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Wagner boss among passengers of crashed jet

Yevgeny Prigozhin
Part of the wreckage of the private jet linked to Wagner mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin.

A private jet traveling from Moscow to St. Petersburg crashed on Wednesday in Russia’s Tver Region.

The Russian Emergencies Ministry announced all 10 people on board had died. Rosaviation has since said that Prigozhin was listed among the passengers.

“The Embraer plane was flying out of Sheremetyevo to St. Petersburg. There were three crew and seven passengers on board. They all died,” an Emergencies Ministry official told TASS.

The crash happened near the village of Kuzhenkino in the northwestern Tver Region.

Some Russian outlets have identified the plane as an Embraer Legacy 600, with the tail number RA-02795, which is believed to belong to Prigozhin.

The Russian federal air transport agency also confirmed that Prighozhin’s name was on the passenger manifest.

Eight bodies have been recovered so far, officials told RIA Novosti.

An investigation into the incident is underway.

Rosaviation added that it has established a special commission to investigate the cause and circumstances of the incident. It identified the airplane as the Embraer-135BJ private jet, owned by the company MNT-Aero.

The cause of the crash was not immediately clear, but Prigozhin’s longstanding feud with the military and the armed uprising he led in June would give the Russian state ample motive for revenge.

Media channels linked to Wagner quickly suggested that a Russian air defence missile had shot down the plane.

Former IRGC commander: Many policies against Islamic ideology

Iran Hijab

Retired Brigadier General Hossein Alaei, in an interview with Khabar Online news outlet, said problems arise only when domestic and foreign policies do not follow Islamic teachings, which he said are based on rationality.

“In Islamic ideology killing a person is the gravest sin…. So, in protests no one should be killed,” the former commander said, explaining based on Islamic belief everyone has the duty to oppose oppression.

Alaei took a swipe at the morality police, arguing that not only did their efforts not lead to better observance of Islamic hijab, which is mandatory for Iranian women, but also brought lax and flimsy hijab to the fore.

The issue has stirred controversy in Iran ever since the death of young Iranian woman Mahsa Amini last September after she was taken in a morality police station for a briefing on her hijab. Her death triggered deadly protests and riots nationwide.

The former commander also called on people “and especially government officials” to assess themselves and “repent for their wrongdoings.”

Turkey closes strait to battle forest fire; hundreds evacuated

Turkey Fire

Emergency responders stated they had made progress containing a patchwork of fires that on Tuesday covered the edge of the popular seaside vacation destination with dark rolling clouds of smoke.

“It’s better today than yesterday,” Agriculture and Forestry Minister Ibrahim Yumakli said in televised remarks.

“Our friends stopped the fire from advancing. If there’s no wind, we will see the picture more clearly in the afternoon,” he added.

Officials say the flames had prompted the evacuation of 1,251 people and saw 48 seek hospital treatment for smoke inhalation.

The blaze also closed a local university campus and forced doctors to evacuate some patients from a hospital as a precaution.

The Dardanelle Strait links the Aegean Sea with the Sea of Marmara and is a popular tourist destination because it is also the site of the ancient ruins of Troy.

The strait also handled grain ships that Ukraine sent before Russia pulled out of the wartime agreement last month.

Turkey has been trying to modernize its emergency response service after being gripped by hugely destructive fires along its southern and western coasts in 2021.

Those flames scorched more than 200,000 hectares (nearly 50,000 acres) of pine forest and claimed at least nine lives.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan came under intense criticism for his response to the disaster at the time.

Its magnitude raised the political importance of environmental issues in Turkey and prompted Erdogan to push through Ankara’s long-delayed ratification of the Paris Climate Accords.

Iran to launch 2 or 3 satellites by March 2024: Defense chief

Iran's Defense Minister Brigadier General Mohammad Reza Ashtiani

Brigadier General Ashtiani expressed hope that the launch of the satellites would be successful.

Iran is among a group of countries worldwide capable of launching its own satellites into orbit, he stated.

The minister also elaborated on the latest achievements of the Defense Ministry, citing the homegrown Simorgh satellite carrier as one of the Islamic Republic’s great accomplishments.

Many countries around the world have special equipment to test their satellite carriers, the defense minister continued, adding that Iran must test its satellites through test flights, which imposes certain limitations.

