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Iran's supreme leader absent as senior officials attend ayatollah's funeral
Image source, Reuters Image caption, Leaders including Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian were in attendance for the former supreme leader's funeral, but Mojtaba Khamenei was absent By Olivia Ireland Published 1 hour ago Iran's Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei was conspicuously absent from his father's funeral, as senior regime figures joined thousands paying their respects to the late ayatollah on Sunday. Ali Khamenei's other three sons - Masoud, Mostafa and Meysam - all attended the service on Sunday, alongside officials including President Masoud Pezeshkian and Revolutionary Guards chief Ahmad Vahidi. Speculation about Mojtaba's condition - fuelled by rumours he was wounded in the same US-Israel air strikes that killed his father - has continued as he has not appeared in public since his appointment in early March. The elder Khamenei ruled the Islamic republic from 1989 until his death in February. Official funeral proceedings for late supreme leader began on Friday, with events planned across Iran and Iraq over the coming week. Iranian authorities say 12-20 million people are expected to attend the ceremonies, which they are calling the "funeral of the century". Khamenei's body is currently lying in state at Tehran's Grand Mosalla religious complex, with a funeral service led by prominent Shia cleric Jafar Sobhani, a 97-year-old scholar who teaches at seminaries in the holy city of Qom. Image source, Getty Images Image caption, More than 10 million people are expected attend the funeral ceremonies in Tehran alone Sunday was declared a public holiday across Iran, and later in the day Khamenei's body will be moved out of the Grand Mosalla ahead of a processions through the capital on Monday. Other than Mojtaba Khamenei's absence, the ceremony has been carefully choreographed The ceremonies have been carefully choreographed and Mojtaba Khamenei's absence from the proceedings comes on a backdrop of threats from Israel to assassinate him as well. A fragile ceasefire between the warring countries is currently holding while talks on a permanent peace deal continue - though both sides have warned they were ready to resume military action. News website Axios quoted US President Donald Trump on Saturday as saying that peace talks had been paused for a week for the events surrounding the funeral. With many of the Iranian regime's senior officials attending, Washington could take them all out with "one shot", it quoted Trump as saying, adding: "But we are not going to do that because then we would have nobody to negotiate with." The president also said he had been surprised to see Iranians crying, saying he thought people hated Khamenei. "Maybe it's fake tears," he said. In response to Trump's claim, mourner Zahra Safaei, 50, told Reuters: "We did not make a revolution 47 years ago to shed fake tears. We did not sacrifice all these martyrs to shed fake tears." Image source, EPA Image caption, Mourners were sprayed with water as temperatures in Tehran are