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Iranian MP accuses govt. of seeking to “engineer” March 2024 parliamentary elections

Iran Parliament

Ehsan Arkani, a member of the 90 Principle Commission of parliament, objected to a directive issued by the Interior Ministry that would impose restrictions on the presence of MPs in pursuit of projects and problems at constituencies under the pretext of the closeness of the voting.

Arkani added that common sense would reject this argument by the administration.

He said it seems that some quarters are bent on taking revenge after the leader of the Islamic Revolution stressed the need for a revolutionary and dynamic parliament.

Arkani added that the push for preventing restricting lawmakers is aimed at weakening their role.

Wall Street Journal reporter detention appeal denied by Moscow court

Evan Gershkovich

Gershkovich appeared in court Thursday for a hearing in his appeal against a ruling to extend his detention until August 30.

He was first arrested in March on espionage charges – the first time an American journalist had been arrested on charges of spying in Russia since the Cold War.

The US is “extremely disappointed” by a Russian court’s decision to reject Evan Gershkovich’s appeal against his pre-trial detention, ambassador Lynne Tracy told reporters outside Moscow City Court on Thursday.

“This was a procedural hearing, appealing the conditions of his continued detention and we were extremely disappointed by the denial of his appeal,” Tracy said.

Tracy said she “could not speak with Evan directly at the courthouse today,” and blasted Russia’s denial of US diplomats’ requests for consular access to him.

“Failing to comply with its obligations under the consular convention enforced between our two countries, Russia has denied the US embassy’s requests for formal consular access on three occasions since I last visited Evan in April,” she continued, adding, “Nonetheless, today, in the courtroom, Evan continued to show remarkable strength and resiliency in these very difficult circumstances.”

Gershkovich, 31, was arrested in March on espionage charges, which he and the Wall Street Journal vehemently deny.

On May 23, his detention was extended until at least August 30 while he awaits trial.

Tracy added: “Despite Russian officials’ public assertions about Evan’s activities, let me reiterate the US government’s firm position. The charges against him are baseless. He is an innocent journalist who was carrying out journalistic activities and has been wrongly detained.”

“Such hostage diplomacy is unacceptable and we call on the Russian Federation to release him as well as Paul Whelan, another US citizen who has been wrongfully detained. And we call for that release to occur immediately,” she said.

Whelan, a former US marine, was detained at a Moscow hotel in December 2018 by Russian authorities who alleged he was involved in an intelligence operation. He was sentenced to 16 years in prison on an espionage charge he vehemently denies.

Iran FM, UAE chief call for promoting trade ties

Hossein Amirabdollahian and Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian, at the beginning of his visit to the United Arab Emirates, met with the UAE President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan on Thursday morning.

In the meeting the two sides exchanged views over various issues pertaining to bilateral ties in the political, economic, trade, cultural and consular fields.

They expressed pleasure with the process of the expansion of the Iran-UAE ties.

The two officials also had consensus about the necessary coordination, planning and joint actions aimed at promoting mutual cooperation specially in economic and trade spheres.

The Iranian foreign minister and the UAE president also agreed to use initiatives for the improvement of the regional cooperation within the interests of the countries and nations of the region.

Some regional and international topics were also discussed during the meeting.

The top Iranian diplomat invited the UAE president to visit Iran on behalf of the Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi.

Seheikh Mohammed bin Zayed also welcomed the Iranian president invitation and voiced readiness for the trip, and in turn, invited President Raisi to visit the UAE.

IRGC commander: Iran has sophisticated technologies in defense industry

Amir Ali Hajizadeh

Brigadier General Amir Ali Hajizadeh made the remarks among the students of Mazandaran University, northern Iran.

Hajizadeh ruled out outside assistance in the progress of the country, including in the defense industry, adding in order to make progress we should look to the domestic capabilities and might.

Referring to the recent unveiling of the Iranian-made hypersonic missile, dubbed “Fattah”, the military commander added we might increase the range of the missile to 2,000 kilometers.

General Hajizadeh also said in the previous Iranian governments, the officials used to protest the missile tests and military drills, so the foreigners, witnessing the protests inside the country, followed suit, but today that is not the case.

Iran’s envoy rejects ‘biased and unfair’ UN human rights report

Iran Protests

Bahraini made the remarks on Wednesday in an address to the 53rd session of the Human Rights Council, during which UN Deputy High Commissioner for Human Rights Nada al-Nashif presented the secretary general’s latest report on Iran.

Covering the period from August 2022 to April 2023, the report alleged that there is “a worsening human rights landscape in Iran coupled with the chronic lack of meaningful and effective avenues for the population to voice grievances or indeed to seek remedies.”

Bahraini rejected the report as “politically motivated, biased and unfair,” arguing that it “did not contribute to the promotion and protection of human rights.”

