Holocaust survivor dies from Iran attacks, raising Israel death toll to 32
Iranian ballistic missile impact site in Rehovot, Israel, June 15, 2025.
A 91-year-old Holocaust survivor who was seriously injured during Iran’s missile attacks on Israel in June died at her home in the central Israeli city of Rehovot on Saturday, raising death toll from Tehran's attacks to 32, Hebrew media reported.
Olga Weissberg collapsed in her home late Saturday and was pronounced dead at the scene by Magen David Adom medics.
She had been wounded on June 15 in an Iranian missile strike during the 12-day war, but was later discharged from hospital. Israeli media reports said her health had deteriorated in recent days.
Weissberg is the second Holocaust survivor whose death has been linked to the June attacks. Ivette Shmilovitz, 95, was killed in a missile strike on Petah Tikva, a city east of Tel Aviv, on June 17.
Iran and Israel fought a 12-day conflict in June that included US strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities at Isfahan, Natanz and Fordow, and Israeli strikes that destroyed critical infrastructure, killing several senior military and scientific figures as well as hundreds of civilians.
Iran responded with missile strikes that killed 31 civilians and one off-duty soldier, according to official figures published by the Israeli government.
The Islamic Republic says 1,062 people were also killed by Israel during the 12-day conflict, including 786 military personnel and 276 civilians.
The closure of several foreign embassies in Tehran during and after the 12-day war with Israel has left between 3,000 and 4,000 Iranian passports stuck in diplomatic missions, stranding visa applicants, Iranian officials said on Sunday.
Omid Mohammad-Alikhan, a member of Iran’s Association of Travel Agencies, told state news agency IRNA that with some embassies halting tourist visa issuance, between 40,000 and 50,000 people remain in limbo.
The Swiss embassy has suspended tourist visas, France has limited operations, the South African mission is closed, Brazil’s embassy has yet to reopen, and Japan plans to resume work in the coming days, he said.
The disruption has hit hardest those needing to travel on fixed dates, such as students who must arrive for the start of the academic year and athletes travelling to competitions or training camps.
Hormatollah Rafiei, head of Iran’s Association of Air and Tourism Agencies, said more than 250 international flights were cancelled during the conflict, preventing over 30,000 people from travelling abroad and leaving airlines and accommodation providers owing passengers over 600 billion tomans (about $6.5 million).
Rafiei criticized a government directive instructing travel agencies to refund customers directly, saying airlines, hotels and booking platforms must first reimburse the agencies.
“Until these companies return the money, we cannot refund the passengers,” he said, adding that despite airlines’ claims of repaying 80% of the funds, agencies had not received the money.
Incoming tourism hit
Iran's tourism sector has also been hit by a sharp drop in foreign arrivals. Deputy Tourism Minister Anoushirvan Mohseni-Bandpey said 330,000 foreign tourists visited Iran in July, down 53% from a year earlier, blaming the war and what he called “Iranophobia” campaigns.
He said visa issuance for most European countries has stopped, but travel between Iran and Asian nations, Turkey, Russia and China continues. Recovering pre-war levels would require time and confidence-building, he added.
Routes to Europe and East Asia, including Austria, Germany, China and Thailand, remain suspended, while flights to regional hubs such as Turkey and the United Arab Emirates have also been sharply reduced.
Cyber operations between Israel and Iran have intensified since June’s brief war despite a ceasefire, the Financial Times reported, citing Israeli officials and cybersecurity experts.
“It heated up after the start of the war, and it’s still going on,” one Israeli official told the FT.
Since the June 24 ceasefire, Iranian-aligned groups have attempted to exploit a recently identified Microsoft server software vulnerability to attack Israeli companies, according to chief executive of Israeli cyber threat intelligence company ClearSky, Boaz Dolev.
While the missiles stopped following the ceasefire that ended the 12-day war which saw massive destruction both sides, Iran's cyber war has continued at full pace, as reported by Iran International last month.
“Although there is a ceasefire in the physical world, in the cyber arena, [the attacks] did not stop,” Dolev added.
Spear-phishing messages purporting to be from diplomats and the prime minister’s office have also surged, cyber security company Check Point told the FT.
During the June conflict, Israel-linked hackers carried out some of the most disruptive strikes of the campaign. Gonjeshke Darande, a group widely regarded as aligned with Israel, claimed responsibility for destroying $90mn from Iran’s Nobitex cryptocurrency exchange and crippling services at Bank Sepah and Bank Pasargad by disabling their main and backup data centers.
While Iran’s capabilities were not to be underestimated, none of the wartime attacks on Israel had dramatic impact, Moty Cristal, a crisis negotiator and lieutenant colonel in the Israeli military reserves, told the FT.
Dolev said Iranian-linked groups had retaliated with hack-and-leak operations against about 50 Israeli companies, alongside attempts to plant malware aimed at destroying computer systems.
While they appeared unable to penetrate the defenses of Israel’s military or largest firms, he said, the attackers targeted smaller, more vulnerable businesses in their supply chains.
These included logistics and fuel providers as well as human resources firms, with hackers later releasing the CVs of thousands of Israelis with defense and security backgrounds.
The political deputy of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard criticized the recent US-brokered Armenia-Azerbaijan agreement on the Zangezur corridor, warning the deal risks destabilizing the strategically vital South Caucasus region.
Yadollah Javani condemned Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev for “falling for the gambler Trump’s trap” by involving the US, Britain, and NATO in the region, ignoring the interests of key neighbors.
