A 12-hour drive through Iran offers glimpses of destruction, defiance and daily life
ravelers approach on foot the border crossing with Turkey at the Razi crossing in Razi, Iran, Saturday, April 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco) 2026-04-06T11:53:30Z ZANJAN, Iran (AP) — A black banner hangs over the border crossing and portraits of Iran’s slain Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei stare down, promising vengeance against the United States and Israel.
But on the 12-hour drive south to the capital, Tehran, daily life continued, with only occasional signs of the ongoing war, including a Shiite religious center that officials say was damaged by a recent airstrike.
Associated Press reporters made the journey on Saturday after crossing into Iran from Turkey.
They gained a glimpse of the country at the center of a regional war that has jolted the world economy and shows no sign of ending five weeks after Khamenei was killed in the opening U.S. and Israeli salvo.
The Associated Press has been granted permission by the Iranian government to send an additional team into the country for a brief reporting trip.
AP already operates in Iran.
The visiting team must be accompanied by a media assistant from a government-affiliated company.
AP retains full editorial control of its content.
A religious center damaged by an airstrike The first major sign of the war’s destruction came in the northwestern city of Zanjan, about six hours’ drive from the border.
Iranian officials say an airstrike hit a religious community center, known as a husseiniyah, killing two people and destroying a clinic and a library.
Other parts of the compound, some of which is centuries old, suffered damage, including its golden dome.
When asked about the strike, the Israeli military said it had hit “a military headquarters,” and that it tries to avoid harming civilian facilities, without elaborating. “It has hurt me a lot and distressed me a lot,” said Somayeh Shojaei, a local resident who has attended religious and cultural events at the center. “With these airstrikes, (the U.S. and Israel) are showing their malicious intent to the whole world,” she said.
Read More The strike killed the library’s caretaker and a volunteer with the Iranian Red Crescent first responders, according to Jaafar Mohammadi, the provincial director of cultural and Islamic guidance.
He said poor people had received free treatment at the clinic and students had made use of the library that housed more than 35,000 books, including antique manuscripts.
He said he did not know why the complex was ta
原文链接: AP News
