• العربية
  • فارسی
Brand
  • Iran Insight
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Analysis
  • Special Report
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Iran Insight
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Analysis
  • Special Report
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Theme
  • Language
    • العربية
    • فارسی
  • Iran Insight
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Analysis
  • Special Report
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
All rights reserved for Volant Media UK Limited
volant media logo

Khamenei urges judiciary to pursue war-related crimes

Jun 28, 2026, 11:34 GMT+1

Iran’s Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei called on the judiciary on Sunday to pursue domestic and international legal cases over deaths and damage from US-Israeli strikes Iran.

In a message marking Judiciary Week, he said the judiciary must follow up on “the crimes of international criminals, arrogant powers and global aggressors,” especially in 2025 and 2026.

“What is certain is that the criminals must be seized by the collar and brought to justice for their criminal acts,” he said.

He also called for judicial reforms, saying people should see results in faster case processing, stronger rulings, easier access to justice and tougher action against corruption.

Most Viewed

Iran held by Egypt, waits on results in bid for first World Cup knockout place
1

Iran held by Egypt, waits on results in bid for first World Cup knockout place

2
ANALYSIS

How a US-Iran deal can reshape the Middle East

3

Iran’s banks keep failing, but no one explains why – Iranian daily

4
ANALYSIS

Direct-to-cell offers Iranians future hope, not a fix today

5
INSIGHT

Khamenei mourning site shut as shroud-wearing hardliners expose loyalist rift

Banner
Banner
Banner

Spotlight

  • How a US-Iran deal can reshape the Middle East
    ANALYSIS

    How a US-Iran deal can reshape the Middle East

  • Iran's Pride Match is about visibility, not politics
    OPINION

    Iran's Pride Match is about visibility, not politics

  • Iranians recast Ashura mourning to remember January protest victims
    VOICES FROM IRAN

    Iranians recast Ashura mourning to remember January protest victims

  • Investigation traces January protest deaths to Gharazi Hospital in Isfahan
    SPECIAL REPORT

    Investigation traces January protest deaths to Gharazi Hospital in Isfahan

  • US-Iran MoU pauses conflict but leaves nuclear dispute unresolved

    US-Iran MoU pauses conflict but leaves nuclear dispute unresolved

  • Rival visions of Iran take to the streets during Ashura
    INSIGHT

    Rival visions of Iran take to the streets during Ashura

  • Iran’s negotiators have 60 days; its factories may not
    ANALYSIS

    Iran’s negotiators have 60 days; its factories may not

•
•
•

More Stories

Khamenei mourning site shut as shroud-wearing hardliners expose loyalist rift

Jun 28, 2026, 11:24 GMT+1
•
Arash Sohrabi
Khamenei mourning site shut as shroud-wearing hardliners expose loyalist rift
100%
Mourners attend ceremonies at Ravagh Keshvardoust, a shrine-like mourning site set up near the place where Ali Khamenei was killed on Tehran’s Jomhouri Street. (June 2026)

A mourning site set up near the place where Ali Khamenei was killed has been shut down after shroud-wearing ultra-hardliners turned it into a three-day sit-in, exposing a widening rift inside Iran’s loyalist camp over how to use the slain leader’s memory.

The site, known as Ravagh Keshvardoust, had been turned into a shrine-like space in central Tehran for prayer, mourning and ritual gatherings after Khamenei’s killing. In Iranian religious architecture, a ravagh usually refers to a covered hall or portico attached to a shrine. In this case, the term was being used for a temporary devotional space around the site of Khamenei’s death.

According to Jamaran, a news outlet close to the family of the Islamic Republic’s founder Ruhollah Khomeini, organizers closed the site after a group of kafan-poushan, or shroud-wearers, arrived from Mashhad on Ashura (June 25) and occupied the space under the banner of “avenging the blood of the slain leader.”

  • US talks trigger unprecedented rift in Iran’s hardline camp

    US talks trigger unprecedented rift in Iran’s hardline camp

The term kafan-poushan refers to activists who wear white burial shrouds in political or religious demonstrations, presenting themselves as ready for death or martyrdom. The symbolism has long been used by hardline factions in the Islamic Republic, especially when they want to frame a political demand as a sacred duty.

Organizers said the group’s three-day sit-in changed the function of the site. What had been a place for prayer, mourning, daily ceremonies and congregational prayers became, in their words, a place for overnight stays, food distribution and protest equipment. They said repeated requests and mediation failed to persuade the protesters to leave.

The decision to close the site was presented as an effort to protect the sanctity of a site named after the slain leader. But politically, it showed something more sensitive: even parts of the pro-Khamenei establishment now appear to see some of the most radical mourners as disruptive, not useful.

The conflict is not between supporters and opponents of the Islamic Republic. It is between two loyalist currents.

  • Iran hardliners seek to stir unrest in parliament after US MoU, activist says

    Iran hardliners seek to stir unrest in parliament after US MoU, activist says

One side wants Khamenei’s death to be used as a managed symbol of unity, grief and continuity under the new leadership. The other wants to turn that grief into a permanent pressure campaign against officials accused of compromise, especially over talks with the United States and the interim memorandum meant to end the war.

