Iran has sentenced three men to death for being involved in the fatal bombing of a mosque that killed 14 Iranians in the southern city of Shiraz in April, the hardline Kayhannewspaper reported today.
Iran has accused the United States, Britain and Israel of being behind the blast that also injured 200 others.
Rouzbeh Yahyazadeh (32), Mohsen Eslamian (21), and Ali Asghar Pashtar (20), will be hanged in Shiraz after the Supreme Court upheld their sentences, said Ali Akbar Haidarifar, representative of Tehran's prosecutor.
Haidarifar, who previously accused the three of being sent on a mission by Israeli intelligence services to carry out assassinations and military sabotage in Iran, did not say when the verdict was issued.
"A Tehran Revolutionary court has found the three guilty as 'mohareb' (one who wages war against God) and 'corrupt on the earth'," Kayhannewspaper quoted Haidarifar as saying.
Under Iranian law, all execution orders must be upheld by Iran's Supreme Court.
"After their verdicts being upheld by the Supreme Court, the three will be hanged in Shiraz," he added.
A little-known Iranian Sunni Muslim dissident group made a claim it was behind the blast on a website in June. Iran is overwhelmingly Shi'ite.
The death sentences follow the early November execution of an Iranian businessman convicted of spying on the military for Israel, the Islamic Republic's arch foe.
A further four people have been charged over the Shiraz blast and will be tried in the near future, said Mr Haidarifar.
Tension between Iran and Israel have been running high in recent months amid speculation the Jewish state might attack Iranian nuclear facilities which it believes form part of a covert weapons programme.
Iran rejects the accusation and says it would retaliate for any military strikes launched by Israel, believed to be the only Middle Eastern country with nuclear arms, or the United States.
Reuters