Sixteen rebels have been hanged in
Iran in retaliation for the deaths of at least 14 border guards in an ambush,
say Iranian news agencies.
The rebels were "linked to groups hostile to the
regime", the attorney general of Sistan-Baluchistan province was quoted as
saying.
They were hanged in prison in Zahedan, north-east of Saravan,
where the border deaths took place overnight.
It is not clear what link, if any, those hanged had to the
border attack.
One report suggests they may already have been tried and
convicted, but their executions brought forward following the ambush.
Friday night's attack in a mountainous region outside Saravan,
on the south-eastern border with Pakistan, was blamed by Saravan's member of
parliament, Hedayatollah Mirmoradzehi, on "anti-revolution
guerrillas".
But reports that a rebel group called Jeish Al-Adl had claimed
responsibility for the ambush were "not confirmed", Mr Mirmoradzehi
told local Tasnim news agency.
A parliamentary committee on national security will look into
the attack on Sunday, meeting relevant officials, a committee member was quoted
as saying.
An armed Sunni group, called Jundallah, has carried out a number
of attacks against the state in recent years.
The Sunni Muslim population in Sistan-Baluchistan complains of
discrimination by Iran's Shia establishment.
"Sixteen rebels linked to groups hostile to the regime were
hanged this morning in the prison of Zahedan in response to the death of border
guards in Saravan," Mohammad Marzieh, the provincial attorney general of
Sistan-Baluchistan province, was quoted as saying by Fars news agency.
The hangings were also reported by the Iranian Students News
Agency (Isna).
At least 14 guards were killed in the ambush, reports now say,
though 17 were previously reported to have died. A number were also wounded,
reports said.
Fars has quoted the province's deputy governor-general, Rajabali
Sheikhzadeh, as saying the culprits fled to Pakistan following the border
attack.
The region has experienced frequent deadly clashes in recent
years.
Iran lies on a major drug trafficking route between Afghanistan
and Europe.
AFP news agency quotes officials as saying more than 4,000
police officers and soldiers have been killed in the past three decades in
fighting with traffickers.
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