New supreme leader says Iran does not seek war in written message

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

Iran's new supreme leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei told Iranians that they must “not imagine that taking to the streets is no longer necessary” despite the announcement of the ceasefire.

Iran’s new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei told Iranians that they must “not imagine that taking to the streets is no longer necessary”, despite the announcement of the ceasefire.

PHOTO: AFP

Google Preferred Source badge

Follow our live coverage here.

Iran’s new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei said in his latest written message that the Islamic republic did not want war with the US and Israel, but would protect its rights as a nation, state television reported on April 9.

“We did not seek war and we do not want it,” he said in the message read out on state TV, weeks after his father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was killed on Feb 28, the first day of the war.

“But we will not renounce our legitimate rights under any circumstances, and in this respect, we consider the entire resistance front as a whole,” he added, in an apparent reference to Lebanon, where Israel is fighting Tehran’s ally Hezbollah.

Iran agreed this week to a fragile two-week ceasefire with the US that could lead to peace negotiations after threats of annihilation from US President Donald Trump.

Mr Khamenei told Iranians that they must “not imagine that taking to the streets is no longer necessary”, despite the announcement of the ceasefire.

“Your voices in public squares are undoubtedly influential in the outcome of the negotiations,” he said, according to the message broadcast on state TV.

Likely wounded in the strike that killed his father, Mr Mojtaba Khamenei has still not been seen in public since his leadership appointment.

He has issued written declarations, most of them read out by presenters on state television.

Mr Trump has even speculated that he could be dead, but Iran state television says he is recovering from his injuries and posts photos of him, without specifying when they were taken. AFP

See more on