Mourners gather around the coffin of Iran's late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei during a farewell ceremony in Tehran ahead of multi-day funeral rites. Photo: Reuters
Tehran: The coffin of Iran’s late Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, arrived at the Imam Khomeini Hussainiyah in Tehran on Friday, July 3, as Iran began six days of funeral ceremonies expected to draw millions of mourners and delegations from more than 30 countries.
Khamenei was assassinated in a joint US-Israeli attack on February 28, an event that triggered weeks of conflict across the Middle East. Ahead of the official programme, Iran’s state broadcaster, Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB), aired footage showing his flower-covered coffin being brought to the site of the attack during a private ceremony.
The footage showed mourners accompanying the coffin through a densely packed crowd, with white dove-shaped decorations, red tulips and green ceremonial displays surrounding the procession. Images released later by Iranian state media showed the coffin placed on a stage beneath butterfly-themed decorations, while Press TV published a photograph showing a flag from the Imam Reza shrine draped above it.
Preparations continued at Tehran’s Grand Mosalla, where black mourning flags, red banners, large portraits of Khamenei and floral arrangements decorated the sprawling religious complex.
According to AFP, security was reinforced around the venue before the ceremonies, with vehicles searched at checkpoints and entry limited to visitors carrying special permits.
The official funeral programme will continue in Tehran on July 4 and 5 before the main funeral procession on July 6. The ceremonies will then move to Qom on July 7, followed by memorial events in Baghdad, Najaf and Karbala on July 8. The final funeral and burial are scheduled for July 9 at the Imam Reza shrine in Mashhad.
Iranian media said leaders and officials from more than 30 countries, including Russia, China, Pakistan, India, Tajikistan, Georgia and Cuba, are expected to attend the memorial ceremony.
Officials estimate that between 15 and 20 million people could attend the ceremonies, potentially making them the largest state funeral in Iran’s history.
Meanwhile, Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf urged Iranians to attend in large numbers, saying the gathering should send a message demanding “vengeance for his blood”. He called on citizens to “write a glorious page in the history of Islamic Iran through your presence”, adding that “the nation’s call for vengeance must ring in the ears of the whole world”.
Separately, mediators said Iran and the United States concluded another round of indirect talks in Doha on Thursday as diplomatic efforts continued to lower tensions. A memorandum of understanding signed in June, brokered by Pakistan and Qatar, established a 60-day ceasefire, reopened the Strait of Hormuz and created a framework for negotiations on reconstruction and Iran’s nuclear programme.
This post was last modified on July 3, 2026 10:37 am