Prominent Iranian filmmaker Ebrahim Golestan dies at 101

Golestan was born in 1922 in the southern Iranian city of Shiraz and became an outstanding filmmaker and literary figure with half a century of shining career.

He established his own studio in 1953, where he made A Fire (1961), Wave, Coral and Rock (1962), the Hills of Marlik (1963), and the Crown Jewels of Iran (1965) among other masterpieces.

He was closely associated with the Iranian poet Forough Farrokhzad and pushed her into cinema.

Golestan immigrated to England for the first time in 1967 and returned to Iran in 1972. He left his homeland again 1977 forever and lived in England for the rest of his life.

Art and culture runs deep in his family. His daughter Leili is a respected translator and author, his late son Kaveh was a photojournalist and documentary filmmaker, and his grandson Mani Haghighi is a decorated filmmaker, actor, and script writer.

Russian governor confirms 3 killed in Ukrainian drone attack

Russia Ukraine War

A Ukrainian drone raid has killed three people in Russia’s Belgorod Region, dropping an explosive device on a recreational facility, Governor Vyacheslav Gladkov confirmed on Wednesday.

The attack took place on Wednesday morning in a village some 20km from the Ukrainian border, according to the official. Two men were killed on the spot, while a third male victim succumbed to his injuries shortly afterwards, Gladkov said.

The regional leader called the bombing a “repeat attack” on the facility.

Earlier in the day he noted that Ukrainian forces had dropped two grenades at the same location, causing minor damage and no casualties.

Kiev’s attacks on the region have become a daily occurrence, involving artillery, drones and occasional raids across the border. On Tuesday alone, five settlements were bombed by drones, according to reports from the governor. Ukrainian forces use small UAVs carrying light explosive payloads for such sorties.

There are “still ways to travel” before Israel-Saudi deal: White House

Netanyahu MbS

Sullivan’s comments appeared to be an attempt to try to lower expectations after a flurry of press reports suggested an agreement could be close.

US officials have previously told Axios that the administration wants to try to complete its diplomatic push with Saudi Arabia before the presidential election campaign consumes President Joe Biden’s agenda.

But several outstanding issues remain, including a possible defense treaty between Washington and Riyadh and possible US support for a civilian nuclear program that would include uranium enrichment on Saudi soil.

Sullivan, who has traveled to Saudi Arabia several times over the last six months, told reporters on Tuesday that he doesn’t want to discuss the issue in detail but stressed that the Biden administration is discussing the issue with both Saudi Arabia and Israel.

“For now, it is done in diplomatic channels…and there are still ways to travel…these are highly technical issues,” he said, adding that there was no imminent announcement on a deal expected.

Sullivan stressed that the Biden administration plans to ask the International Atomic Energy Agency for its opinion on a possible civilian nuclear program in Saudi Arabia that includes uranium enrichment.

“Peace between Israel and Saudi Arabia would be a big deal,” Sullivan also said, adding that a normalization agreement would be in the interest of the US because it would create a more stable Middle East in which US allies and partners could work together.

Biden would likely have to pass at least parts of it through Congress, where many Democrats hold highly critical views of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, also known as MbS, due to the kingdom’s human rights record and the murder of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi.

Sullivan declined to comment on whether Biden is considering a meeting with MbS at the G20 in New Delhi next month as Axios reported earlier this week.

Such a meeting, if it happened, could give a significant push to the talks.

Iranian court issues final verdicts over murder of security guard Ajamian

Iran Court Roohollah Ajamian

Chief Justice of Alborz Province said on Wednesday, the court has issued the final verdict for the remaining defendants in Rouhollah Ajamian’s case after considering the appeal.

Hossein Fazeli said Hamid Qareh Hasanlou was sentenced to 15 years of imprisonment in exile and Reza Aria, Hossein Mohammadi, and Mehdi Mohammadi were each sentenced to 10 years in exile. The convicts were earlier given death sentences, but the Supreme Court of Iran annulled the rulings ‘due to faulty investigations’.

The provincial chief justice also added the other defendants, Mohammed Amin Akhlaghi, Amin Mehdi Shokrollahi, and Farzaneh Qareh Hasanlou were each sentenced to five years in exile, and Ali Moazzami Goodarzi was sentenced to three years in exile.

Ajamian was stabbed to death by a group of rioters armed with knives in early November last year in Karaj city, the capital of Alborz Province.

