Ali Reza Tavassoli
Ali Reza Tavassoli (Persian: علیرضا توسلی; 1962 – 28 February 2015) was an Afghan militant of the Fatemiyoun Brigade. An ethnic Hazara, he was born in Afghanistan and later moved to Iran, where he studied at Al-Mustafa International University. His first activities as a combatant were during the Iran–Iraq War, when he and many other Afghan Shia Muslims enlisted in a volunteer pro-Iranian militia to fight against Iraq. Following the Arab Spring in 2011, Tavassoli was appointed by Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) to command Afghan Shia militants in the Syrian Civil War. Four years later, while fighting alongside the IRGC, Hezbollah, and the Syrian government in the Southern Syria offensive, he was killed by Jabhat al-Nusra.[1][2] BiographyTavassoli was born in 1962 in Afghanistan.[3] He later moved to Iran, where he lived in Mashhad and studied in Qom, eventually graduating from Al-Mustafa International University.[4] CareerHe served as a Shia volunteer fighter on the Iranian side of the Iran–Iraq War.[5] During the Syrian Civil War, Tavassoli was appointed by Qasem Soleimani, the erstwhile Iranian commander of the Quds Force, as a commander of Shia volunteer fighters from Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Lebanon, Syria, and Yemen. On 2014, he organized Afghan Shia volunteers and formed the Fatemiyoun Brigade to protect Shia shrines in Syria, where he was known by the Arabic-language nickname Abu Hamed.[2][4] DeathOn 28 February 2015, Tavassoli was killed during the Southern Syria offensive[1] while fighting Jabhat al-Nusra in Daraa, south of Damascus.[1][2] He was buried in Mashhad, Iran.[4] References
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