After Naser's assassination in 1896, Ali Asghar helped by securing the throne and its secure transfer to his son,
Mozaffar ad-Din Shah Qajar. In November 1896, Ali Asghar was dismissed from his prime minister office by Mozaffar ad-Din Shah. Ali Asghar then initially retired to
Qom, later traveled through
Russia to
China and
Japan, and then emigrated to
Switzerland. During the
Iranian Constitutional Revolution, the new
Qajar shah
Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar invited Ali Asghar back to Iran. Although Ali Asghar had many who opposed him, he also had supporters in major Iranian cities such as
Qazvin,
Rasht, and his native Tehran. He was shortly appointed by Mohammad Ali Shah as the Prime Minister of Iran. At the time of Ali Asghar's re-appointment as prime minister, Iran was in chaos: the state owed money to the people who served them;
British-
Russian rivalry over Iran;
Ottoman incursions on the west Iranian borders; and devastating rebellions. Ali Asghar managed to quickly stop the Ottomans, and also tried to make stability fix the financial problems in Iran. Ali Asghar was assassinated by radical left-wing members of the opposition in the front of the
Iranian Parliament on 31 August 1907, though it has been suggested that
Mohammad Ali Shah was involved in the assassination. ==See also==