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Iran’s former president Rouhani slams his disqualification from elections

Hassan Rouhani

Iran’s electoral vetting body known as the Guardian Council disqualified Rouhani on Wednesday.

Rouhani said the council banned him from running while he intended to only fulfill his religious and national duty at a time when people are grappling with many economic woes.

The former president also enumerated some other reasons for his decision to run for the parliamentary and Assembly of Experts elections including the critical situation in the region and foreign threats, concern over the future of Iran and the rampant hostility toward religion stemming from current “wrong policies.”

Rouhani noted that those who disqualified him and thousands of others from running in the vote for political reasons do not own the revolution and the country nor are they in any position to ban sincere servants of the nation.

By disqualifying him, he noted, the Guardian Council made people disillusioned with the elections.

The former president added that this is at odds with the demand of the leader of Iran’s Islamic Revolution for all efforts to pave the way for a huge turnout in the vote.

Rouhani went on to say that his disqualification leaves no doubt that what the “ruling minority” wants is a low popular turnout so that they will determine people’s future with their own decisions.

The Gaurdian Council has not yet commented on Rouhani’s statement.

The Assembly of Experts election is going to be held on 1 March 2024, simultaneous with the parliamentary vote.

Under the Iranian Constitution, the Assembly of Experts is tasked with selecting, and in some cases dismissing the leader and supervising his performance.

Netanyahu’s remarks ‘destructive’ to hostage deal efforts: Qatar

Benjamin Netanyahu

Qatari Foreign Ministry spokesman Majed Al-Ansari made the statement in response to the recording, which was broadcast by Israel’s Channel 12, in which Netanyahu said he did not publicly thank Doha because it had not done enough to press Hamas and advised the US to put more pressure on the Qatari government.

“We are appalled by the alleged remarks attributed to the Israeli prime minister in various media reports about Qatar’s mediation role,” stated Al-Ansari.

“These remarks, if validated, are irresponsible and destructive to the efforts to save innocent lives, but are not surprising,” he added.

Al-Ansari said that “for months, and following successful mediation last year that led to the release of more than a hundred hostages, Qatar has been engaged in regular dialogue with the negotiating parties, including Israeli institutions, attempting to establish the framework for a new hostage agreement and the immediate entry of humanitarian aid into Gaza”.

He further noted that “If the reported remarks are found to be true, the Israeli PM would only be obstructing and undermining the mediation process for reasons that appear to serve his political career instead of prioritizing saving innocent lives, including Israeli hostages”.

“Instead of concerning himself with Qatar’s strategic relations with the United States, we hope Netanyahu decides to operate in good faith and concentrate on the release of the hostages,” he added.

Al-Ansari had affirmed that mediation efforts between Palestinians and Israelis are still ongoing to stop the fighting and exchange prisoners, while Qatari mediation and efforts continue to ensure the entry of aid and medicine into Gaza.

On Dec. 1 last year, a temporary pause between Hamas and Israel mediated by Qatar, Egypt and the US ended after seven days, during which prisoners were exchanged and limited humanitarian aid was allowed into the territory, home to about 2.3 million Palestinians.

Israel estimates that there are approximately 136 hostages still held in the Gaza Strip, according to media reports and statements from Israeli officials.

Since Oct. 7 last year, the Israeli army has been conducting a destructive war in the Gaza Strip resulting in 25,700 deaths and 63,750 injuries, most of them women and children, say Palestinian authorities, and causing massive destruction and an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe, according to the United Nations.

Families of Israeli hostages held by Hamas have also accused Netanyahu of leaking a tape in which he criticized Doha’s role in the swap negotiations with the Palestinian group.

“All conversations that take place in meetings with the Prime Minister are recorded by his office and his associates present at the meeting,” Haim Rubinstein, a spokesperson for the hostages’ families, said in a statement.

“The families participating in the meeting had their phones taken at the entrance,” Rubinstein added.

The spokesperson termed the leaking of Netanyahu’s comments as a “grave issue that indicates a loss of control.”

Thousands block main streets in Tel Aviv, demanding release of hostages in Gaza

Israel Hostages

Around 5,000 protesters, including families of hostages, closed the main Ayalon highway in Tel Aviv, while others closed nearby Kaplan Street on both sides, blocking traffic, the Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper reported.

They held up photos of the hostages and banners with slogans such as “Deal Now”, “Ceasefire”, “Bring back the hostages” and “There is no military solution to a political problem.”

In recent days, popular pressure has increased on the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to reach an immediate deal for the release of around 137 hostages that Israel claims are still being held by the Palestinian group Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

Earlier on Wednesday, the Israeli daily Israel Hayom reported that Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich told the families of the hostages that he cannot commit to bringing them all back alive, marking a first-of-its-kind statement.