That split has been visible for weeks.

Ultra-hardline figures linked to the Paydari Front have attacked the negotiating team led by Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, accusing them of crossing the late leader’s red lines. Some protesters at hardline rallies have chanted against Ghalibaf and Araghchi, asking what happened to “the blood” of their leader. Some went further, calling for their death or execution.

  • Iran hardliners rage over US deal, but experts say regime is closing ranks

    Iran hardliners rage over US deal, but experts say regime is closing ranks

Iran International previously reported that supporters of the Paydari Front were removed from nightly state-organized rallies in Tehran after requests by President Masoud Pezeshkian and Ghalibaf, in an apparent attempt to contain pressure from the ultra-hardline street while talks with Washington continued.

The same divide has appeared in parliament and in the media. Lawmakers close to the ultra-hardline camp have accused Ghalibaf of keeping parliament closed to shield negotiations from criticism. Conservative activist Mohammad Mohajeri accused hardline lawmakers of trying to use parliament’s podium for factional purposes after the US-Iran memorandum.

Earlier, Iran International reported that the dispute had spilled into a public clash between Raja News, close to Saeed Jalili’s ultraconservative camp, and the IRGC-linked Tasnim News Agency. The argument centered on how far Iran should go in negotiations and whether maximalist demands, including sweeping sanctions relief and regional ceasefires, were realistic.

  • Iran sidelines ultra-hardliners from pro-government nightly rallies

    Iran sidelines ultra-hardliners from pro-government nightly rallies

The closure of the site brings that fight into the religious arena.

State-linked outlets had spent weeks giving the site a sacred vocabulary. Some described it as a place where mourners could approach the “killing site” of the slain leader. Others compared it to Tel Zaynabiyya, a deeply emotional reference in Shiite memory. In Karbala, Tel Zaynabiyya is associated with the place from which Zaynab, the sister of Imam Hussein, is believed to have witnessed the battlefield after Hussein’s killing in 680. Using that phrase for Khamenei’s death places the site inside the language of Ashura, martyrdom and sacred grief.

Ashura is not just a mourning ritual in the Islamic Republic’s political culture. It is also a vocabulary of legitimacy, sacrifice and confrontation. Since 1979, the state has repeatedly used the story of Imam Hussein’s stand at Karbala to frame political loyalty as moral resistance and compromise as betrayal.

But the Keshvardoust dispute shows the risk of that language for the state itself. Once Khamenei’s death is framed as a sacred wound demanding revenge, the most radical loyalists can use the same symbolism against the government, parliament speaker, foreign minister or any official seen as too “pragmatic.”

That is why the incident is politically revealing. The establishment wants mourning that strengthens the system. The ultra-hardliners want mourning that disciplines the system.

Saudi Arabia condemns Iranian attacks on Kuwait, Bahrain

Jun 28, 2026, 10:46 GMT+1

Saudi Arabia condemned Iranian attacks on Kuwait and Bahrain on Sunday and said the strikes also targeted maritime security and freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz.

The Saudi foreign ministry called the attacks a violation of international law and the UN Charter, saying they undermined international efforts to restore security and stability in the region.

Riyadh said it stood in full solidarity with Kuwait and Bahrain and supported any measures they take to protect their sovereignty and security.

Iran alone responsible for reopening Hormuz traffic, Araghchi says

Jun 28, 2026, 10:22 GMT+1

Iran alone is responsible for managing and fully reopening maritime traffic in the Strait of Hormuz under recent understandings, Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said on Sunday in Baghdad.

Speaking at a news conference with Iraqi Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein, Araghchi said the reopening would take place after existing obstacles were removed and that implementation was underway.

“No other country or institution has any responsibility in this regard,” Araghchi said.

He warned that any intervention or attempt to create arrangements that contradict the existing understandings would complicate conditions, delay the return of normal traffic to the Strait of Hormuz and increase tensions.

He called on all parties to abide by the understandings, avoid interfering in the management of the Strait of Hormuz and allow the arrangements to be carried out.

Qatar condemns repeated Iranian attacks on Bahrain, Kuwait

Jun 28, 2026, 09:59 GMT+1

Qatar strongly condemned repeated Iranian attacks on Bahrain and Kuwait on Sunday, calling them a blatant violation of the two countries’ sovereignty and a clear breach of international law.

Qatar’s foreign ministry said it stressed the need to reduce escalation, according to the Qatar News Agency.

Israel, Lebanon recognize Hezbollah as shared enemy, US envoy says

Jun 28, 2026, 09:08 GMT+1

US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee said on Sunday that Israel and Lebanon recognized that they were not at war with each other, but with Hezbollah.

“Get rid of the cancer & everyone lives-in PEACE!” he wrote on X.

He also said he had returned to Jerusalem after a week in Washington for a fifth round of Israel-Lebanon peace talks.