Iran yesterday marked the 45th anniversary of the 1979 Islamic Revolution amid tensions gripping the wider Middle East over Israel’s continued war against Hamas in the Gaza Strip.
Thousands of Iranians marched through major streets and squares decorated with flags, balloons and banners with revolutionary and religious slogans.
In Tehran, crowds waved Iranian flags, chanted slogans and carried placards with the traditional “Death to America” and “Death to Israel” written on them.
Photo: AFP
Some burned US and Israeli flags, a common practice in pro-government rallies.
There was a heavy security presence in the major cities across the country.
The anniversary came a month after a deadly attack by the extremist Islamic State group in the central city of Kerman that left at least 95 people dead during the commemoration for prominent Iranian general Qasem Soleimani whom the US killed in a 2020 drone strike.
Iran has tried to blame the US and Israel for the attack as the Israeli offensive in the Gaza Strip continues.
The Islamic Republic launched missile attacks on Iraq and Syria. It then struck alleged anti-Iran Sunni militant group Jaish al-Adl targets in nuclear-armed Pakistan, which responded with its own strikes on Iran, further raising tensions in a region inflamed by the Israel-Hamas war.
Earlier in January a drone attack killed three US troops in Jordan, which an umbrella group for Iran-backed factions known as the Islamic Resistance in Iraq claimed.
The US said that it held Tehran responsible, and Iran threatened to “decisively respond” to any US attack on the Islamic Republic.
The Islamic Revolution began with widespread unrest in Iran over the rule of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.
The shah, terminally and secretly ill with cancer, fled the country in January 1979.
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini then returned from exile and the government fell on Feb. 11, 1979, after days of mass demonstrations and confrontations between protesters and security forces.
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