In a statement titled “Aliyev and Pashinyan on Zelensky’s Road to Misery,” Javani compared their actions to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s decision to invite NATO into Russia’s traditional security zone, which precipitated Russia’s invasion.
“The strategic error by Zelensky has so far imposed heavy and irreversible costs on Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity,” Javani wrote, “and now Aliyev and Pashinyan risk similar consequences by leasing the Zangezur corridor exclusively to the United States for 99 years, provoking Iran, Russia, China, and India.”
The corridor, designed to link Azerbaijan to its Nakhchivan exclave through southern Armenia, was renamed the “Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity” (TRIPP) following the deal signed at the White House on Friday.
Although it remains under Armenian jurisdiction, the land will be leased to a private American company responsible for construction and logistics.
Iran, which shares a border near the corridor, has expressed fierce opposition.
Ali Akbar Velayati, senior adviser to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, told state media that Tehran would block the corridor’s establishment even without Russia’s help.
He accused Washington of attempting to reshape the South Caucasus and said, “This passage will not become a gateway for Trump’s mercenaries; it will become their graveyard.”
Ali Bagheri Kani, the secretary of Iran's Strategic Council on Foreign Relations, told state broadcaster IRIB on Saturday “the Islamic Republic will not easily overlook the issue of Zangezur.”
Three suspected militants and a police officer were killed in an armed clash in the southeastern Iranian city of Saravan, police in Sistan and Baluchestan province said on Sunday, in the latest violence to hit the restive region.
One other police officer was wounded and taken to hospital, the provincial police information center said in a statement carried by state media.
It said security patrols in Saravan came under armed attack by the assailants, identified as members of the Sunni militant group Jaish al-Adl, who were attempting to enter a local police station.
Security forces killed three attackers and were pursuing others who fled, the statement said.
The police commander of the province said that four people were arrested, and two vehicles along with a quantity of weapons and ammunition were seized following the clash with police in Saravan.
Local rights outlet Haalvsh had earlier reported heavy gunfire in Saravan, saying several people were injured, including a passerby.
The clash comes less than two weeks after a deadly assault on a courthouse in the provincial capital, Zahedan, that killed nine people -- including three attackers -- and wounded 20.
Jaish al-Adl claimed responsibility for that attack, which involved gunmen storming the judiciary building, firing on court offices and civilians, and an explosion inside the compound.
Sistan and Baluchestan, which borders Pakistan and Afghanistan, has long been the scene of sporadic violence involving Sunni militant groups, drug smugglers, and security forces. Jaish al-Adl, designated as a terrorist organization by Iran and the United States, says it is fighting for greater rights for Iran’s Baluch minority but is accused by Tehran of links to cross-border militant networks.
Iran has stepped up executions in the province in recent months, with rights groups warning that the surge in hangings of Baluch prisoners risks fueling further unrest.
The Islamic Republic's threats to critics in Canada could grow in 2025, with Iran using organized crime networks to intimidate and harm them, Canada’s intelligence agency warned on Saturday.
“Iranian threat-related activities directed at Canada and its allies are likely to continue in 2025 and may increase depending on developments in the Middle East and the Iranian regime’s own threat perceptions,” the Canadian Security Intelligence Service said in a statement.
The CSIS told The Globe and Mail on Saturday it is actively investigating death threats in Canada linked to the Islamic Republic.
“Given the need to protect our sources, tradecraft and methods, however, we cannot confirm or deny specific investigative details,” said CSIS spokesperson Magali Hébert.
The agency’s warning follows an announcement by Iran International that two of its Canada-based journalists were targeted by the Islamic Republic in recent weeks.
"It's very, very intense and very threatening," Adam Baillie, spokesman for Iran International, told The Canadian Press.
"People get all sorts of messages of, 'We know where you live, remember we watch you, remember we know all about you, we know where your family lives.' It's that kind of thing," Baillie said.
UN appeal over threats to journalists
On Tuesday, Iran International filed an urgent appeal with United Nations experts urging them to take action against Iran over serious risks to the lives and safety of their journalists worldwide and relatives inside Iran.
Over the past six weeks, the Iranian authorities have intimidated and threatened 45 journalists and 315 of their family members with death unless they stop working for Iran International by specific deadlines, Iran International said in a statement.
Carlos Nagore Diaz, spokesperson for UN special rapporteur on freedom of expression Irene Khan, said “several UN Special Rapporteurs are considering taking urgent action on the renewed credible threats to life,” but confirmed that “any communications with the Iranian regime are currently confidential.”
In its reply to the UN, Iran’s permanent mission rejected “allegations made about the threats or kidnapping plans” and described Iran International as “an anti-Iranian network” whose operatives “will be dealt with according to the relevant laws.”
UN rapporteurs wrote in May 2024 that intimidation of the channel’s staff “may amount to violations of the sovereignty” of the countries in which they operate.
In March 2023, Iran International presenter Pouria Zeraati was stabbed in London. Two Romanian nationals were later charged.
In late June, IRGC forces in Tehran detained the family of another Iran International presenter to pressure them into ending their cooperation with the network.
CSIS’s warning also comes after an alleged Iranian plot to assassinate former Canadian justice minister Irwin Cotler, which the Royal Canadian Mounted Police says it foiled last year. Cotler remains under 24-hour police protection.
Last week, Canada joined Britain, the US, France, Germany, the Netherlands, and Denmark in condemning what they called “a growing number of threats from Iranian intelligence services on their soil,” including collaboration with organized crime networks to target dissidents.