Thursday, January 1, 2026
Home Blog Page 4580

Iran urges justice for perpetrators of Nigeria Muslim killings

Velayati

A senior Iranian official has called on the Nigerian government to bring to justice those involved in the military’s bloody crackdown on Shiite Muslims in the African country.

In a statement released Tuesday, Secretary General of the World Assembly of Islamic Awakening Ali-Akbar Velayati expressed “deep regret and sorrow” over the Nigerian army’s recent “brutal attack” on Shiite Muslims in that country.

He added that people across the world still remember the killing of 25 Muslims by the Nigerian army during last year’s rallies marking the International Quds Day, stressing that the demonstrators were killed only for supporting the Palestinian nation against Israel’s atrocities and occupation.

Velayati, who is also a senior advisor to Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei, further stated that the Nigerian army, provoked by the Israeli regime and backed by Wahhabi extremists, has once again attacked Muslims in the African country following the massive march of Nigerians during this year’s mourning rituals of Arba’een, which marked the 40th day after the martyrdom anniversary of Imam Hussain (PBUH), the third Shiite imam.

Local media said on December 12 that more than a dozen people were killed after clashes erupted between the Nigerian army and Shiite Muslims in the northern city of Zaria, Kaduna State. The military accused the Shiites of attempting to assassinate Lieutenant General Tukur Buratai, the chief of the Nigerian army staff.

The clashes broke out when Nigerian soldiers opened fire on the people attending a religious ceremony at Hussainiyyah Baqeeyatullah, a religious center belonging to the Islamic Movement of Nigeria (IMN).

One day later, revered Nigerian Shia cleric, Ibrahim al-Zakzaky, and his wife were arrested during a raid by the army on his residence and the buildings connected to the Shiite community in Zaria. Local sources say hundreds of people trying to protect the cleric were killed.

In other developments, over 200 Iranian lawmakers condemned the “brutal” killing and called for the formation of an ad hoc committee to investigate the matter. And President Hassan Rouhani called for the establishment of a fact-finding committee in Nigeria to investigate the crackdown on Shiite Muslims.

Images of Iran shot by an Italian 45 years ago (PHOTOS)

45 years ago _803

Iran 1970 is a photo essay about the travels of Italian photographer Gabriele Basilico with his old Fiat 124 and friends through Iran in 1970.

Humboldt Books has recently published the travelogue that features the following images which have been republished by entekhab.ir:

IAEA resolution opens new chapter in Iran-IAEA ties: Zarif

Zarif

Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif says the closure of the case of the past and present outstanding issues regarding Iran’s nuclear program will open a new chapter in ties between Iran and the UN nuclear agency.

The foreign minister commended the approval of a resolution by the Board of Governors of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) on Tuesday.

Finally after 12 years, the board asserted that Iran and the IAEA have met their obligations under the roadmap they signed in July and explicitly announced the closure of the so-called PMD file, he said.

“This resolution has gone far beyond the closure of the so-called PMD and has officially nullified the previous 12 resolutions of the governing board regarding Iran’s nuclear program that contained allegations and serious restrictions on the country’s nuclear program,” the Iranian foreign minister pointed out.

He added that the 35-nation board also specified a new agenda for a specific period of time about the implementation of JCPOA.

Zarif said the resolution once again verified the non-diversion of Iranian nuclear material toward non-peaceful activities and Tehran’s full commitment to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) regulations, adding that it reaffirmed the peaceful nature of Iran’s nuclear program.

The Islamic Republic reiterates its perennial policy on the prohibition of the production and use of weapons of mass destruction as well as the country’s full commitment to the NPT and expresses its readiness to completely implement JCPOA provided that the P5+1 countries will also remain committed to their obligations, Zarif said.

During its meeting in the Austrian capital Vienna on Tuesday, the Board of Governors overwhelmingly voted in favor of a draft resolution which brings an end to a 12-year investigation into the past and present outstanding issues regarding Iran’s nuclear program.

The 35-nation body passed the draft resolution which had been submitted by P5+1 on December 7 on Iran’s past nuclear activities.

