Iran judiciary says 21 official bodies responsible for April port blast
The aftermath of the explosion at Shahid Rajaee port, Hormozgan province (April 2025)
Twenty-one official bodies were found responsible for the April explosion at Shahid Rajaee port, southern Iran, that killed 58 people and injured more than 1,500, Iran’s judiciary said on Monday.
The judiciary said experts concluded that poor storage of hazardous materials, weak oversight, and lack of coordination among authorities contributed to the disaster. Official bodies including the Ports and Maritime Organization, Customs, the Central Bank and several ministries, were among those cited.
The blast, triggered by containers in the wharf area and followed by a massive fire, devastated part of Bandar Abbas’s main port infrastructure.
The Mostazafan Foundation, a multi-billion-dollar conglomerate controlled by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and sanctioned by the United States, was also named.
Judiciary chief Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei called the explosion “very bitter and sad” and said inquiries into both organizations and individuals were continuing.
“According to expert assessments, some organizations and individuals were found at fault. Once the matter is finalized, those responsible will be held accountable,” he said on Monday.
He said several people had been arrested, but gave no numbers.
Ejei said damages for all 58 victims had been secured and most families had already received payments. Assistance has also been provided to survivors and to businesses that lost property.
The blast began with a fire in a container yard at the Sina company site in Bandar Abbas and spread quickly, destroying part of Iran’s main southern port. The area was operated by Sina Marine and Port Services, a subsidiary of the Mostazafan Foundation. Satellite images showed the yard, which could hold up to 20,000 containers, was completely destroyed.
The judiciary said port operations have restarted, with new measures promised to prevent similar tragedies.
Ejei said the judiciary would press for tougher safety enforcement and faster investigations. “Matters must be pursued with determination and should not be allowed to drag on,” he said.
A proposal to return control of Iran’s nuclear negotiations to the Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) has highlighted the growing influence of its new chief, Ali Larijani—and a potential readjustment of Tehran’s negotiation strategy as UN sanctions loom.
Supporters of the move argue that only the SNSC can bring coherence to policymaking, uniting rival political factions in a way the Foreign Ministry cannot.
That case was made most clearly in a rare joint commentary by moderate journalist Mohammad Ghoochani and conservative commentator Mohammad Mohajeri, published September 7 in the centrist daily Ham Mihan.
“(The council) is the only body capable of coordinating between the military, diplomats, revolutionaries, reformist and conservative politicians, the President and the Supreme Leader, or indeed between the government and the people,” they wrote.
Notably, they criticized the continued involvement of former SNSC secretary Ali Shamkhani in the nuclear talks and dismissed the idea of handing the file to Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, arguing that Iran could no longer afford the stagnation of recent years.
A day after the joint editorial, Iran’s former ambassador to Germany, Alireza Sheikh Attar, told the conservative daily Farhikhtegan that Larijani had been appointed on September 5 to oversee Iran’s entire nuclear dossier.
If confirmed, Larijani would once more take center stage in tough negotiations in the weeks ahead.
Regroup or rethink?
Although final authority rests with Khamenei, the emphasis on the Council’s coordinating role by Ghoochani and Mohajeri may point to Larijani’s potential to nudge the Leader toward a definitive decision on engagement with Washington.
Khamenei appeared to be abandoning his “neither war nor talks” line in his meeting with President Masoud Pezeshkian and his cabinet. The state of “no war, no peace,” he said, was “the enemies’ plan” and harmed the country.
Hints of movement are already emerging.
Conservative diplomat Alireza Sheikh Attar suggested on Monday that decisions have been made about resuming talks with the United States, possibly coupled with a request to delay activation of the snapback mechanism until negotiations yield results.
Whether these shifts mark a genuine rethink or simply a bureaucratic reshuffle remains uncertain.
Council on the rise?
The proposal by the two prominent editors also reflects frustration at the Council’s long decline.
Created in 1990 amid post-war turmoil, the SNSC was designed as a mechanism for cohesion, tasked with protecting national interests and reconciling state institutions with public needs.
Its first secretary, Hassan Rouhani, held the post for 16 years and was credited with pragmatism, particularly in preventing new wars.
The nuclear dossier was assigned to the Council in the early 2000s, but under president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad control shifted to the foreign ministry—and effectively to Ahmadinejad himself, whose chaotic management eventually forced Khamenei to open backchannels of his own.
