IRAN’S PRESIDENT, EBRAHIM RAISI CONFIRMED DEAD IN HELICOPTER CRASH AGED 63
By Ajape Sefiu A.
The Iranian president was travelling by helicopter in the country’s East Azerbaijan province when it came down in a forested area.
Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi lost his life after the helicopter he and other officials boarded crashed during bad weather in a mountainous and forested region of the nation.
The 63-year-old, who served as a representative of hardline and conservative political groups in Iran for almost three years, looked set to seek reelection next year.
A former chief justice, Raisi was touted as a potential successor to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the 85-year-old supreme leader of Iran.
Raisi was born in Mashhad, a center of Shia Islam in northern Iran. He received religious instruction and training at the Qom seminary, where he studied under eminent academics like Khamenei.
He donned a black turban, just like the supreme leader, signifying that he was a sayyid, or a descendent of the Prophet Muhammad. Twelver Shia Muslims place special importance on this rank.
Raisi racked up experience as a prosecutor in multiple jurisdictions before coming to Tehran in 1985. It was in the capital city that, according to human rights organisations, he was part of a committee of judges who oversaw executions of political prisoners.
The late president was a longtime member of the Assembly of Experts, the body that is tasked with choosing a replacement for the supreme leader in the event of his death.
He became attorney general in 2014 for two years, when he was appointed by Khamenei to lead the Astan Quds Razavi. The colossal bonyad, or charitable trust, has billions of dollars in assets and is the custodian of the shrine of Imam Reza, the eighth Shia imam.
Raisi initially ran for president in 2017, unsuccessfully challenging the re-election of former President Hassan Rouhani, who represented the centrist and moderate camps.
After a short hiatus, Raisi was making headlines as the new head of the Iranian judiciary system, having been appointed by Khamenei in 2019. He presented himself as a defender of justice and a fighter against corruption, and he made many provincial trips to garner popular support.
Raisi became president in 2021 amid low voter turnout and the wide disqualification of reformist and moderate candidates, and he appeared to have secured a firm footing for re-election.
Like other top Iranian officials, his harshest rhetoric was reserved for Israel and the United States, followed by their Western allies.
Raisi has made many speeches since the start of the war on Gaza in October to condemn “genocide” and “massacres” committed by Israel against Palestinians and call on the international community to intervene.
He promised revenge against Israel after it levelled Tehran’s consulate building in Syria and killed seven members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), including two generals.
And he welcomed Iran’s response, which was to launch hundreds of drones and missiles at Israel—most of which were shot down by a coalition of Israeli allies—but left Iran claiming an overall success.
Raisi was hawkish on Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers, or the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), which has been in limbo since former US President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew from it in 2018.
He was a champion of the strategic policy of “resistance” and “resilience” that Khamenei has adopted in the face of the harshest-ever sanctions that Iran has faced, imposed after the nuclear deal fell through.
A close ally of the IRGC, the late president was also a staunch supporter of the “axis of resistance” of political and armed groups that Iran supports across the region, including Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen.
And he was a strong backer of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, whom Iran has supported in his government’s war against the Syrian opposition, which has left hundreds of thousands dead.