Foreign
Court orders US government to pay $50bn for assassination of Iranian General Qasem Soleimani
A Tehran court has ordered the United States government to pay nearly $50 billion in damages for assassinating a top Iranian general, Qasem Soleimani, nearly four years ago.
This was according to a ruling by the court’s judicial officials on Wednesday, December 6, 2023.
Soleimani, the commander of the Quds Force, was killed in a US drone strike shortly after touching down in Baghdad on January 3, 2020.
He was assassinated on the order of the then-US president Donald Trump.
Days later, Iran retaliated by firing missiles at bases in Iraq housing American and other coalition troops. No US personnel were killed but Washington said dozens suffered traumatic brain injuries.
According to the Iranian judiciary’s Mizan Online news agency, the Tehran court had sentenced the US government to pay $49.7 billion in “material, moral and punitive damages” after a lawsuit filed by more than 3,300 Iranians.
The court found 42 individuals and legal persons guilty, including Trump, the US government, former Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo and former Defence Secretary, Mark Esper, Mizan added.
Soleimani was one of the country’s most popular public figures who spearheaded Iran’s Middle East operations and was seen as a hero of the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war.
Iranian courts have now handed down several rulings against the United States.
Last month an Iranian court ordered the US government to pay $420 million in compensation to victims of an abortive 1980 operation to free hostages held at the US embassy.
In August, a Tehran court demanded Washington pay $330 million in damages for “planning a coup” in 1980 against the fledgling Islamic republic.
Those suits follow a series of multi-billion-dollar compensation rulings against Tehran by US courts.
In 2016, the US Supreme Court ordered that Iranian assets frozen in the United States should be paid to victims of attacks Washington has blamed on Tehran, including the 1983 bombing of a US Marine barracks in Beirut and a 1996 blast in Saudi Arabia.
Tehran denies all responsibility for the attacks.
It has appealed to international justice to help unlock the funds of several Iranian individuals and companies that have been frozen by Washington.
In March the International Court of Justice ruled that Washington’s freezing of funds was “manifestly unreasonable”.
But it ruled it had no jurisdiction to unblock nearly $2 billion in Iranian central bank assets frozen by the United States.
Iran and Washington have had no diplomatic relations since the aftermath of the 1979 revolution.
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