IAEA Passes Resolution on Closure of Iran’s PMD Case

IAEA

The resolution, proposed earlier by the Group 5+1 (Russia, China, the US, Britain, France and Germany), was put to the vote in a session of the UN watchdog’s Board of Governors on Tuesday in Vienna and got approved with the unanimous vote of the member states.

It will make it possible to actually close Teheran’s nuclear dossier and begin the implementation phase of a lasting nuclear deal, also known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), which was finalized between Iran and the Group 5+1 (also known as the P5+1 or E3+3) in July.

The IAEA has been given the role of verifying Iran’s commitments under the nuclear deal with six world powers.

As part of a Road-map signed between Iran and the IAEA on July 14, the agency was required to finish its investigations about Iran’s nuclear activities and submit a report to the Board of Governors by December 15.

A report released on December 2 by Amano on Iran’s nuclear program confirmed that the agency has no credible indications of suspicious work in Tehran’s nuclear activities.

Iranians Stage Rally in Protest at Shiite Killings in Nigeria

Iran-Nigeria

The demonstrators called on the Nigerian government to address the attacks on Shiite Muslims.

They also voiced support for prominent Shiite Nigerian cleric Sheikh Ibrahim Zakzaky, who has been wounded in an attack by the military forces on his house in Nigeria’s northern city of Zaria and is now in custody.

In a statement at the end of the rally, the protestors slammed the recent attacks on Nigerian Shiite people as part of a “Takfiri-Zionist” plot, saying the US and Israeli regimes have the blood of the victims on their hands.

They also called on the Abuja government to prevent harassment of the Shiite Muslims.

On Saturday night, Nigerian military forces surrounded the house of Sheikh Zakzaky in Zaria. Heavy fighting broke out afterwards between the government forces and members of the Islamic Movement, which stretched into the early hours of Sunday.

Director of a local hospital has reported that at least 60 people have been killed this weekend when the Nigerian army raided the Shiite community and arrested Sheikh Zakzaky.

The Nigerian Army alleges that members of the movement were involved in an attack on the convoy of the Chief of Nigeria’s Army Staff, Tukur Buratai. The Islamic Movement has vehemently denied the allegations.

 

Who pulls the strings behind clampdown on Nigerian Shiites?

Nigerian Army

Shiites in Nigeria have become the prime target of a plot jointly hatched by the African country’s government, the Western powers, the Zionists and Wahhabi groups.

Tasnim News Agency on December 14 published a report on Nigeria and attempts by outsiders who aim to eliminate the Shiites in the African country on the Gulf of Guinea. The following is a translation of part of that report:

A country of 170 million, Nigeria is in West Africa. It has the largest population on the black continent and its 36 states are run by a federal government. Nigeria has the world’s tenth largest oil reserves and is the eighth biggest oil exporter. Muslims account for 50 percent of the population in Nigeria.

Since 2002, the country has been hit by military conflicts between Boko Haram and government forces. Boko Haram, which is an armed terrorist group, is seeking to shut down all modern schools and impose its Takfiri-Salafi laws in the country.

Shiites in Nigeria

Shiites in Nigeria are the biggest Shiite community in Africa. In 2008, the population of the Shiites was estimated to stand around seven million. The Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN), a Shiite group, is led by Sheikh Ibraheem Zakzaky. Nigerian Shiites live in Lagos, Zaria and Kano, and the Baghiatallah religious site in Zaria is their stronghold.

NigeriaNinety-five percent of the Shiites are said to have embraced Shiite Islam in the past three decades. They are known as Mostabserin [those who have converted to Shiism]. Except for indigenous Shiites, a number of Lebanese immigrants are living in Nigeria too.

The Twelver Shiites hold religious ceremonies which bring together the faithful in their hundreds, among other occasions, to mark Ashura; they release newspapers, magazines and books, develop websites, and produce audio and video materials on the beliefs of the Prophet Muhammad’s infallible Household in their native language.

