Thursday, January 1, 2026
Home Blog Page 1076

Iranian FM expresses hope Tehran, Moscow will sign strategic partnership treaty soon

Amirabdollahian Lavrov

Amirabdollahian met with his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov in New York on the sidelines of a United Nations Security Council (UNSC) meeting on Palestine on Monday.

The two top diplomats discussed and exchanged views about the issues on the agenda in bilateral ties as well as regional developments, including the latest incidents in the war on Gaza.

The Iranian foreign minister stressed that over 100 days of resistance by the oppressed people in Gaza led to the failure of the Israeli regime to achieve any of its goals.

He added that the Zionist regime’s recent aggression on Syria and Lebanon are meant to distract the international community’s attention from the disgraceful defeat, ineptitude and helplessness of the regime in the battlefield.

The Iranian foreign minister also stated that the Israeli move is a malicious attempt to spread instability and insecurity in the region.

Referring to Russia’s position and role as a permanent member of the UN Security Council, Amirabdollahian demanded Russia play a more active role to stop the war on Gaza.

He expressed satisfaction with the level of bilateral ties with Russia.

Pointing to the recent trip by Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi to Moscow, he expressed hope that a comprehensive strategic cooperation deal will be signed between the two countries during the upcoming visit by the Russian president to Tehran.

The Russian foreign minister also said he was pleased with the current state of bilateral ties and stressed that the agreements reached between the two countries should be implemented.

Lavrov slammed the United States for obstructing a ceasefire resolution at the UN Security Council, and called on Arab states to adopt a united stance on the Palestinian issue.

UN says Taliban enforcing restrictions on Afghan women

Taliban Women

The report detailed the “lack of clarity” on the legal mechanisms in place for women to bring concerns about gender-based violence and which Taliban authority “is responsible for each action along the justice chain regarding such complaints”.

Many women seek “traditional” means of resolving the issues “because of fear of the [Taliban] de facto authorities”.

The report noted that complaints are predominantly dealt with by men, who often seek “mediation” instead of prosecution and trial.

The report also focuses on restrictions of rights for women, specifically noting that the Taliban “continue to enforce and promulgate restrictions on women’s rights to work, education and freedom of movement”.

It mentions increased enforcement of the requirements that women wear a hijab and travel with a guardian — either a husband or male blood relative.

The report cites an example where three female health workers were detained because they went to work without being accompanied by a mahram, or a person with whom marriage would be forbidden.

The report says significant actions have been taken to enforce the hijab decree, and Taliban authorities have taken measures “involving arbitrary arrests and detentions and verbal warnings of a substantial number of women and girls accused of not wearing proper hijab”.

The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA), which published the report, announced it is “looking into allegations of instances of ill-treatment, longer periods of detention, incommunicado detention and demands for payment of money in exchange for release.”

“Enforcement measures involving physical violence are especially demeaning and dangerous for Afghan women and girls, carrying a stigma that places them at even greater risk,” the report added.

The report also details “targeted attacks against Hazaras”, an ethnic minority that has long faced discrimination in the region.

Additionally, it raises concerns about the “forced expulsion of Afghans from Pakistan”, noting that this decree particularly affects Afghans who have fled the country after the Taliban took control.

In August 2021, the Joe Biden administration withdrew all troops from Afghanistan, concluding that US involvement in the region was not sustainable and not producing any positive effect on the region. Soon after the US withdrawal, the Taliban took control swiftly and has slowly begun to enforce restrictive policies on its people, specifically hampering women’s rights and freedoms in the region.

21 Israeli soldiers killed in biggest single loss during Gaza conflict: Army

Israeli Army

In a televised statement Tuesday, Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said two buildings collapsed on the soldiers after being hit by an RPG during a military operation.

The buildings were full of landmines that Israeli troops planted to demolish the Palestinian structures.

He added the Hamas fighters fired a rocket-propelled grenade at an Israeli tank, while, simultaneously, an explosion caused two two-story buildings to collapse.

“The buildings collapsed due to this explosion, while most of the forces were inside and near them,” Hagari continued.

Isaac Herzog has described an “unbearably difficult morning” today as “more and more names of the best of our sons” are being added to tombstones.

Explaining how 21 Israeli soldiers died in a single day of combat in Gaza on Monday, he stated “intense battles are taking place in an extremely challenging space”.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has also stated that the deaths of 21 Israeli soldiers was “one of the most difficult days” since the outbreak of war.

“I mourn for our fallen heroic soldiers. I hug the families in their time of need and we all pray for the peace of our wounded,” Netanyahu wrote on X.

“The IDF has launched an investigation into the disaster. We must draw the necessary lessons and do everything to keep our warriors safe,” he continued, adding Israel “will not stop fighting until the absolute victory.”

This is the highest daily death toll for Israeli troops since the start of the Gaza ground offensive in late October.