Netanyahu stated Monday there is an Israeli proposal to reach an agreement with Palestinian factions in Gaza, without disclosing its details.

Hamas has not officially commented on the Israeli offer so far.

Egypt, Qatar and the US are sponsoring efforts to reach a second temporary pause in fighting in Gaza. The first pause was reached in November last year, resulting in the release of 105 detainees held by Hamas, including 81 Israelis, 23 Thai citizens and one Filipino, as well as 240 Palestinian prisoners.

Since Oct. 7 last year, the Israeli army has been conducting a destructive war in the Gaza Strip, resulting in 25,700 fatalities and 63,750 injuries, most of them women and children, say Palestinian authorities, and causing massive destruction and an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe, according to the United Nations.

Iran’s President Raisi in Turkey for talks with Erdogan

Raisi and Erdogan

Before his departure, Raisi called negotiations over regional issues the centerpiece of his travel plans to Turkey, saying, “One of the important issues that worries all Muslims and awakes people in the world is the Palestine issue. Iran and Turkey’s common position is to support the resistance of the oppressed and powerful Palestinians.”

Emphasizing that “efforts have been made to stop the Israeli bombings in Gaza”, he stated, “Because of the support of the Americans and Westerners for the Zionist regime, we are still witnessing the killings of Palestinian women and children.”

“But we are sure that the victory belongs to Palestine. And it will be annihilation of the Zionist regime.”

Raisi assert that high on the agenda is the issue of cutting off the vital arteries of the Zionist regime, which can be effective in stopping the crimes of the regime against the Palestinian people.

The Iranian chief executive is scheduled to have a private meeting with Erdogan at his presidential palace, and attend the 8th meeting of the Supreme Council of Iran-Turkey Cooperation under the chairmanship of the two presidents.

After the signing ceremony of cooperation documents between the two neighbors, the two presidents will outline the results of their consultations in a joint press conference.

During the visit which comes after Erdogan’s invitation, Raeisi and Erdogan will also attend the joint meeting of business people and economic actors of Iran and Turkey. The Iranian president will also meet with Iranian nationals living in the neighboring country.

Raisi added the Iranian government’s goal is to raise the level of trade relations between Tehran and Ankara to 30 billion dollars.

“Our goal is to increase the level of commercial and economic relations between our country and Turkey to 30 billion dollars, which can be achieved with the existing capacities of the two countries,” he continued.

Raisi also stressed that important documents will be signed during the trip, which shows the will of the two countries to develop trade and economic relations.

The seventh meeting of the Supreme Council of Iran-Turkey Cooperation was held in July 2022 during the official visit of the Turkish president to the Iranian capital.

Raisi’s trip to Turkey was supposed to be held on January 15, but it was postponed due to the terrorist attack in the southeastern Iranian province of Kerman.

Hassan Rouhani disqualified from running in Assembly of Experts election

Hassan Rouhani

The Guardian Council dismissed the qualifications of Rouhani, a former president, as a nominee to run in the vote.

His disqualification will officially be announced by the Interior Ministry, says the Guardian Council.

Rouhani was Iran’s president from 2013 to 2021.

The Assembly of Experts election is going to be held on 1 March 2024, simultaneous with the parliamentary vote.

Under the Iranian Constitution, the Assembly of Experts is tasked with selecting, and in some cases dismissing the leader and supervising his performance.

Source: Hamas says ready for exchanging women and children hostages with Israel

Israel Hostages

Such an initiative marked a significant shift in the position of Hamas that used to insist during recent weeks on a comprehensive ceasefire agreement as a condition for the hostage release talks, the report said.

However, Israeli officials are still very skeptical about potential progress in the negotiations with Hamas, although Tel Aviv remains ready to continue the talks, the newspaper reported, citing Egyptian and Qatari officials.

On October 7, the Gaza Strip-controlling Hamas movement launched a large-scale rocket attack against Israel and breached the border, attacking both civilian neighborhoods and military bases. As a result, over 1,200 people in Israel were killed and some 250 others abducted.

Israel launched retaliatory strikes, ordered a complete blockade of Gaza, and started a ground incursion into the Palestinian enclave with the declared goal of eliminating Hamas fighters and rescuing the hostages. Nearly 25,500 people have been killed so far in the Gaza Strip as a result of Israeli strikes, local authorities said.

On November 24, Qatar mediated a deal between Israel and Hamas on a temporary truce and the exchange of some of the prisoners and hostages, as well as the delivery of humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip. The ceasefire was extended several times and expired on December 1. More than 100 hostages are still believed to be held by Hamas in Gaza.

