
Iranian president forced to escape through emergency hatch during Israeli air strike
Masoud Pezeshkian was wounded in the leg and forced to escape through an emergency hatch after Israel struck the meeting in Tehran with six missiles during June's 12-day war.
The revelation, which was made in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) affiliated Fars news agency, confirms the claims made by Mr Pezeshkian during a recent interview that Israel tried to assassinate him.
According to Fars, Mr Pezeshkian, 70, sustained a leg injury after the strike on June 16 where others in attendance included parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and judiciary chief Mohseni Ejei.
The agency said the attack bore similarities to the strike that targeted the head of Iran's biggest regional proxy, Hezbollah, last year, which succeeded in killing long-time leader, Hassan Nasrallah, in Beirut.
'The attack occurred before noon on Monday, June 16, while a meeting of the Supreme National Security Council was being held with the heads of the three branches of government and other senior officials in the lower floors of a building in western Tehran,' the report said.
'The attackers targeted the building's entrances and exits by firing six bombs or missiles to block escape routes and cut off air flow.'
Fars also reported that in addition to the president, others had been injured in the attack. It stated that 'some officials, including the president, suffered minor injuries to their legs while leaving', and added that they escaped through 'an emergency hatch that had been planned in advance'.
'After the explosions, the electricity on the floor was cut off,' it added.
Investigations are now underway to find a possible insider because of the precise nature of the attack.
Iran has arrested more than 700 people in the wake of the war on charges of collaborating with Israel, and has attempted to push through a new emergency spy law that aims to impose harsher penalties, including the death penalty.
Though Fars did not detail the location of the strike, opposition outlet Iran International reported an Israeli air strike against an area near Shahrak-e Gharb in western Tehran on June 16.
Mohsen Rezaei, an IRGC general, also told state TV that Israel 'struck six points at the location where the Supreme National Security Council was meeting, but not the slightest harm was done to any of its members'.
However, in an interview with political commentator Tucker Carlson, Mr Pezeshkian accused Israel of trying to assassinate him, though had not admitted to having being injured. 'They did try [to assassinate me], yes...They acted accordingly, but they failed,' he said.
The interview drew massive criticism from MPs in Iran, with 24 joining together in a public letter accusing the president of undermining national security.
They said his openness to renewed negotiations with the United States in spite of the American strikes on three key nuclear facilities, and his willingness to cooperate with the International Atomic Energy Agency, which has since been expelled from the country, showed weakness.
'From a national security standpoint, such messaging risks inviting further aggression,' the MPs wrote.
'If before June 12 there were diverse views on resisting American overreach, this war generated rare unity around the necessity of confronting the United States and its proxy, the Zionist regime,' they added.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
21 minutes ago
- BBC News
Witney rail line resurrection 'economically viable'
A rail link from Oxford to the west of the county would be "economically viable", a study commissioned by a local authority has study, sanctioned by West Oxfordshire District Council (WODC), investigated the potential benefits of reinstating a rail link between Carterton, Witney, Eynsham and found that the rail scheme could "offer high value for money when wider benefits to the economy, environment and public health are included".The government previously said there were "significant challenges" with the project, particularly around cost - reported to be about £600m. Councillor Hugo Ashton, WODC's planning chief, said the study had shown that a rail connection "wouldn't just improve how people travel; it could transform how we grow as a district"."It makes a strong case for including rail as part of a long-term, joined-up plan and also shows that it is economically viable," he said."From unlocking new housing to boosting access to jobs, essential services, education, and reducing congestion and carbon emissions, the benefits would be wide-reaching and underline why sustainable transport must be at the heart of our plans for the future." The study found the proposed new railway line could help reduce congestion on the A40 - which is the main route for drivers travelling to and from the said the new line could also support population growth and help west Oxfordshire progress towards its net zero carbon added that the benefits were estimated to be "more than double the cost of the scheme".Witney's Liberal Democrat MP, Charlie Maynard, previously told a Westminster debate that the proposed line could cut journey times by up to 70%.Trains ran between Oxford and Witney until 1962, when the line was shut as part of a swathe of closures across the then, various suggestions to ease traffic on the A40 and make travel between the two easier- including plans for a guided transit expressway proposed more than two decades ago - have fallen by the wayside. You can follow BBC Oxfordshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Thanet District Council renews bid to issue fines for swearing
A council in Kent is renewing its efforts to introduce fines for people who are caught swearing in District Council last summer applied for permission to enforce a public space protection order (PSPO), which aims to target anti-social behaviour, including foul those plans were rejected amid a threat of a legal authority has reapplied for a PSPO to be introduced in areas including Margate, Broadstairs and Ramsgate, highlighting issues with swearing, drug use and alcohol. A PSPO makes it an offence to refuse to stop drinking alcohol in public, leave the area or use foul and abusive language if requested by a police or council officer.A fine of £100 can be a statement in support of the order, Ch Insp Ian Swallow said the implementation was a "necessary measure" to reduce crime, disorder and anti-social behaviour in Thanet. 'Reasonable excuse' In a council document presented at a meeting, the authority said there was "ongoing issues with anti-social behaviour" in the said there was overwhelming support for a PSPO among those consulted on the matter, following changes to its previous some of those consulted raised concerns that the PSPO could be used against peaceful protestors, while others were worried that young people may be fined wrongly for gathering in a person said in the council papers: "Whilst I disagree with foul language, I think that it is part of life today in the UK. I don't really see that it could cause harassment, alarm or distress to the majority of people."In response to these concerns, the council highlighted that there was a defence of "reasonable excuse", and that the Human Rights Act remained District Council has been approached for a full statement.


Reuters
4 hours ago
- Reuters
Merz visits UK as Europe closes ranks in face of threats
BERLIN/LONDON, July 17 (Reuters) - Friedrich Merz embarks on his first trip to London as German chancellor on Thursday to meet with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and sign a wide-ranging friendship treaty, as part of a broader push to reset the EU's relationship with Britain. Merz's day trip comes a week after a three-day state visit by French President Emmanuel Macron, signaling greater cooperation between Europe's three top powers at a time of growing threats to the continent and uncertainty about their U.S. ally. Europe is facing trade tensions with the United States since the return of President Donald Trump to the White House as well as existential questions about Washington's commitment to helping defend its European allies, including Ukraine in the face of Russia's invasion. "The agreement comes at a time when, as Europeans, we are particularly challenged in terms of security policy," a German government official said in a briefing ahead of the trip. "Not stated in the preamble is that transatlantic matters are also — let's put it this way — in flux. This too is part of the context." Germany has such friendship treaties with just a handful of countries like France, symbolizing the closeness of their ties. Coming nearly a decade after Britain voted to leave the European Union, the treaty includes a clause on mutual assistance which, "in light of the Russian war of aggression against Ukraine, is highly significant", the official said. It builds on a defence deal agreed last year that included the joint development of long-range strike weapons, and comes after France and Britain agreed last week to reinforce cooperation over their respective nuclear arsenals. German defence tech company Stark on Wednesday announced a new factory in Britain, the first production facility outside of Germany, to create AI-powered unmanned systems. The treaty will include an agreement to jointly combat smuggling and human trafficking, the German official said. The British government said Germany would make a landmark commitment to outlaw the facilitation of illegal migration to Britain with a law change to be adopted by the end of the year. That would give law enforcement the tools to investigate warehouses and storage facilities used by migrant smugglers to conceal dangerous small boats intended for illegal crossings to Britain, it said in a statement.