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Iran: Raisi's helicopter caught fire after crash, no sign of attack


A woman weeps during a mourning ceremony for Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi in downtown Tehran on May 20, 2024. Iranian state media reported on May 24 that investigators found no evidence that Raisi's helicopter was attacked before it crashed in a remote area of Iran.
A woman weeps during a mourning ceremony for Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi in downtown Tehran on May 20, 2024. Iranian state media reported on May 24 that investigators found no evidence that Raisi's helicopter was attacked before it crashed in a remote area of Iran.

The helicopter carrying Iran's late President Ebrahim Raisi caught fire soon after it crashed into a mountain and there was no sign it was attacked, state media reported, citing the military's crash investigators.

The statement from the general staff of the armed forces in charge of investigating the crash was read on state television late Thursday. The first statement on the crash did not lay blame but said more details would come after further investigation.

The crash Sunday killed Raisi, the country’s foreign minister and six other people.

The general staff’s statement said the communications between the control tower and the crew of the helicopter before the crash contained nothing suspicious. It said the last communication of the crashed helicopter was between it and two helicopters accompanying it some 90 seconds before the crash.

There was no sign of anything being shot at the helicopter, and its flight path did not change, the statement said.

The aging Bell helicopter went down Sunday in a foggy, remote mountainous region of Iran’s northwest. The crash site was discovered Monday morning with all eight on board dead.

Raisi was buried in a tomb at the Imam Reza Shrine in Mashhad on Thursday.

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