A preliminary report published by Iran's armed forces general staff on late Thursday states that the May 19 helicopter crash, which killed the Iranian president, his foreign minister and six other people, was most likely an accident.
Raisi was laid to rest on Thursday in his home city of Mashhad.
What we know about the crash
The helicopter carrying Ebrahim Raisi, Hossein Amirabdollahian and others caught fire on impact after going down in rough terrain while in transit to the northern Iranian city of Tabriz, according to Iranian forces.
Investigators stated they have not found entry holes of any kind in the helicopter's wreckage.
In-flight communication between the helicopter and control tower was unsuspicious while there were no deviations from the scheduled flight route.
DW debunks space laser theory
A viral post by a user on X (formerly Twitter) this week claimed that Raisi's helicopter was brought down by a space-based weapon firing off a laser beam. The now deleted X post, which had generated more than 29 million views, claimed to show an image of the helicopter catching fire in mid-air and going down.
DW's Fact Check team, meanwhile, has identified the claim and the image as false. While laser weapons are able to destroy flying targets from tens of kilometers away, it is impossible to shoot down a helicopter from as far as space, according to DW.
sb/wd (AFP, Reuters)