The deaths bring the death toll of Israeli soldiers in Gaza since a ground assault began on Oct. 27 to 219, while the army’s overall death toll since the launch of the Israeli offensive against Gaza on Oct. 7 has risen to 565.

Israel has pounded the Gaza Strip since a cross-border attack by the Palestinian resistance group Hamas on Oct. 7, killing at least 25,300 Palestinians and injuring 63,000. Nearly 1,200 Israelis are believed to have been killed in the Hamas attack.

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.

Iranian FM to UN chief: Israel should bear consequences for assassination of IRGC military advisors

IRGC Military Advisor Syria

The letter by Hossein Amirabdollahian came after the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) confirmed five of its members serving on a military advisory mission in Syria had been assassinated in an Israeli airstrike on a residential building in the Mezzeh neighborhood, west of the Syrian capital city of Damascus.

“The Israeli regime must bear the consequences of this and all other terrorist acts it has committed against Iranian military advisors,” Amirabdollahian said in the letter, adding, “This regime must also be compelled to abandon all its other destabilizing activities in the region.”

“The Islamic Republic of Iran reserves its inherent right, under international law and the United Nations Charter, to respond decisively and proportionately to such acts at the time and place of its choosing,” the top diplomat stated.

The Iranian foreign minister noted that the latest act of terrorism was the third of its kind to be committed against Iranian military advisors in recent months.

“This heinous terrorist act has also revealed, once more, the real terrorist nature of the Israeli regime, its destabilizing role in the region, and the threat that it poses to the peace and security of the region and beyond,” he continued.

Such acts of terror are “aimed at diverting attention away from the Israeli regime’s atrocities against the people of Palestine, particularly in Gaza”, he noted, referring to the Palestinian territory that has been under a genocidal Israeli war for more than three months. The regime’s military aggression has so far killed more than 25,000 Palestinians in Gaza.

In another part of his letter, Iran’s foreign minister also called for strong condemnation of Israel’s acts of terrorism by the UN Security Council.

“The UN Security Council is expected, in fulfilling its duties under the United Nations Charter, to strongly condemn the Israeli regime’s acts of terrorism and other cases of unlawful use of force, as such provocative measures pose a serious threat to regional and international peace and security,” Iran’s top diplomat said.

Israel proposes new hostage agreement to Hamas: Report

Israel Hamas Hostages

Hamas seized around 250 Israelis in its October 7 attack from Gaza. While some were released during a week-long humanitarian pause at the end of November, Israel estimates that 130 are still being held in the Palestinian enclave.

According to two Israeli officials who spoke to Axios reporter Barak Ravid, the War Cabinet approved the parameters of the proposal “ten days ago” and sent it to Hamas via Qatar and Egypt. Israel is now waiting for the group’s response and is reportedly “cautiously optimistic” about it.

US envoy Brett McGurk was in Egypt on Sunday and is set to proceed to Qatar for talks aimed at negotiating the release of captives held by Hamas.

Under the terms of the Israeli proposal, the first phase would see Hamas releasing women, men over 60, and hostages who are in critical medical condition, Axios wrote on Monday. The second phase would involve releasing female soldiers, male civilians under 60, male soldiers, and finally the bodies of hostages that have been killed.

Israel is prepared to stop operations for “up to two months”, the longest truce it has offered since Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared war on Hamas. However, the government is not prepared to end the war or release all 6,000 Palestinian prisoners, according to Axios. Hamas and Israel would have to agree in advance on how many Palestinian prisoners would be released for each Israeli in every category, and negotiate on their names separately.

The proposal also includes a “redeployment” of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) from parts of Gaza and allowing a “gradual return” of Palestinians to Gaza City. If Hamas accepts the deal, IDF operations in Gaza will continue after 60 days but would be “significantly smaller in scope and intensity”, the officials who spoke to Axios have stated.

Two officials familiar with the ongoing international discussions also told CNN Israel has proposed that Hamas senior leaders could leave Gaza as part of a broader ceasefire deal.

Israel has estimated Hamas casualties at 10,000 killed and 16,000 wounded, while the recently published US estimates were somewhat lower. The Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry has reported over 25,000 Palestinians have died in the conflict, two-thirds of them women and children.

Over half a million Gazans at risk of death from starvation due to Israeli attacks: Hamas

Gaza War

Osama Hamdan, who represents the movement in Lebanon, made the remarks at a press conference in Beirut on Monday.

“Due to the high number of displaced people, lack of viable shelters, and scarcity of adequate food aid, more than half a million of our people in the northern Gaza Strip face the real danger of death and are starving,” Hamdan said.

The official added that the people of Gaza have been forced to “grind animal fodder” in the absence of flour and food.

The Israeli regime launched its onslaught on Gaza on October 7, 2023 following Operation al-Aqsa Storm by the territory’s resistance movements.

