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Iran vows revenge after more than 95 killed in blasts near tomb of former commander

Two explosions occurred in the city of Kerman, where Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps commander Qassem Soleimani is buried.

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Footage shows the moment the explosion occurred at a ceremony in the city of Kerman, Iran.
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Iran has vowed revenge after 95 people were killed in two explosions near the tomb of a general.

At the time of the explosions a ceremony was being held in the city of Kerman to mark the 2020 assassination of Iran's top commander Qassem Soleimani.

Iranian president Ebrahim Raisi said the attack was "heinous and inhumane", while Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei has vowed to get revenge.

According to state media, he said: "Cruel criminals [...] must know that they will be strongly dealt with from now on and [...] undoubtedly there will be a harsh response."

Pic: AP
People gather at the site of an explosion in the city of Kerman, about 510 miles (820 kilometres) southeast of the capital Tehran, Iran, Wednesday, Jan. 3, 2024. Two bombs exploded Wednesday at a commemoration for a prominent Iranian general slain by the U.S. in a 2020 drone strike, Iranian officials said, as the Middle East remains on edge over Israel's war on Hamas in the Gaza Strip. (Sare Tajalli, ISNA via AP)
Image: Pic: AP
Pic: AP
People stay next to destroyed cars after an explosion in Kerman, Iran, Wednesday, Jan. 3, 2024. Iran says bomb blasts at an event honoring a prominent Iranian general slain in a U.S. airstrike in 2020 have killed at least 103 people and wounded 188 others. (Tasnim News Agency via AP)
Image: Pic: AP

Kerman's mayor, Saeed Tabrizi, told Iran's state-run ISNA news agency that the blasts took place about 10 minutes apart.

Local media reports suggest more than 140 people were injured.

Kerman's deputy governor Rahman Jalali described the blasts as "terroristic attacks" - without elaborating on who could be behind them.

The United States has said it was not involved in the explosions in Iran in any way and has no reason to believe Israel was either.

Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of the Iranian-backed Hezbollah group in Lebanon, has blamed Israel for the explosions and said those who died were "targeted".

The Hezbollah leader also paid tribute to Soleimani and said: "Even in his tomb, he is living. In his martyrdom, his life has become stronger, more present.

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Who was Qassem Soleimani?

"We see him in our rockets, in our homes, in the tears of the children."

Soleimani, once Iran's top military general, was assassinated in a US drone strike during a visit to Iraq to meet then prime minister Adil Abdul-Mahdi.

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In this picture taken on September 14, 2013, the commander of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard's Quds Force, Gen. Qassem Soleimani, is seen as people pay their condolences following the death of his mother in Tehran.
Image: Qassem Soleimani. File pic

Iran's Tasnim news agency, quoting two unnamed sources, reported that "two bags carrying bombs went off" at the site and that the "perpetrators ... of this incident apparently detonated the bombs by remote control".

Tehran has enemies both internally and externally.

Israel has in the past been accused of carrying out drone strikes on Iranian military facilities, while Sunni extremist groups such as Islamic State have carried out bombings, often on civilian targets, in the majority Shia nation.

No group has yet claimed responsibility for Wednesday's blasts.

It comes a day after .

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Pic: SNNTV
Image: Smoke rises in the background following the explosions. Pic: SNNTV
Iran blasts
Image: An ambulance arrives at the scene

The drone strike that killed Soleimani caused a major diplomatic crisis between the US and Iran, leading to retaliatory rocket strikes against US military sites in Iraq and pushing the two countries to the brink of war.

More than a million people took to the streets for Soleimani's funeral - leading to a stampede in which 56 mourners were killed.

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Having served in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), Soleimani became one of the country's top commanders.

A national hero to supporters of Iran's theocratic regime, he was often touted as the country's second most powerful figure, behind only Iran's supreme leader, Ali Khamenei.

He was the commander of the Quds Force - a division of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Cops responsible for spying and military operations outside of Iran.

Thousands have turned out for the funeral of Maj Gen Soleimani
Image: More than a million people took to the streets for the funeral (pictured) of Soleimani following his assassination in 2020

The group was deemed a terrorist organisation by the US.

They claimed Soleimani oversaw Quds Force officers as they tried and failed to assassinate Saudi Arabia's ambassador to the US Adel al Jubeir at the upscale Cafe Milano in Washington in 2011.

Soleimani was also regarded as the mastermind of Iran's military operations in Iraq and Syria and influential in the development of the so-called "Axis of Resistance" - categorised as the "Axis of Evil" by Western officials - involving Iran and Iranian-backed militias including Lebanon's Hezbollah and Hamas in Gaza.