Nigerian ShiaShiites were present in Nigeria in three historic periods: 1) It started before 1994 when the number of Shiites did not exceed 500 in total, because the Nigerians were not familiar with this branch of Islam. 2) It began after 1994 when the Islamic Movement – which was inspired by the Muslim Brotherhood – was established. The tendency of certain members of this movement toward Shiism created rifts in its ranks with those converting to Shiism defecting from the movement and leaving for other countries. This marked the beginning of familiarity with Shiism and led to the emergence and spread of Shiism among Nigerian Muslims.

3) This period, which was inspired by the awakening and the Islamic Revolution of Iran, started from 1999 onward. During this period, Shiism was given a broad, hearty welcome by Muslims and people in Nigeria, and grew in the country remarkably. Despite the negative propaganda and mistreatment [of Shiites] by the anti-Shiite sects, over seven million people have converted to Shiism.

Who is Ibraheem Zakzaky?  

Born in 1953, Ibrahim Yaqoub El Zakzaky – who holds a degree in economics – is the leader of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN). He landed in jail many times in the 1980s and 1990s. His three sons were killed on International Quds Day rallies in Zaria in 2014 at the hands of the Nigerian police. [On July 25, 2014, Nigerian Army reportedly gunned down 35 followers of Ibrahim Zakzaky including his 3 undergraduate biological sons after pro-Palestinian procession in Zaria]. His activities have helped a number of Nigerian natives join [Shiism and] embrace the ideology of the Prophet’s Household.

Ibraheem Zakzaky-3

He has been in charge [of helping Nigerians convert to Shiism] since about 30 years ago, or as far back as the victory of the Islamic Revolution in Iran back in 1979. Following the Islamic Revolution, Zakzaky was inspired by the late Imam Khomeini. In the following years he came to Iran, and when he returned to Nigeria in clerical clothing, he embarked on promoting Shiism in Zaria and Kano.

On the “vehemently anti-American” leader of Nigerian Shiites, a BBC reporter says, “When I met the white-bearded, traditionally dressed religious leader, who looked older than his 57 years, he resembled a peaceful, friendly, elder statesman and smiled as he told me that he now has hundreds of thousands of followers.

“We sat together on his bright, fluffy pink, red and white rug and an orange-flowered garland framed a hanging portrait of the revolutionary Islamic leader of Iran, Ayatollah Khomeini, who watched over us.

“But followers here, including Sheikh Zakzaky, are closely watching present-day events in Iran.”

Western plot against Shiites

The emergence of Shiism and the growing number of Shiites in Nigeria together with the burgeoning hopes of truth-seekers and the oppressed people have triggered bitter opposition to the Islamic Movement in Nigeria and its leader. Zionist-run organizations and Wahhabi groups are in the ranks of the opponents.

Nigeria-2A closer study of such opposition brings to light the covert cooperation of two Salafi and Zionist movements which are taking action against the Shiites by committing terrorist acts. Such terrorist measures have been mainly plotted by Mossad in cooperation with the Nigerian security forces. A case in point is the abortive assassination of Sheikh Zakzaky in 2009. A bomb was to go off in the Sheikh’s residence in Zaria, but he disclosed the plot in Friday prayer sermons on September 11.

The details of the plot showed that the assassination had the support of the Saudis in addition to involvement of the US and Israel. The Saudis had [reportedly] paid certain missionaries to talk against the IMN all over the country.

The Nigerian security forces gathered in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital, last September to hold their final talks on carrying out such a plot [against the Shiites]. As part of the plot, they decided to unleash a barrage of charges against Zakzaky and his followers. Their decision was put in force courtesy of Saudi financial support and by the Wahhabi clerics who describe the Shiites as Rafezi (a derogatory term Wahhabis use to refer to Shiites).

The [anti-IMN] measures are at their highest in Zaria which is home to the largest numbers of International Quds Day ralliers each year.

On International Quds Day last year, security forces in Nigeria dispatched a so-called anti-terrorism squad to different states, especially Zaria [in Kaduna State in Northern Nigeria] to apparently track down the remnants of Boko Haram – a [terrorist] Wahhabi group – but they massacred people and captured a group of individuals. Police checkpoints had been ordered to stop the inflow of aid from other regions into the predominantly Shiite regions.