He also dismissed the claim about Iran’s “limited” implementation of recommendations of human rights mechanisms, saying such accusations “highlighted the biased and one-sided opinions of the report.”

“Iran was committed to promoting and protecting human rights, and interacted and cooperated with the United Nations human rights mechanisms,” the envoy asserted.

He further criticized the report for turning a blind eye to the illegal sanctions imposed on the Iranian nation.

“The unilateral measures enacted on Iran impacted all areas of the Iranian people’s lives. The imposition of these measures against the Iranian nation was a crime against humanity, which was neglected by the report,” Bahraini added.

The report claimed that last year’s foreign-backed riots in Iran, which broke out after the death of young woman Mahsa Amini, brought to the fore issues such as “discrimination in law and practice against women and girls as well as minorities.”

The ambassador said the allegation “painted an incorrect picture on the situation of human rights in Iran.”

He also questioned the report’s sources, saying, it “should not utilize fake news published by terrorist organizations.”

“Out of more than 130 sources in the report’s footnotes, less than 30 were cited from inside sources; more were from anti-Iranian outlets. Unfortunately, the claims made by the report regarding the recent riots in the country contained inappropriate terms, often used by media outlets which reported against Iran,” he continued.

EU’s Mora says held ‘intense talks’ with Iran’s Bagheri Kani

Iran's Bagheri and EU's Mora

Mora made the comment in a twitter post, a day after he began talks with Bagheri Kani in Qatar’s capital Doha.

“Intense talks yesterday and today with Vice Minister Bagheri Kani in Doha on a range of difficult bilateral, regional and international issues, including the way forward on the JCPOA,” he wrote on Twitter.

The JCPOA, or the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, is the official name of the 2015 Iran nuclear deal which the Islamic Republic clinched with the EU as well as the five permanent members of the UN Security Council, namely the US, the UK, France, Britain, China, Russia plus Germany.

The JCPOA was thrown into disarray in May 2018 when the US withdrew from it and reinstated the anti-Iran sanctions lifted under the accord.

Iran began talks with the remaining signatories in April 2021. Those talks however stalled since last year over what Iran has called the lack of a political will from the Western side to abide by its commitments and lift the sanctions in a verifiable manner.

Earlier on Wednesday, Bagheri Kani said that his meeting with Mora was serious and constructive.

The Iranian deputy foreign minister added that he and the EU official had talked over a wide range of issues, including removal of US sanctions as part of efforts to salvage the 2015 agreement.

Israel plans to authorize 1,000 new homes in West Bank

Israeli Settlement

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced on Wednesday that he and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich “agreed to move ahead immediately” with the planning. No further timetable was provided.

“Our response to terror is to hit it hard and build in our land,” a statement from their meeting said.

It is unclear if the 1,000 units are from the 4,560 already proposed across the occupied West Bank or if they are entirely separate. The Jerusalem Post reported that the units are separate from the previously proposed ones.

The United Nations secretary general Antonio Guterres stated previously that proposed settlements would further diminish efforts to create a contiguous and viable Palestinian state.

“Settlements are a flagrant violation of international law,” he continued, adding, “The expansion of these illegal settlements is a significant driver of tensions and violence and deepens humanitarian needs.”

On Tuesday, four Israeli settlers were killed in a shooting in the occupied West Bank, and four others were left wounded.

The Magen David Adom emergency services announced the shooting took place near the illegal Israeli settlement of Eli in the central West Bank.

Two gunmen were identified by Palestinian media as Muhannad Faleh Shehadeh and Khaled Mustafa Sabah, both of whom are from the village of Orif, south of Nablus in the occupied West Bank.

On Wednesday, Israel killed three Palestinians in a drone strike in the occupied West Bank, the first aerial attack in the occupied West Bank in over a decade.

A new resolution gives practically all control over planning approval in the West Bank to Smotrich, who is himself a settler and a fierce proponent of settlement expansion.

The decision, which takes immediate effect, speeds up the process of expanding West Bank settlements and retroactively legalises settlements under Israeli law.

All Israeli settlements beyond the 1967 borders are illegal under international law.

On Sunday, the US State Department announced that it was “deeply troubled” by Israeli moves aimed at expanding settlement construction in the occupied West Bank.

Washington branded the Israeli move as an “obstacle to peace”.

“As has been long-standing policy, the US opposes such unilateral actions that make a two-state solution more difficult to achieve and are an obstacle to peace,” the statement continued.

UN envoy says Afghan women ban makes Taliban recognition “nearly impossible”

Taliban Women

Roza Otunbayeva told the UN Security Council on Wednesday that the Taliban have asked to be recognised by the UN and its member nations, “but at the same time, they act against the key values expressed in the United Nations Charter”.