Russia says 65 Ukrainian POWs killed in plane crash

Russia’s Il-76 plane

In a statement on Wednesday, the Russian Defense Ministry said that an IL-76 cargo aircraft carrying 65 captured Ukrainian service members as well as six crew members and three people accompanying the POWs went down during a pre-planned flight at around 11am local time. It added that the prisoners were being transported to Belgorod region for an exchange.

Defense officials also noted that Moscow has dispatched a commission to establish the cause of the incident.

Kiev’s forces knowingly downed a Russian plane carrying Ukrainian prisoners of war that crashed on Wednesday, killing all on board, in order to pin the attack on Moscow, the defense ministry has said, adding that Kiev had once again shown its true colors.

The Russian Defense Ministry claimed that radar facilities of the Russian Aerospace Forces recorded the launch of two Ukrainian missiles.

It claimed that the “Kiev regime committed a terrorist act” by targeting the plane, which was transporting POWs for a further prisoner exchange, from the Chkalovsky military airbase near Moscow to Belgorod.

Confirming that everyone aboard was killed in the attack, the ministry said that the Ukrainian leadership was well aware of the flight and its mission. It noted that Moscow and Kiev had agreed to conduct a prisoner exchange later on Wednesday near the Russian border village of Kolotilovka in Belgorod Region.

“Nevertheless, the Nazi Kiev regime [carried out this attack] in a bid to accuse Russia of killing members of the Ukrainian military. By committing this terrorist act, the Ukrainian leadership showed its true face, disregarding the lives of its citizens.”

The Ukrainian Defense Ministry has so far declined to comment on the incident, saying only that it was looking into the matter. However, Andrey Yusov, a spokesman for Kiev’s Main Directorate of Intelligence (GUR), confirmed that Russia and Ukraine were indeed scheduled to carry out a prisoner exchange on Wednesday, adding that it had since been canceled.

US opposes Israeli plans for ‘buffer zone’ in Gaza

Gaza War

“We do not want to see the territory of Gaza reduced in any way. We won’t support that,” National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby told reporters at the White House on Tuesday.

Kirby declined to outline any diplomatic conversations the US has had with Israel about the matter, but emphasized that Washington has “been very clear and consistent, both in private and publicly, that we do not want to see the territory of Gaza reduced in any way”.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has also said Washington will not support Israel creating so-called “buffer zones” permanently in Gaza that would effectively reduce the size of the Palestinian territory.

“When it comes to the permanent status of Gaza going forward, we’ve been clear, we remain clear, about not encroaching on its territory,” Blinken stated at a news conference in Abuja, Nigeria.

However, Blinken stressed that there may need to be “transitional arrangements” that provide “necessary security arrangements” to allow Israelis who fled areas adjacent to Gaza after October 7 to return.

Blinken also maintained that Gazans who fled their homes must be allowed to return and that Palestinians be able to govern themselves.

Israel has since December been moving toward the establishment of its more than half-mile “buffer zone” inside Gaza along the border with Israel, destroying buildings in the area to make way for the corridor.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has elicited furor in Egypt after saying publicly that Israel wants to take control of the border area between Gaza and Egypt. Netanyahu said Saturday the 8.7-mile (14-kilometer) strip, which is known in Israel as the Philadelphi Corridor, “must be in our hands”.

Diaa Rashwan, the chairman of Egypt’s State Information Service (SIS), stated Cairo would consider any attempt by Israel to occupy the area as a “violation of the security agreements and protocols signed between it (Israel) and Egypt”.

“It must be strictly emphasized that any Israeli move in this direction will lead to a serious threat to Egyptian-Israeli relations,” he added.

Nearly 25,500 Palestinians have been confirmed killed in Israel’s offensive on the Gaza Strip since Oct. 7. Thousands more are feared dead under the rubble.

The vast majority of Palestinians who have been killed, an estimated two-thirds, are women and children.

Israel began its war in retaliation for Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel in which an estimated 1,200 people are believed to have been killed. Roughly 250 others were taken back to Gaza as hostages. More than 100 remain detained in the coastal enclave.

The Israeli offensive has left 85% of Gaza’s population internally displaced amid acute shortages of food, clean water and medicine, while 60% of the enclave’s infrastructure has been damaged or destroyed, according to the UN.

Israeli leaders are offering genocide and ethnic cleansing to Palestinian people, Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki said Tuesday.

Al-Maliki added Israel has denied Palestinians existence, rights and humanity — whether in Gaza, the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, or Palestinian refugees or Palestinian prisoners.

