Two top Iranian judges shot dead in Tehran supreme court in ‘planned assassination’ by gunman who then shot himself
TWO veteran Iranian Supreme Court judges have been shot dead by an assailant who later took his own life.
Judge Mohammad Moghiseh, 68, and Judge Ali Razini, 71, were known for handling high-profile cases "fighting crimes against national security, espionage and terrorism".
The Iranian judiciary said the assailant killed the two senior judges in a “planned assassination” in Tehran.
The judiciary's Mizan Online website said: "This morning, a gunman infiltrated the Supreme Court in a planned act of assassination of two brave and experienced judges.
"The two judges were martyred in the act."
A guard was also injured in the attack and it is thought to have been a terrorist act, according to reports.
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A motive behind the shock killing was not immediately clear but Mizan said the assailant was not involved in any cases before the Supreme Court.
No further details on the attacker's identity were released but Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian urged an investigation take place into the shock shooting.
Pezeshkian said: "I strongly urge the security and law enforcement forces to take the necessary measures as soon as possible by examining the dimensions and angles of this reprehensible act and to identify its perpetrators."
Moghisseh has had a rocky past with the West as he was sanctioned by the EU in 2011 and by the United States in 2019.
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The US Department of the Treasury accused him of having "overseen countless unfair trails, during which charges went unsubstantiated and evidence was disregarded".
Razini held several important positions in Iran's judiciary and has been the target of assassination attempts in the past.
In 1998, he survived an assassination attempt after a bomb was attached to his vehicle.
Razini had been accused of being one of the judges involved in the infamous “Death Commission” committee - responsible for overseeing the tragic prosecution and execution of thousands of political prisoners in 1988.
Although the shooting of a sitting judge is rare in Iran, the country has faced a history of high-profile figures being targeted for death.
A Shiite Muslim preacher was shot dead in the southern city of Kazeroun after leading Friday prayers, In October.
A powerful cleric, later identified as Hassan Moghaddas, was also shot dead at a bank in the northern province of Mazandaran, in August 2005.
He was fatally attacked when two gunmen climbed into his car in the middle of a busy business district in the capital.
Two men were publically executed and hung two years after the shock murder.