A major security operation is underway after 17 people were killed last Wednesday in suicide bombings and gun attacks in Tehran, the first to be claimed by the hardline Sunni Islamist group Islamic State inside Iran, a Shia power. "Police forces clashed with the four men and killed them in a mountainous area in southern Iran," the semi-official Tasnim news agency quoted a local police chief as saying.
12 dead in attacks on Iran parliament, Khomenei's mausoleum in Tehran
Two of those killed were not Iranian, he said, without elaborating. Guns, ammunition, explosives and the flag of Islamic State were seized during the operation, Tasnim reported, citing the police chief. A local official at the port town of Jask, also in Hormuzgan, said five suspects linked to Islamic State were detained on Monday, Iran's Mizan news agency reported.
Southern Iran is home to a Sunni minority and has seen previous clashes between security forces and Sunni insurgent groups. The authorities say Iranian security forces killed the mastermind of the attacks on Saturday and that more than 50 suspects have been arrested around the country.
NA condemns Iran attack, urges Pak role over Gulf crisis
Iran accuses Saudi Arabia of funding hard line Sunni militants, including Islamic State, and in the wake of last week's attack pointed the finger at its regional rival. Riyadh has denied involvement in the attacks.
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