“They do not see our people as an empirical and political reality to exist with, but as a demographic threat to get rid of through this displacement or subjugation,” he stated at a UN Security Council meeting on Gaza.

“These are the choices they offer us; genocide, ethnic cleansing or apartheid. I know some here are uncomfortable with these words, but they are the reality that we live under,” al-Maliki continued.

He said there are only two paths ahead for the conflict between Palestine and Israel.

“One that starts with Palestinian freedom and leads to shared peace and security in our region, or one that continues denying this freedom and dooms our region to further bloodshed and endless conflict,” he added.

The foreign minister also took aim at the Israeli PM, saying, “Netanyahu boasts publicly and repeatedly that he played the key role in preventing the independence of the Palestinian state and peace in our region and pledges to continue doing so.”

“Israel should no longer entertain the illusion that there is somehow a third path whereby it can choose (to) continue to occupation and colonialism and apartheid, and somehow still achieve regional peace and security. This is not a viable path, nor illegitimate,” he added.

UN chief calls for immediate end to Gaza war, sending aid to Palestinians

Guterres and Amirabdollahian

In a meeting with Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amrabdollahian in New York, Guterres said unfortunately, it is not possible to send humanitarian aid to Gaza without a ceasefire.

The United Nations secretary general also highlighted the necessity of establishing  an independent state for Palestinians and their right to self-determination.

The UN chief also touched upon the recent developments in the Red Sea, and voiced concern over the spread of war in the region.

In the meeting, the top Iranian diplomat also appreciated Guterres’ efforts and positions with regards to the necessity of ending the killing of Palestinians, once again highlighting the need for an immediate end to Israel’s attacks against Palestinians.

Around 26,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s war on Gaza since early October. Women and children constitute about 70 percent of the fatalities.

Amrabdollahian expressed deep concern and regret over the complicated and painful humanitarian situation in Gaza, urging the UN secretary general to facilitate, through negotiations, the dispatch of humanitarian aid to Palestinian people.

The Iranian foreign minister then touched upon the ongoing developments in the Red Sea, once again underscoring the Islamic Republic of Iran’s “principled stance on the necessity of ensuring shipping and maritime security.”

“By stopping ships bound for the occupied Palestinian territories, Yemen’s Ansarullah aims to stop the Zionist regime’s crimes and genocide
against citizens of Gaza,” added Amirabdollahian.

He referred to the US and UK raids on Yemen, adding “By attacking Yemen and Ansarullah, the United States and Britain made a strategic error, an error which would expand the sphere of tensions and conflicts in the region.”

Iran slams US for preventing UN from pressing for an end to Israeli war on Gaza

Gaza War

The top diplomat made the remarks on Wednesday, addressing a United Nations Security Council (UNSC) meeting on the situation in the Middle East, especially Gaza.

The Israeli regime launched the war on October 7, 2023 following Operation al-Aqsa Storm by Gaza’s resistance movements. Close to 25,500 Palestinians, mostly women and children, have lost their lives so far as a result of the onslaught.

The United States has been providing Israel with unbridled military and political support in its onslaught against Gaza, arming Tel Aviv with more than 10,000 tons of military hardware. The US has also torpedoed the prospect of cessation of the Israeli aggression by stonewalling ratification of all Security Council resolutions that have been calling for a permanent ceasefire in the Israeli aggression.

Amirabdollahian denounced the US for serving “as the practical supporter and main accomplice of the Israeli regime in its crimes.”

Washington, he said, “has prevented this body (the UNSC) from effectively fulfilling its inherent duties in stopping the overt genocide of a nation and establishing a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip.”

“…the US must compel the Israeli regime to stop the war and pull itself out of the trap that the Israeli regime has set to drag the US into direct conflict.”

Amirabdollahian stressed that the killing of innocent civilians, especially women and children, had to be stopped immediately.

“War is not the solution. Security cannot be achieved by resorting to the use of force and committing the crime of genocide in Gaza,” he asserted.

The minister called on the UNSC to act on its duty to pass a resolution calling for an immediate and permanent ceasefire in Gaza, and unhindered delivery of humanitarian aid to the territory.

Such a resolution should also urge immediate and complete withdrawal of the Israeli regime from the coastal sliver, and extract a commitment from the regime to refrain from any efforts to relocate Palestinians to Egypt and Jordan.

The foreign minister pointed to one of the goals that the Israeli regime has purportedly been seeking through waging the war, namely “total destruction” of the Palestinian resistance movement of Hamas that rules Gaza.

“That time will never come,” Amirabdollahian stated.

Expressing the reason for his assertion, the top diplomat said, “In the past 80 years, this nation (the Palestinian nation)’s will of steel has not weakened.”