“In my regular discussions with the de facto authorities, I am blunt about the obstacles they have created for themselves by the decrees and restrictions they have enacted, in particular against women and girls,” Otunbayeva told the Security Council.

“We have conveyed to them that as long as these decrees are in place, it is nearly impossible that their government will be recognised by members of the international community,” Otunbayeva added.

Afghanistan’s Taliban government is not officially recognised by any foreign country or international organisation since seizing power in August 2021 as United States and NATO forces were in the final weeks of withdrawing from the country after two decades of war.

The Taliban initially promised a more moderate rule than during their first stint in power from 1996 to 2001, but have since started to enforce restrictions on women and girls, including barring women from most jobs and public places such as parks, baths and gyms. Girls are also banned from education beyond sixth grade.

Despite appeals to the Taliban, Otunbayeva reported no change to the restrictions on women and girls, including an April ban on Afghan women working for the UN.

Otunbayeva stated the Taliban had given her no explanation for the ban, “and no assurances that it will be lifted”, according to the UN News site.

“It is also clear that these decrees are highly unpopular among the Afghan population. They cost the Taliban both domestic and international legitimacy while inflicting suffering on half of their population and damaging the economy,” Otunbayeva continued, according to UN News.

The UN remains “steadfast” that female national staff will not be replaced by male staff “as some Taliban authorities have suggested”, she added.

In late April, the Security Council unanimously approved a resolution calling on the Taliban to swiftly reverse the increasingly harsh constraints imposed on women and girls and condemned the ban on Afghan women working for the UN, calling it “unprecedented in the history of the United Nations”.

In her frank political assessment, the UN envoy also told council members that the Taliban regime “remains insular and autocratic”, with “an unaccountable central authority” and an all-male government almost entirely from its Pashtun and rural base.

And while the country’s economy is currently stable in terms of inflation and exchange rates, which the UN envoy said was due in part to a reduction in corruption, severe household poverty is a concern with 58 percent of the population “struggling to satisfy basic needs”, UN News reported.

Concluding her address to the council, Otunbayeva said the UN in Afghanistan will continue to engage with the country’s Taliban rulers, but noted that much more could be done if restrictions on women were lifted.

“We could do much more, however, if the Taliban rescinded its punishing restrictions on its female population,” she said, according to UN News.

US House moving to make Iran sanctions permanent

US House

Reps. Michelle Steel, R-Calif., and Susie Lee, D-Nev., alongside committee chairman Michael McCaul, R-Texas, are the muscle behind the Solidifying Iran Sanctions Act (SISA) that is heading to a full vote on the House floor.

The bill would make permanent the 1996 economic sanctions against Iran.

The measure passed out of committee unanimously by voice vote and will be headed to the full House floor for a vote.

Tehran has repeatedly stated that it has no intention of developing nuclear weapons, with Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei even issuing religious edicts against the atom bomb and other weapons of mass destruction.

Iranian officials have blasted the Western states for their double-standard policies on terrorism, and said that thousands of Iranians have fallen victim to terrorist acts.

Tehran says Washington does not seem to have the necessary political will for continuing the negotiations in Vienna to revive the nuclear deal, officially called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), urging the United States to drop its addiction to sanctions.

3 Palestinians killed in Israel drone raid on West Bank

Israel Drone

The official Palestinian news agency Wafa reported three people were killed late Wednesday in the attack. The air raid occurred in the Jenin refugee camp and set the car on fire, according to video circulated on social media.

In a statement, Israel’s military said it “identified a terrorist cell inside a suspicious vehicle after the cell carried out a shooting adjacent to the town of Jalamah”.

Jalamah, at the northern end of the occupied West Bank, is just a few kilometres from Jenin where an Israeli raid killed seven Palestinians on Monday.

It claimed the targets had been responsible for a number of shooting attacks on Jewish settlements. The identities of the occupants in the car were not immediately known.

“Following the identification of the terrorist cell, an [Israel military] UAV fired toward the cell and thwarted them,” it added.

The rare drone raid in the occupied West Bank marked an escalation in Israel’s continuing campaign against Palestinians in the area.

Hamas spokesman Hazem Qassem said what he called the “assassination crime” would not go unpunished.

“The use of planes by the Zionist army to assassinate our people is a grave escalation,” Qassem added.

A statement from the Jenin Brigades, which includes fighters from different Palestinian factions, said two of the men killed belonged to the Palestinian Islamic Jihad armed group and one was from Fatah.

Islamic Jihad announced Israel must now await “punishment” after its “foolish act to target three of our fighters by drones and detaining their bodies”.

The long string of violent incidents in the region over the past year and a half has shown no sign of relenting.