Meanwhile, the government had supported the clerics linked to the establishment asking them to identify – in their remarks – the Islamic Movement, its leader and members as part of a deviant sect which should be eliminated. The clerics have also been demanded to downplay the sympathy of people, especially women and children, with the movement if its members were killed.

Nigerian-1Unlike in the past when different groups were instigated to attack the Islamic Movement, this time around the Nigerian security forces got involved in the anti-IMN measures. The government is not simply happy with the killing of the Islamic Movement’s leader and active members. The next phase of the long-term plan calls for the identification of the clerics who are like-minded with the Islamic Movement. Police in the Kaduna State had admitted in a report to the federal government that the US embassy had called for drastic measures against the Shiites in Nigeria.

Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman traveled to Nigeria a few days before such [anti-Shiite] operations got underway. His visit [ostensibly] produced a mutual cooperation document on agricultural and technological fronts, but it also generated a secret security treaty under which the Zionist regime would train Nigeria’s security forces and would get involved in communal conflicts in the African country.

People are entitled to governing their country

Rafsanjani

The chairman of the Expediency Council has stressed the importance of the [parliamentary and Assembly of Experts] elections in late February and the post-JCPOA conditions and said that wise and popular statements should be made at this juncture.

Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani made the remark in a meeting with members of the Central Council of the Islamic Association of Students at the University of Tehran and Tehran University of Medical Sciences on Monday and added that people who are entitled to governing should learn about their rights and take part in the elections.

Tasnim News Agency on December 14 published Ayatollah Rafsanjani’s remarks and the following is the translation of what the top councilor said:

University students

The Expediency Council chairman said that university students are the valuable assets of today and tomorrow in the country. “Failure to meet the rightful demands of university students does no good to any establishment, because these students build the future and they should not face ambiguities in dealing with different issues.”

He further said that some [hardliners] are not happy with people’s tendency toward moderate ideas which are the essence of Shiism and have their roots in the pure Islamic faith.

Naturally, when political pressures surrounding a social phenomenon are removed, there will be some reactions before things reach a point of balance,said Rafsanjani.

As for the university atmosphere in the eleventh government and the Student Day ceremony [on December 7], he said that the relatively successful ceremony is another example of the determination of vigilant people in society, especially university students and the educated people, to create yet another epic in defending the Islamic establishment and the ideals of the late Imam and the martyrs.

Seyyed Hassan Khomeini

The top councilor then recalled the decision by Seyyed Hassan Khomeini [the grandson of the late Imam] to run for the Assembly of Experts and the reactions his decision has drawn and said that the candidacy of a person like him is the basic right every ordinary citizen, let alone a member of the family of the late Imam, but that he is not treated fairly.

Seyyed Mahmoud Doaei

Ayatollah Rafsanjani then recalled the controversy over Seyyed Mahmoud Doaei and his Ettela’at daily’s republication of an interview with former President Mohammad Khatami and said that Doaei has a long record of struggles [against the Pahlavi regime], cultural experiences in the pre-revolution struggles and accompanying the late Imam during his years in exile.

“In 1966, we released a statement against the coronation ceremony. Mr. Doaei and I were betrayed. I landed in jail and he escaped to Iraq where he – aided by Mr. Mostafa Khomeini – joined Radio Baghdad and became the sole speaker at The Clerical Movement in Iran, an influential program.”

Rafsanjani highlighted Doaei’s strong interest in the late Imam, the revolution and the Islamic establishment and said that unfair treatment of a person who has spent a lifetime – before and after the Islamic Revolution – serving the establishment is nothing but an anger which has no rational, legal and farsighted basis. “We are concerned, because the consequences of such misbehaviors will by no means serve the establishment’s interests.”

ISIS and extremism

The Expediency Council chairman said that extremism is doomed to fail, adding that rebellion by ISIS and a coalition of the world’s opposing powers against the terror group shows that terrorism and extremist acts are condemned as horrible in all divine faiths and human schools of thought.

“Even those who are known in the world for their radical policies and support for racist regimes have come to the conclusion that they had better join the anti-ISIS coalition or they have been forced to do so, because they know that the world public opinion is against terrorism and the massacre of humans.”

