
Iran's new supreme leader issues his 1st statement, but his absence raises questions about his health
CBC
Iran’s new supreme leader did not appear in person to give his first statement Thursday, fuelling speculation that he was injured more seriously than Iranian officials have acknowledged.
Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei vowed to keep the critical Strait of Hormuz closed and continue attacking U.S. bases in neighbouring countries, in a defiant statement attributed to him and read by a state TV presenter.
"I assure everyone that we will not neglect avenging the blood of your martyrs," the statement said.
The TV presenter did not explain why the statement was not delivered in person.
No images of Khamenei have been released since an Israeli strike at the start of the war killed several members of his family, including his wife and his father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who led Iran for more than 36 years.
Iranian officials have said the hardline cleric was “lightly” injured on his face and foot in the airstrike that killed his family members.
“The longer that he doesn't make a public appearance on camera, the more rumors are going to circulate about the breadth and depth of his injuries,” said Nader Hashemi, an associate professor of Middle East and Islamic Politics at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C.
Hashemi says Khamenei’s failure to appear does not reflect well on the government, and says if he isn’t seen soon it will raise serious questions about Iran’s leadership.
“If he's been severely injured, then who issued this statement today?” he said. “If he was unable to issue it, does that suggest that there are other forces that are really running this state, and it's not the supreme leader who is in charge?”
Khamenei has never held a formal position in the Islamic republic's government, despite being widely seen as the gatekeeper to his father, and some critics have said he lacks the clerical credentials to be supreme leader.
He has appeared at loyalist rallies but has rarely spoken in public.
Abbas Amanat, professor of history emeritus at Yale University, told CBC News there have been rumours that Khamenei was wounded and is in a coma in hospital in Tehran — or that he may even be dead.
Akaash Maharaj, senior fellow at the University of Toronto’s Munk School of Public Policy, says it’s also possible Khamenei is simply in hiding, given the dangers of offering even a small clue regarding his whereabouts to U.S. and Israeli forces.
“Every time a member of his regime lifts his head above the parapet, it has a bad habit of being blown off by the Americans or the Israelis," he said. "And even a highly controlled video would provide some clues to the person's location and his condition.”