A total of 16 people were arrested in connection with the case. The court has yet to decide about the last defendant, Arian Farzam Nia, who was a minor when the murder took place.

Earlier this year in January, Iran implemented the death sentences handed down to the main culprits in the murder case, Mohammad Mehdi Karami and Mohammad Hosseini.

Malaysia says will never recognize US sanctions against Iran

During a meeting with Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi in Tehran on Tuesday, Zambry described the Islamic Republic as Malaysia’s “very important partner” in the region and the Muslim world.

He also hailed “positive” meetings with Iranian officials during his trip to Tehran on August 20-23.

Zambry further called for the development of bilateral relations, especially in the fields of agriculture, medicine, science, and technology.

Raisi, for his part, said that devising a long-term strategic cooperation plan between Iran and Malaysia will “open up new horizons” in bilateral ties.

He also expressed hope that the cooperation plan will lead to enhanced relations and economic exchanges.

The top Malaysian diplomat paid his first official visit to Iran since assuming office last December, upon an invitation by his Iranian counterpart, Hossein Amirabdollahian.

In a Monday meeting, Zambry and Amirabdollahian held talks about further improvement of Iran-Malaysia ties and some leading regional and international issues.

They further agreed to speed up the extradition of criminals and the exchange of prisoners.

The Iranian foreign minister stated that a session of the Iran-Malaysia joint economic commission would convene in Tehran in the near future and its sub-committees would hold regular sessions to discuss consular, trade, economic, and cultural issues and the fight against terrorism.

He added that diplomatic efforts are underway to organize visits by President Raisi to Kuala Lumpur and the Malaysian prime minister to Tehran.

Resistance groups victories source of pride for Muslim nations: Iran Leader’s aide

Ali Akbar Velayati

Velayati made the remarks in separate phone calls with Ismail Haniyeh, head of the Political Bureau of the Palestinian resistance movement of Hamas, Ziad al-Nakhala, secretary-general of the Palestinian resistance movement of Islamic Jihad, and Sheikh Naim Qassem, deputy secretary-general of the Lebanese resistance movement of Hezbollah.

Velayati considered the victories to be a source of pride for the Muslim world and the result of “unity and solidarity” between the Palestinian groups and Lebanon’s Hezbollah.

“We are very pleased with your recent victories, and hope for these victories to continue,” he told Haniyeh.

“Whatever effort the Zionist regime puts into preserving itself is met with defeat, and it (the regime) will eventually be faced with more challenges and frustrations,” the Iranian official asserted.

“Victory is undoubtedly yours,” he told the Palestinian official.

Hamas and the Islamic Jihad successfully resisted Israel’s latest war on the Gaza Strip, which targeted the coastal sliver — where the movements are headquartered — last August. They fired upwards of 1,100 rockets towards the occupied territories, which prompted the Israeli military to beat a retreat.

Speaking to Nakhala, Velayati congratulated the Islamic Jihad on the numerous successful resistance operations of the group’s fighters in the occupied West Bank.

“The outcome of the unity [between the Palestinian groups and Hezbollah] will be ultimate victory,” he told the Palestinian official.

Speaking to Qassem, the Leader’s advisor similarly congratulated him on the occasion of the resistance’s recent victories as well as the recent anniversary of the defeat that was imposed by Hezbollah on the Israeli military during Tel Aviv’s 33-Day War of 2006 against Lebanon.

Velayati considered Hezbollah to be “the flag-bearer of struggle in Lebanon and the Muslim world.”

For their part, the resistance leaders voiced gratitude towards the Islamic Republic for its supportive position towards the region’s resistance outfits.

“These victories have been realized on the back of unity and alignment with friendly countries and nations, especially Iran,” the Hamas’ official said. “God willing, we will defeat the Zionist regime and what the resistance has done in the West Bank will continue,” Haniyeh added.

Nakhala, meanwhile, asserted, “The resistance is making progress and realizing victories every day, and continues down its clear path each day stronger than before.”

Qassem, for his part, said the instances of support provided by Ayatollah Khamenei and the Islamic Republic’s stances “have undoubtedly had an important role in [realization of] these victories.”

“God willing, we will be able to free [the holy occupied city of] al-Quds from this cancerous tumor through steadfastness and resistance,” the Lebanese official added, referring to the occupying regime.