More than 25,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, have lost their lives so far as a result of the brutal onslaught and a concomitant siege, which the regime has imposed on the territory with all-out American military and political support.

Hamdan stated Israel and the administration of the United States President Joe Biden are responsible for the massacres that have been carried out against Gazans, calling on international organizations to declare northern Gaza a “famine zone”.

He also urged the Organization of Islamic Cooperation and the Arab League to intervene immediately to open Gaza’s crossings and bring in aid.

The Hamas’ official said despite what the Israeli regime and the United States claim, there are no safe areas across the coastal territory.

Since the onset of its military aggression on Gaza, the regime has also staged sporadic attacks against Lebanon, sparking a firefight with the Lebanese resistance movement Hezbollah.

Iraqi and Yemeni resistance movements have also conducted retaliatory strikes against Israeli and American targets as a means of protesting the onslaught on Gaza and the United States’ support for it.

Hamdan stressed that the US administration is fully accountable for the escalation that the region is witnessing due to its continued support for Israel and its aggression against Gaza.

The Israeli regime, he emphasized, has stopped short of achieving any of the goals it had sought to realize through its military aggression against Gaza.

“After 108 days of this Zionist-American war against the Gaza Strip, the enemy has failed to achieve any of its aggressive goals. It has not been able to break the will of our great, patient, committed, and sacrificing people, nor has it been able to defeat the resistance,” Hamdan continued.

He added, “Neither our people left their land, nor did the resistance raise the white flag, nor did any of [Israeli] captives return to it, except for those that the resistance released on its own terms.”

In another part of his remarks, Hamdan said the Hamas movement strongly condemns the US administration’s designation of Yemen’s Ansarullah resistance movement as a terrorist group.

“We also condemn the continuation of the brutal American-British aggression against the brotherly [nation of] Yemen … and we consider it a proof to US insistence on militarizing the Red Sea to protect the [Israeli] occupation and support its crimes and aggression,” the Hamas representative added.

Concluding his remarks, Hamdan reaffirmed that Operation al-Aqsa Storm was a “necessary step and a natural response” by the resistance to the Israeli regime’s plots against Palestinians.

He enumerated the regime’s plots as “liquidating the Palestinian cause” of liberation from Israeli occupation and aggression, “controlling and Judaizing” the Palestinian territories, and eliminating Palestinians’ sovereignty over the al-Aqsa Mosque Compound and other holy sites.

The Israeli regime has built hundreds of settlements across the Palestinian territories and is constantly ratifying plans to expand such structures, which are illegal under international law due to their construction on an occupied territory.

Backed by the regime’s forces, illegal Israeli settlers also regularly invade the al-Aqsa Mosque Compound, Islam’s third-holiest site, where it is forbidden to perform non-Muslim prayers or rituals based on longstanding international agreements.

The United Nations Relief Works and Agency (UNRWA) has also announced that more than half a million people in Gaza face catastrophic hunger.

In the northern part of the besieged enclave, very little aid has reached residents and displaced families there, who have begun to grind animal feed into flour.

UNRWA pointed out that intense fighting, communications blackouts and access restrictions have hindered the organisation’s ability to “safely and effectively deliver aid”.

The UN’s food agency has also warned that “very little” food assistance has made it beyond the southern part of the bombarded and besieged territory since the start of the war.

“It’s difficult to get into the places where we need to get to in Gaza, especially in northern Gaza,” said Abeer Etefa, the World Food Programme’s spokesperson for the Middle East.

“The risk of having pockets of famine in Gaza is very much still there,” she added.

Etefa noted that there was a “systematic limitation on getting into the north of Gaza, not just for the WFP”.

“This is why we’re seeing people becoming more desperate and being impatient to wait for food distributions because it’s very sporadic,” she said, adding, “They don’t get it frequently, and they have no trust or confidence that these convoys will come again.”

Russia says US sees Ukraine as a ‘business project’

Zelensky in US

The minister was referring to earlier statements made by US State Secretary Antony Blinken. Last month, the top US diplomat claimed that 90% of the money allocated for Ukrainian aid ends up getting funneled back to the US “to the benefit of American business, local communities, and strengthening the US defense industrial base”.

In November 2023, the Washington Post also reported that the majority of these funds were spent on manufacturing new weapons or replacing the equipment sent to Ukraine out of American stockpiles.

The US is essentially “developing its military industrial” complex while “dumping the old junk in Ukraine”, Lavrov said.

Russia’s top diplomat also claimed that most major Ukrainian companies, including lithium producers, are being sold to Americans and US companies have been able to get their hands on Ukraine’s fertile land “on the cheap”.

Lavrov denounced the statements made by US officials as “cynical” and said that Washington has been treating the ongoing conflict “not as a war that has already claimed hundreds of thousands of lives … but as a profitable business project.”