Elections

He said that people who are entitled to running their country should know their rights, adding that they are expected to participate in the elections because the turnout is of great importance.

People showed a similar behavior in the 2013 presidential elections and achieved a [good] result, Rafsanjani said, adding that the moderates seek trans-factional cooperation in their governance, and they are after an approach which serves the interests of the revolution, establishment, country and people.

Country’s conditions

Rafsanjani advised students to exercise patience and said, “If we try for God’s sake, He will not abandon those who fight in His path. Perhaps we have to go through tough tests to prove that honesty works.”

He referred to different developments that unfolded before and after the victory of the Islamic Revolution and said some individuals who claim to be popular have – knowingly and unknowingly – tried to create a chasm between people and the establishment.

The top councilor said that the enemy’s infiltrators are trying to poison the secure atmosphere in the country, cause differences among people and shatter unity in the country, adding that students should remain vigilant not to let them achieve their objectives.

Female partisans prepare to take on Daesh (PHOTOS)

Female partisans

Fifty female members of Syria’s Democratic Union Party have formed a partisan platoon to take on Daesh.

These female fighters of Christian faith are now battling Daesh terrorists alongside Kurdish Peshmerga and Yazidi fighters.

The following images of these brave Kurdish fighters have been shot by a French News Agency photographer and republished by faradeed.ir:

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

Iranian Newspapers Headlines
Iranian Newspapers Headlines

No single story dominated the front pages of Iranian newspapers on Tuesday. Reformist-leaning papers put on their covers the comments of the chairman of the Expediency Council about upcoming elections, and principlist dailies focused on the comments of the Judiciary chief about the responsibilities of the Assembly of Experts.

 

Ettela’at: The country’s economic vulnerability has decreased, the economy minister told a national gathering on improvement of business environment.

A comprehensive map on international economic cooperation has been drawn.

Ettela’at: Wrong decisions of the previous government and its measures to gloss things over are to blame for a rise in social harms.

Unfortunately the previous government failed to look into the root causes of social harms. Its failure resulted in a rise in such harms, Fatemeh Daneshvar [a female entrepreneur] said.

Ettela’at: As many as 190 soldiers of the Saudi-led coalition died when the Yemeni army staged a massive missile attack on the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait.

Ettela’at: Government is determined to support research and technological development, said the minister of science, research and technology.

Allocation of 1 percent of the country’s GDP to research will transform the science sector.

Ettela’at: The misbehaviors of the hardliners don’t have any logical or legal foundation, said Chairman of the Expediency Council Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.

Failure to meet the rightful expectations of students does not serve the interests of any establishment.

Ettela’at: The P5+1 resolution will be unanimously adopted at the Board of Governors of the International Atomic Energy Agency.

The comment by Iran’s IAEA envoy came ahead of a meeting of the Board of Governors to examine a report by the UN nuclear chief on Iran’s nuclear program.

Ettela’at: The Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman has said that Iran is to carry on with its advisory role in Syria.

Hossein Jaber Ansari further said that Iran’s unchangeable policy is to hold talks with its neighbors.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Afkar: Government appreciates the Supreme Leader’s trust in and support for the administration, said First Vice-President Eshagh Jahangiri.

Afkar: Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani has told the head of Iran-Indonesia Cooperation Group that unity is the cornerstone of Iran’s policy in dealing with the world of Islam.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Aftab-e Yazd: On orders of the president, ballot boxes to be used in upcoming elections will be transparent.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Arman-e Emrooz: The managing director of the State Retirement Fund has revealed millions of dollars in misconduct by the previous government.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Asr-e Eghtesad: The Iranian transport chief has said that Iran has reached an agreement with Airbus to buy 140 aircraft.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15


 

Asrar: A spokesman for the Interior Ministry has said that those who disrupt authorized gatherings will be referred to the Judiciary.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Bahar: In reaction to attacks by hardliners, Hashemi Rafsanjani has rushed to the defense of Seyyed Hassan [the grandson of the late Imam Khomeini] and [Seyyed Mahmoud] Doaei [the managing editor of Ettela’at daily].

