In their first reactions to the events of late Friday, Iranian newspapers reflected the country's divisions between reformists and hardliners fiercely critical of the West.
Moderate President Hassan Rouhani yesterday condemned the coordinated assaults claimed by the Islamic State group as "crimes against humanity".
Condemning the "horror at the heart of Paris," reformist daily Shargh reported on a small vigil of Iranians who gathered outside the French embassy in Tehran late yesterday.
Another reformist daily, Etemad, also condemned the attacks, saying: "The world is mourning with Paris".
Also Read
But Etemad noted there had not been the same outpouring of global shock over Thursday's bombings in Beirut, also claimed by IS, that left 44 dead.
It condemned the "silence over the Beirut attack", which targeted a bastion of Shiite movement Hezbollah, a key ally of Iran.
Centrist pro-government newspaper Iran said the attacks "shocked and disgusted not only the people of France but the whole world," saying they were "a sign of weakness" as IS faces increasing defeats on the battlefield.
On its front page, hardline paper Javan featured an illustration of a masked jihadist with a gun and a machete standing at the top of the Eiffel Tower, waving a mixed flag of the United States and IS.
"Return to home," its headline said, quoting reports that some 200 French jihadists had returned to the country after fighting with IS abroad.
In Kayhan - Iran's oldest and most-vocal hardline paper - editor Hossein Shariatmadari repeated a conspiracy theory often cited in Iranian media that IS is a creation of the West and Israel under an operation dubbed "Hornet's Nest".