are ‘false’
Judiciary spokesman says investigations into assassination of Ismail Haniyeh are underway and results will be published when they are completed
TEHRAN — Iran has yet to make any arrests linked to the suspected Israeli killing of Hamas political chief Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran, the Iranian judiciary said Tuesday.
The leader of the Palestinian terror group was killed July 31 during a visit to attend the swearing-in ceremony of Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian.
The “necessary investigations” have begun and the results will be announced “as soon as the probe is completed,” said judiciary spokesman Asghar Jahangir.
“Until today, no arrests have been made in connection with this case,” he said, adding that the investigations involved Iranian military officials.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said Haniyeh was killed using a “short-range projectile” launched from outside his accommodation in Tehran.
Iran and Hamas have blamed Israel and vowed to retaliate. Israel has declined to comment.
On Saturday, The New York Times reported that Iran had arrested more than two dozen people, including senior intelligence officers among others, in connection with Haniyeh’s killing.
Jahangir dismissed the claims about any arrests as “rumors” and “false.”
“Haniyeh’s assassination will definitely be met with a courageous response by the Islamic Republic,” he said.
Both Iranian and Hamas officials have claimed that Haniyeh was killed by a missile fired from the air, even possibly launched from outside the country.
However, The New York Times reported that Haniyeh was killed by a bomb planted in his room. And the UK’s Telegraph in a Saturday report cited two Iranian officials as also saying Israel’s Mossad spy agency paid Guard Corps members to plant a bomb in Haniyeh’s room two months before the deadly explosion.
Haniyeh’s death came hours after an Israeli strike in south Beirut killed a senior commander of Hezbollah, the Lebanese terror group that Israel blamed for a rocket strike on the Golan Heights that killed 12 children and teens in a soccer field.
The two high-profile killings in Lebanon and Iran are the latest of several major incidents that have inflamed regional tensions during the Gaza war, which has drawn in Iran-backed groups in Syria, Lebanon, Iraq and Yemen.
Late Monday, Pezeshkian said Israel would “receive the response for its crimes and arrogance,” but insisted that Tehran “is in no way seeking to expand the scope of war and crisis in the region.”