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Gunmen in NW Iran assassinate prosecutor

(Agencies)
Updated: 2010-01-19 17:22
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Gunmen in NW Iran assassinate prosecutor
Government supporters hold placards and pictures of Iran's late leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini (R) and Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in protest against opposition demonstrations during Ashura in Tehran December 30, 2009. [Agencies]

TEHRAN: Attackers gunned down an Iranian court prosecutor outside his home in the country's northwest, national media reported on Tuesday.

Two gunmen opened fire at Vali Hajgholizadeh, described as a prosecutor with an excellent anti-corruption record, outside his building late Monday in the town of Khoy, about 470 miles (780 kilometers) northwest of Tehran.

The prosecutor died later of his wounds in a hospital, national television said.

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The town of Khoy is close to the Turkish border in an area that has seen occasional clashes between security forces and separatist Kurdish groups.

The English-language state Press TV said initial reports indicate the prosecutor had received death threats over the past few days. It said an investigation was under way to identify and arrest the culprits.

Hajgholizadeh had a "brilliant record in battling land-grabbing, moral corruption, and counterrevolutionaries," the semiofficial Fars news agency quoted Ebrahim Mazraeli from the Khoy governor's office as saying.

Last week a Tehran University physicist was killed in a mysterious, remote-controlled bomb attack in front of his home in the Iranian capital. No group took responsibility for the assassination and no arrests have been made.

Iranian officials have blamed the bombing on an exiled opposition group known as the People's Mujahedeen, accusing it of acting on behalf of Israel and the US. The armed opposition group and Washington have denied involvement, while Israel has not commented. On Monday, Iran vowed to take revenge on Israel and the United States for the slaying of the physics professor.

The bombing came at a time of high tension in Iran, where authorities struggle to contain a resilient opposition movement that has challenged the result of June's residential election and has also increasingly confronted Iran's clerical leadership.