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After the fall of Saddam Hussein, Rouhani attempted to relocate to Iraq but was barred from leaving the country. His brother Muhammad was arrested in 1994 for insisting that the role of the clergy should be a social, not a political one and criticizing the regime for discrediting Islam. [12] Muhammad died in 1997.
The United States has held a total of 115 Yemeni citizens at Guantanamo Bay, forty-two of whom have since been transferred out of the facility. [1] Only Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia had a greater number of their citizens held in the Guantanamo Bay detention camp. [1] By January 2008, the Yemenis in Guantanamo represented the largest group of ...
Mohammad Ebrahim Jannaati (born 1933) Mohammad Kazem Shariatmadari (1904–1986) Mohammad Khamenei (born 1935) Mostafa Hosseini Tabatabaei (born 1936) Muhammad Husayn Tabatabai (1903–1981) Mohammad Sadeq Rouhani (1926–2022) Mohammad Sadeqi Tehrani (1926–2011) Mohammad Sadoughi (1909–1982) Mohammad Taghi Mesbah Yazdi (1935–2021)
His grandfather Ayatollah Sadeq Qomiye was a student of the great Murtadha al-Ansari. His mother is the daughter of Seyed Fakhreddin Qomiye and granddaughter of Mirza-ye Qomi. [3] [4] He is also the cousin of Mohammad Sadeq Rouhani and Seyed Mohammad Hosseini Rohani, both of whom are Marja', otherwise known as Grand Ayatollah. [5]
Heads of states and governments stayed at the Sa'dabad Palace, which is the official residence of the Iranian president. Other guests based in Parsian Esteghlal Hotel. Hassan Rouhani went to Imam Khomeini Hosseinieh, the official residence of Supreme Leader of Iran to receive his presidential precept from Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
On November 7, 1990, Mohammad Salimi was appointed the head of the Second Branch of the Special Court for the Clerics. [6] Khamenei "significantly expanded the SCC. While the courts had hitherto functioned on the basis of no specific code, Khamenei commissioned an extraordinary ordinance of 47 articles, which was expanded in 2005. [ 7 ]
The 1991 Iraqi uprisings were ethnic and religious uprisings against Saddam Hussein's Ba'athist regime in Iraq that were led by Shia Arabs and Kurds.The uprisings lasted from March to April 1991 after a ceasefire following the end of the Gulf War.
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