Larijani’s return has been welcomed by moderates as a potential revival of rational governance, though his occasional firebrand remarks—such as threats against IAEA chief Rafael Grossi—have raised doubts.
Larijani may bring new energy to the Council. The question is whether he can direct diplomacy in ways others could not or his ascent merely repackages decisions that still flow from the top.
An Iranian court has ordered six Baha'i women in the western city of Hamedan to serve a combined 39 years in prison on charges linked to their religious activity, a US-based rights group reported on Monday.
The women — Neda Mohebbi, Atefeh Zahedi, Farideh Ayubi, Noura Ayubi, Zarrindokht Ahadzadeh and Zhaleh Rezaei — were told to appear within ten days at the Hamedan Revolutionary Court to begin serving their terms, the Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) said.
They were convicted in June 2024 of membership in the Baha’i community and of spreading propaganda against Islam, and their sentences were later upheld on appeal.
The six were first detained in November 2023 by security forces and later released on bail in December. Their homes were searched during the arrests, HRANA said.
Baha'is constitute the largest religious minority in Iran and have faced systematic harassment and persecution since the Islamic Revolution of 1979.
The Islamic Republic does not recognize the Baha’i faith as an official religion, unlike Christianity, Judaism or Zoroastrianism.
The Iranian Baha’i community has faced nearly 1,500 years in prison sentences over the past five years, according to a report by HRANA last month.
At least 284 Baha’is were arrested and 270 were summoned to security or judicial institutions in Iran between August 2020 and 2025.
Nearly three-quarters of documented violations of religious minority rights in Iran have involved Baha'is over the past three years, according to the report.
US President Donald Trump on Monday torched a Democratic Senator who last week said the notion that rights were derived from the creator and not laws was troubling and in line with theocratic thinking in Iran.
The comments he referred to related to a Senate Foreign Relations hearing on Wednesday on the confirmation of Riley Barnes, Trump's pick for assistant secretary of state for democracy, human rights and labor.
In opening remarks, Barnes quoted Secretary of State Marco Rubio as saying, "We are a nation founded on a powerful principle ... that all men are created equal, because our rights come from God our creator — not from our laws, not from our governments."
Virginia Senator Tim Kaine, who was the Democratic pick for Vice President in the 2016 Presidential campaign in which Trump was triumphant, called the assertion "extremely troubling" while adding that he believes in the idea of natural rights.
"The notion that rights don't come from laws and don't come from the government but come from the creator, that's what the Iranian government believes. it's a theocratic regime that bases its rule on Shia law and targets Sunnis, Baha'is, Jews, Christians and other religious minorities," Kaine said.
"They do it because they believe that they understand what natural rights are from their creator."
The July 4, 1776, document considered foundational to American democratic principles declares, "we hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights.
"To secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed," it adds.
Trump, who counts evangelical Christians as a key constituency, lambasted the comments in a speech at Washington DC's Bible Museum to laughter and applause from supporters.
"Isn't it terrible how he would say something like that, that this is advocated really by a totalitarian regime? This is what they say.
"But as everyone in this room understands, it's the tyrants who are denying our rights and the rights that come from God," he added, saying Kaine ought to be "ashamed of himself."
Departures from Iran are on the rise since a 12-day war with Israel in June as heightened surveillance and moribund prospects at home push some households to liquidate assets and leave.
“Before the war, most trips we handled were touristic," an immigration police officer at Tehran’s Khomeini airport told Iran International on condition of anonymity.
Since the 12-day war in June, "departures have multiplied, and many who left have not returned after a month or two — a clear sign they have decided not to come back."
The officer said it is no longer just the young. Middle-aged and even elderly people are also leaving to shield themselves from the war’s direct and indirect threats.
Pejman, 46, a freelance remote designer, said he had recently rebuilt a life in Tehran after two years in Tbilisi, Georgia, earning $3,000 a month, renting a large apartment and buying nice furniture and a car before the Israeli war.
“This war forced me to leave Tehran and ask my in-laws to sell everything and send me the proceeds,” he said. “I cannot return because the authorities may arrest me for working with companies abroad.”
He cited a widening dragnet involving arrests and executions for his fears.
