
One of two high-profile Shiite religious leaders in Iran who issued fatwas following the death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, formerly received a religious tolerance’ £15,000 ‘religious tolerance’ grant from Brent Council.
On Sunday, following the assassination of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei by the US and Israel, Grand Ayatollah Hossein Nouri Hamedani and Grand Ayatollah Naser Makarem Shirazi have issued fatwas calling on Muslims worldwide to take revenge.
Hamedani responded in writing to a request from the presidium of the Assembly of Seminary Students and Scholars in Qom, saying that “avenging the blood of the martyred leader of the revolution is obligatory for all Muslims.”
“Without doubt, criminal America and the bloodthirsty Zionists have reached the end of their path, and this time the powerful armed forces will deliver a decisive and unforgettable response,” he warned.
Shirazi issued a fatwa calling Israel and the US the “most wicked enemies of humanity” and “the principal perpetrators of this crime.”
“The people of Iran and the Islamic world are the avengers of the blood of the martyred leader of the Revolution,” he said, adding that “seeking revenge is the religious duty of all Muslims worldwide so that the evil of these criminals may be removed from the world.”
Brent Council alerted to IRGC links
Shirazi, one of the most important religious figures in Iran, launched a representative office on Harrow Road in London called the Babul Murad Centre in 2008.
Via the Centre, Shirazi also had a charity in the UK named International Islamic Link, which received a £15,000 grant from Brent Council, a local government body in London, to promote “religious tolerance” in 2009.
After being alerted to IRGC links, Brent Council stated that it has “not commissioned this [charity] since and have no future plans to fund them.”
Before being investigated by the Charity Commission, Shirazi’s own website featured several pages about his belief that the Holocaust was a myth invented by Jews to gain support for the Zionist project.
The trustees of International Islamic Link claim that there is no current link to Shirazi; organizations such as the Middle East Forum dispute this. https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/iran-news/article-888528





