Ayatollah Khamenei's iron grip on power in Iran comes to an end
Ayatollah Khamenei's iron grip on power in Iran comes to an end 4 hours ago Sam Woodhouse Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has been killed on the first day of massive US and Israeli air strikes on Iran, US President Donald Trump has announced.
Iran has had only two supreme leaders since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
Young Iranians have never experienced life without him in charge.
State television has covered Khamenei's every move.
His image is plastered on billboards in public spaces and his photograph is ubiquitous in shops.
Abroad, successive Iranian presidents have often hogged the limelight.
But, at home, it was Khamenei who pulled the strings.
Ali Khamenei was born in the city of Mashhad, in north-eastern Iran, in 1939.
But, in common with many religious leaders of the time, his work was as much political as spiritual.
For years, he lived underground or festered in jail.
He was arrested six times by the Shah's secret police, suffering torture and internal exile.
Every week, his political sermons were broadcast throughout the country.
It firmly established Khamenei as part of the new leadership of the country.
Dozens of diplomats and embassy staff were taken hostage.
The hostage-taking lasted for 444 days.
The episode also marked the beginning of decades of international isolation for Iran.
Shortly after the crisis, Khamenei was fortunate to survive an assassination attempt.
In June 1981, a dissident group hid a bomb inside a tape recorder.
It exploded as he delivered a lecture.
His lungs took months to recover, and he permanently lost the use of his right arm.
With Khomeini controlling who had the right to stand, the outcome was never in doubt.
Khamenei won with 97% of the vote.
In office, Khamenei became a wartime leader.
Months earlier, the country's neighbour, Iraq, had invaded.
At home, he crushed opposition.
In 1999, student protests were a moment of peril, but they were put down.
According to Amnesty International, the police then shot protesters dead with machine gun fire.
He did remove his predecessor's barriers to the education of women.
But Khamenei was no believer in gender equality.
Those who supported them were also targeted.
One human rights lawyer was given 38 years in prison and 148 lashes.
Abroad, Khamenei has been widely accused of leading a pariah state.
But, for the first time in years, he looked weak.
But Khamenei refused to abandon uranium enrichment.
Khamenei has kept a firm and often brutal hand on the levers of power in Iran.
Life in Iran is currently governed by the laws he laid down.
Few can say with certainty who will succeed him, and - therefore - what changes might come
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