Iranians in Korea express mixed reactions to death of Khamenei

The Iran that Park Si-ma remembers was once described as the “Paris of the Middle East,” a place where women wore miniskirts instead of hijabs and some residents flew abroad for weekend shopping trips. That changed in 1979, when the Iranian Revolution toppled the Pahlavi dynasty and ushered in the Islamic Republic — the same year Park moved to Korea with the husband she had met in Iran. The revolution transformed Iranian society and governance, ending decades of secular, Western-oriented rule and replacing it with a theocratic system that reshaped everyday life and cultural norms. Since 2009, the Iranian Network in Korea (INK) has carried out activities from Korea opposing the Iranian government. On Saturday, too, Park and about 70 other Iranians held a rally in Seoul condemning Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. That same day, Khamenei was killed in coordinated U.S.-Israeli airstrikes on his central Tehran compound — a dramatic escalation in hostilities that marked one of the most significant military operations in the long-running conflict and triggered retaliator

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