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Ebtekar: The influenza tsunami has found its way to Tehran.

A number of patients infected with H1N1 strain of the flu virus have been admitted to the hospitals of the capital.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Etemad: The German ambassador to Tehran has said in an exclusive interview with the daily that Berlin stands ready to act as a mediator between Iran and Saudi Arabia.

Etemad: There is no such thing as “overseeing the leader” in the Constitution, said the Judiciary chief.

Etemad:  Authorities have released the list of 227 items whose import from the US is banned.

Clothes, tea, cigarettes, stationery items, sauces, and Christmas items are on the list.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Hambastegi: Hardliners and extremists are unhappy about society’s willingness to embrace moderate thoughts, said Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Hemayat: The Assembly of Experts is tasked with determining whether an individual meets the necessary requirements to become leader, it does not supervise the workings of the leader, said the Judiciary chief.

Ayatollah Sadegh Amoli Larijani said that human rights claims by a country like the US are absurd.

Hemayat: Nine Iranians are still unaccounted for following the deadly stampede involving Hajj pilgrims in Mina, Saudi Arabia in September.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Iran: The Foreign Ministry spokesman has said that the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action will be implemented in January.

Iran: Saeed Mortazavi, the second co-defendant in an oil corruption trial, has told a hearing that he had the go-ahead of Ahmadinejad [to work with Babak Zanjani].

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Jahan-e Sanat: The ban on the publication of news about and images of former President Mohammad Khatami does not have the blessing of the Leader, said the spokesman of the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Javan: The Yemenis have taken revenge on the eve of a cease-fire.

Yemeni missiles killed 190 Blackwater, Saudi and Emirati troops.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Jomhouri Islami: The government spokesman has denied reports that a ban will be slapped on new hiring by the public sector next year.

Jomhouri Islami: The Judiciary chief has said that the oversight of the leader by the Assembly of Expert is illegal.

Tehran MP Ali Motahari has said that comments by the top judge that such supervision is illegal “took me by surprise”.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Kaenat: Inflation is expected to slip into single digits next month, said the economy minister.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Kayhan: A number of MPs have said that the US Congressional bill that requires those who have visited Iran to obtain a visa to travel to America amounts to violation of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Khorasan: An American professor in an interview with the daily has said that he and hundreds of his students have gone through the second letter Iran’s Supreme Leader has written to the youth in the West.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Resalat: The government spokesman has said that the government in not interested in carrying on with the implementation of the Targeted Subsidies Act.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Roozan: Five MPs have written a letter to the Judiciary, criticizing the way it treats Saeed Mortazavi [who is on trial for corruption and has a conviction under his belt].

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Shahrvand: Help. Tehran is dying!

The number of people who fall victim to air pollution in Tehran is equal to the lives 20 air accidents might claim.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 


 

Taadol: Air pollution in Tehran on Monday was at its highest in nine months yesterday.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 15

 

Iran condemns terrorist attack in Pakistan’s Parachinar

Jaber Ansari

Iran’s Foreign Ministry condemned a Sunday terrorist attack in Pakistan that killed 23 people at a market in the predominantly Shiite city of Parachinar.

Foreign Ministry Spokesman Hossein Jaberi Ansari expressed Iran’s condolences to the Pakistani people and government and families of the victims of the deadly attack.

He said such heinous acts are meant to serve the interests of the enemies of Pakistan and the Islamic world, adding, “Terrorists seek to upset peace and stability in Pakistan.”

The spokesman expressed hope that appropriate policies would be adopted to prevent the repetition of such acts of terrorism.

The Sunday bomb blast at a crowded bazaar in Parachinar city, in Pakistan’s northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, killed 23 people and wounded several others.

The Lashkar-e-Jhangvi Takfiri terrorist group claimed responsibility for the attack, saying it had planted an IED (improvised electronic device) at the market.

Targeted killings against Shiite Muslims in Pakistan have drawn international outrage, with rights groups and regional countries expressing concern over the growing violence.

Shiites are seen as a minority group in Pakistan. They make up roughly 20 percent of the country’s population of 185 million.