The conflict that started on February 28 with a blitz of air strikes on Tehran and different cities has killed greater than 1,300 Iranians up to now, officers say.
As gravediggers ready new burial plots for these killed within the US-Israeli assault on Iran, Marzia Razaei wept for her son Arfan Shamei, who died in a blast at a navy coaching camp days earlier than he was due residence on go away.
The conflict that started on February 28 with a blitz of air strikes on Tehran and different cities has killed greater than 1,300 Iranians up to now, in line with Iranian officers, and plunged the Center East into disaster.
Tears streamed down Razaei’s face and she or he stared vacantly, hugging a big portrait of Shamei, 23, her voice breaking with grief as she recalled her final dialog with him after they mentioned his upcoming journey again residence to his household.
“I hadn’t seen him for 2 months,” she stated, including that his final day earlier than heading residence was meant to have been Monday, the day Reuters along with her.
He was to have been married quickly afterwards and the journey residence was a part of the preparations for the marriage.
Shamei was killed in a blast at his coaching camp in Kermanshah in western Iran on March 4 that turned his tent right into a ball of flame and left his physique so charred that Razaei was unable to see it.
“My son was fearful of the darkish,” she stated, sitting in entrance of his grave within the huge Behesht-e Zahra cemetery that sprawls throughout a big space simply south of Tehran, the rain drizzling steadily round her.
Families’ grief and anger
Shamei and others killed in the current conflict are buried in Section 42 of the cemetery, where a dozen gravediggers were busy on Monday preparing for burials while workers readied white marble stones engraved with the names of the deceased.
As another body was brought in for burial, the bier carried on the shoulders of family members, the sound of an air strike echoed across the cemetery, gray smoke rising up from a nearby district.
Graves lay under a canopy decorated with pictures of the dead and Iranian flags, as families gathered, crying and talking. Women sat by the graves, some quietly weeping, others so distraught they were beating their chests with their fists.
A truck stood nearby, loaded with colorful flowers, and petals had been strewn across the graves as loudspeakers played Shi’ite Muslim hymns of mourning.
Other graves in the section contained members of the Basij, a volunteer militia group affiliated with the Revolutionary Guards, and officials and detainees from Evin Prison, which was targeted in the current war and in strikes in June last year.
Fatima Darbechi, 58, had lost her 44-year-old brother early in the war as he tried to rescue people trapped in a bombed car when another blast sprayed him with shrapnel, leaving him mortally injured.
Their parents had died when he was a small child. “He grew up without a mother. I raised him,” she said, tears coursing down her cheeks.
For some of the mourners, the sorrow was matched by anger and defiance at Israel and the United States for their bombing campaign.
“When you burn our hearts, you don’t stop us, you don’t bring us to our knees,” said the mother of 25-year-old Ihsan Jangravi, pumping her fist in the air.