Iran has arrested over 20,000 people after the war with Israel, mostly on charges of cooperating with hostile countries or spying for Israel, according to judiciary officials.
“They don't care if you are a lawful freelancer with no political ties. One of my friends was arrested and accused of espionage. They told him, ‘You are not allowed to work with US-based companies.’”
Pejman’s wife recounted a hurried liquidation of life as they knew it and flight.
“We sold our car, we sold our household goods, we sold everything. There was no way out,” she said. “With every ring of the doorbell we trembled, thinking agents had come to arrest my husband.”
The family now waits in Turkey, seeking passage to Germany.
Work strangled by outages and a broken internet
Behrouz, 51, an online interpreter in Tehran, said daily electricity blackouts and patchy internet have gutted his income for UK- and US-based language firms.
“Six months ago I could interpret five to six hours a day for migrants and patients in hospitals, courts and social services abroad,” he said. “Daily power cuts reduced that to three or four hours. Since the war, internet restrictions have piled on the outages, and I barely manage one or two hours in long sittings.”
He and his family are preparing to sell their apartment to fund an exit. “I have to go somewhere safe with stable internet,” he said. “Most of the companies I work for are US-based, and I could be accused of cooperating with what they call hostile states.”
His wife outlined a reluctant plan. “We will go to a visa-free country like Turkey, Armenia, or even Qatar, and then file a case to move somewhere safe,” she said. “This is not the migration we wanted. This government forced us.”
She contrasted local wages with the risk of remote work. “They pay $200 to $300 a month here, and when my husband finally secured a remote job that pays ten times more, the clerics would not let us live,” she said.
“They restrict the internet because they fear being overthrown. They fear everyone and everything, and they sacrifice people to stay in power.”
From airport counters to flats cleared out under duress, interviewees described a decisive break rather than seasonal travel. For Pejman’s family, the fear is arrest; for Behrouz’s, a livelihood stifled by outages and a failing network.
The shock of the 12-day war has rippled far beyond the front, turning departures into open-ended exits — homes sold, schools missed, savings converted into tickets — and leaving behind a grim future that many no longer dare to reclaim.
A farmer hanged himself on Monday outside the local agriculture department headquarters in Kahnuj in southeastern Iran in protest over mounting economic pressures, local rights group Haalvsh reported.
The farmer was identified as Reza Qalandari, a resident of Langabad village in Kahnuj, Kerman province.
"He had come under severe pressure due to his inability to pay the fine for renewing his agricultural motor permit and the denial of his fuel quota by the agriculture department," Haalvsh reported, citing an unnamed source.
The report added that his death shocked locals, with many describing it as a symbol of the authorities’ failure to address the struggles of farmers from the ethnic Baluch minority from which he hailed.
Sanctions, corruption and economic mismanagement have contributed to widespread economic hardship and market instability as Iran's currency the rial has lost over 90% of its value since US sanctions were reimposed in 2018.
A poll by Iran's leading economic newspaper Donya-ye Eqtesad last month showed that a vast majority of Iranians are dissatisfied with the government's economic policies, as costs of living soar and the value of the Iranian currency slips.
Specialist doctor dies by suicide
On the same day in Saravan, Sistan and Baluchestan province, Dr. Akram Shiri, an internal medicine specialist at Iranmehr Hospital, was found dead in her dormitory after taking medication, Haalvsh reported, marking the second suicide reported in southeastern Iran on Monday.
"The doctor’s body was found around 12:00 noon in the hospital dormitory. Reports indicate she went into cardiac arrest after taking medication and lost her life," Haalvsh reported, citing an unnamed source.
Her death is the latest in a series of suicides among Saravan medical staff over difficult working conditions, the report added.
In 2023, two emergency physicians, Dr. Fatemeh Rezaeipour and Dr. Mehran Khosravanian, also died by suicide within a month, and in April this year a Baloch nurse at Iranmehr Hospital took his own life.
Haalvsh's report said that their colleagues blame heavy workloads and punishing conditions for the repeated tragedies.
Experts have attributed the increased suicides in Iran to the systemic reluctance and neglect of Iranian authorities to address workers' conditions.
Last year, The Iranian Psychiatric Scientific Association highlighted an increase in suicides among medical professionals, saying that 16 medical residents took their own lives the previous year.