Moscow is waging a military campaign not against Ukraine but against “a criminal regime, presumptuous in its impunity”, he declared.

Kiev has not forgone on the “war against its own citizens in the east and south” despite years-long efforts by Moscow to find a peaceful solution to this crisis, he explained, adding that over 7 million Ukrainians had found refuge in Russia since the 2014 Maidan coup.

Kiev’s Western backers have never tried to stop the government from persecuting Russian-speaking Ukrainians, the minister added, accusing the US and its allies of using the past few years to “arm Ukraine and prepare it for war against Russia”, while using the Minsk Agreements as a cover.

Russia is ready for talks on Ukraine but it is not willing to discuss ways to keep Kiev’s current government in power, Moscow’s top diplomat concluded.

Iranian man convicted in connection with 2022 unrest and deadly riots, executed

Mohammad Ghobadlou

Mohammad Ghobadlou, 23, was convicted of ramming his car into a policeman and killing him and wounding five others amid the nationwide anti-government protests in Iran.

In July last year, Iran’s Supreme Court overturned the Gessas (retribution) sentence for Ghobadlou, but revoked it later.

Besides the premeditated murder, he was accused of ‘corruption on earth,’ a charge punishable by death in Iran.

Protests erupted in Iran after the death of Mahsa Amini, a 23-year-old woman, who was taken in by the police for not wearing a proper hijab in September in 2022.

Iranian officials say, the US, Israel and some of their allies were fanning the flames of the unrest that saw the killing  of hundreds of security forces and protestors and the injurjes of many more.

EU agrees on naval mission in Red Sea against Yemen

Yemen Houthi

Germany, France, and Italy have proposed the step in response to requests from the Netherlands, whose merchant shipping has been impacted by the months-long Houthi attacks on vessels linked to Israel.

“We have agreed, in principle, to start the EU mission in the Red Sea,” Borrell said after the meeting, according to the Italian news agency ANSA.

“Now we have to work on unanimity as to when (it will start).”

The European External Action Service aims to have the mission established by February 19 and start operations soon afterward, Reuters has reported, citing anonymous diplomatic sources in Brussels.

According to an internal document leaked to several media outlets, the mission would involve “at least three” naval vessels. A diplomatic source told the German outlet Deutsche Welle (DW) on Sunday that the preferred option would be to expand Operation Agenor, the French-led monitoring mission in the Strait of Hormuz.

Spain has made it clear it will not participate in the mission, but Madrid is unwilling to veto it altogether.

The Houthis declared in October that they would interdict any Israeli-linked vessels in the Red Sea, in solidarity with the Palestinians in Gaza.

After the US and UK launched air and missile strikes against the Houthis earlier this month, as part of ‘Operation Prosperity Guardian’, the group declared that any British or American vessels would be legitimate targets as well.

The EU is acting because it wants to be seen doing something, but doesn’t seem to have thought the operation through, according to Nathalie Tocci, the director of Italy’s Institute for International Affairs (IAI).

“Let’s put this in perspective. The Saudis have been bombing the hell out of Yemen for ten years. Did they actually succeed in weakening the Houthis’ military capacities? No they didn’t,” Tocci told DW on Sunday.

Riyadh had been against fighting the Houthis since 2015, without much success, before agreeing to a ceasefire last year.

“So what makes us think some sort of maritime operation, which presumably would have a defensive rather than an offensive purpose, would actually deter in any shape or form?” added Tocci.

Iran’s president due in Turkey on Wednesday

Ebrahim Raisi

Heading a high-ranking politico-economic delegation, Raisi will leave Tehran for Ankara on Wednesday at the invitation of his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

The Turkish president will officially welcome his Iranian counterpart, and the two presidents are scheduled to hold a private meeting.

Raisi and Erdogan will co-chair the 8th meeting of the Iran-Turkey high-level cooperation council and then attend a joint press conference.

The two presidents also plan to participate in a joint meeting of both countries’ tradesmen and economic actors.

Raisi will also hold a meeting with Iranian nationals residing in Turkey.

The Iranian president canceled his planned visit to Turkey following a Daesh-claimed terrorist attack in the southeastern city of Kerman on January 3, during which 94 people lost their lives and 211 others sustained injuries.

Erdogan had first announced in November that “Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi is coming to us on the 28th of the month” to focus on forging a joint response to the Israeli invasion of Gaza, but the visit did not take place due to conflicting schedules of their foreign ministers.

In a phone conversation with his Iranian counterpart Hossein Amirabdollahian on Thursday, Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said his country is ready to host President Raisi in the near future after seeing the trip canceled twice for different reasons.

Both Turkey and Iran oppose the illegal US presence in Syria and have strongly condemned the ongoing Israeli genocide against the Palestinians.