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Iran’s envoy calls for economic synergy with Russia

Iran and Russia Flags

Although Iran has lived under sweeping international sanctions for decades, the country’s economy has not been ruined, Jalali stated. On the contrary, Tehran has managed to adapt and has insulated its economy such that it is no longer heavily reliant on Western trade, he added.

“The US sanctions were designed to destroy the Iranian economy which used to be dependent on oil and gas exports. We unmasked the plan of our enemies and started developing various areas of the economy and reduced our dependence on energy exports,” he stated.

Two decades ago, Iran’s non-oil exports totaled a mere $1.5 billion, the ambassador noted. Since then, Tehran has managed to diversify away from energy, reaching $54 billion in non-energy exports this year, the official said.

The government has seen the sanctions regime as an opportunity, and currently the Iranian economy is the world’s 16th largest, according to Jalali.

“In many sectors of the industry including science and technology Iran has created full-cycle manufacturing even as Iranian industry just like Russia’s has been dependent on Western technologies. Russia is now shifting away from the West. We started this process forty years ago,” the official added.

He also highlighted the deepening ties between Moscow and Tehran and said that the two economies could complement each other, pointing to increased mutual investment, as well as energy and industrial cooperation.

“This trend is gaining momentum. Our economies could complement each other and eventually create a synergy,” Jalali suggested.

Russia and Iran have been strengthening ties in the face of Western economic sanctions. Bilateral trade turnover has nearly tripled from the $1.6 billion recorded in 2019, reaching $4.6 billion in 2022, according to official data.

Iran’s Kish Island hosts stone climbing tournament

Kish Island hosts stone climbing tournament

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Iranian daily: Social media bans only led to emergence of ‘VPN mafia’

Iran Internet Mobile

Jomhouri-e Eslami daily said the “catastrophic” Internet ban imposed by the government has led to the emergence of a “VPN mafia” in the country while failing to cut the public access to the banned platforms.

“It seems that the authorities of the country’s Internet space must, once for all, define their relationship with the filter-breaking mafia and put an end to these fruitless restrictions that only fill the pockets of certain people,” the daily wrote.

The Iranian government tightened bans on US-based social media giants last year, in the wake of a wave of protests and riots that followed the death in police custody of a young woman.

Officials criticized Whatsapp and Instagram, among other similar platforms, for their “bias” toward the developments in Iran and for promotion of violence on the streets in the country in the course of the unrest.

Tehran says all social media platforms will be free to operate in Iran if they agree to open an office in the country and regulate their activities.

Palestinian youth killed by Israeli forces in Nablus raid

Israeli Forces

Citing local and medical sources, Palestine’s official Wafa news agency reported that Israeli troops stormed the city early on Thursday, triggering confrontations with Palestinians.

The Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS) announced that Khalil Yehya Anis was shot by Israeli forces during the clashes, adding that two others were shot in the limbs and were taken to a hospital in Nablus, one in critical condition.

The occupation forces also raided the Rafidia neighborhood of Nablus, surrounding a four-storey Palestinian-owned house and evicting its residents before demolishing it.

Hours later, the regime’s troops demolished the 150-square-meter home of Usama Tawil, who was arrested on February 13 for allegedly killing an Israeli soldier in the city, displacing his parents and sister.

Israeli forces also fired tear gas canisters at Palestinians who gathered to protest the demolition.

According to PRCS, 170 people were treated at the scene after inhaling tear gas fired by the regime’s forces during the raid.

It also noted that one of its ambulances was hit by a tear gas canister and another was shot at by Israeli troops to prevent it from reaching the area to evacuate the wounded.

Over the past months, Israel has ramped up attacks on Palestinian towns and cities throughout the occupied territories. As a result of these attacks, dozens of Palestinians have lost their lives and many others have been arrested.

Most of the raids have targeted the cities of Nablus and Jenin in the occupied West Bank, where the regime’s forces have been trying to stifle a growing Palestinian resistance against the occupation.

One of the goals of Israel’s raids on various locations across the West Bank has been to raze the structures that belong to the Palestinians, whom the regime accuses of killing Israeli settlers.

As a result of these attacks, over 160 Palestinians, including 28 children, have lost their lives and many others have been arrested in 2023.

US sends fighter jets to Middle East, citing Russia ‘increasingly unsafe’ activity

F22

US Central Command (CENTCOM) said in a release Wednesday that it deployed the F-22 Raptors to demonstrate the country’s ability to “re-posture forces and deliver overwhelming power at a moment’s notice.”

“US Air Force F-22 Raptors deployed to US Central Command’s area of responsibility as part of a multifaceted show of US support and capability in the wake of increasingly unsafe and unprofessional behavior by Russian aircraft in the region,” the release states.

“Russian Forces’ unsafe and unprofessional behavior is not what we expect from a professional air force. Their regular violation of agreed upon airspace deconfliction measures increases the risk of escalation or miscalculation,” Gen. Michael Kurilla, commander of CENTCOM, stated in the release.

“Alongside our partners and allies, we are committed to improving the security and stability in the region,” he added.

The move comes as tensions between the US and Russia have spiked in the past year amid Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

US officials have reportedly said Russia has become more aggressive in the Middle East recently, with Kurilla telling the Senate Armed Services Committee in March that the US has observed a “significant spike” in aggressive Russian flights over Syria.

Russian pilots have also tried to “dogfight” US jets over Syria, possibly attempting to provoke the US into starting an incident.

Amnesty International urges ICC to investigate Israel’s war crimes in Gaza

Israel raid Gaza

The new report concluded that Israel conducted “apparently disproportionate” strikes against men, women and children in Gaza over a five-day period in May, killing 33 Palestinians, including six children.

One Israeli was also killed during the fighting.

During the attacks, the Israeli military damaged 2,943 housing units, including 103 homes which were completely destroyed. More than 1,244 Palestinians have also been displaced.

“Since the root cause of these recurrent unlawful attacks against civilians is Israel’s apartheid system against Palestinians, therefore Amnesty International is renewing its call on the ICC to consider the applicability of the crime against humanity of apartheid within its current formal investigation into the Situation in the State of Palestine,” said the report.

The fighting on 9 May began when the Israeli military killed 15 Palestinians, including three Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) commanders along with their wives and children, in air strikes.

“Those who planned and authorised the attacks anticipated – and likely disregarded – the disproportionate harm to civilians,” noted Amnesty, adding that “intentionally launching disproportionate attacks… is a war crime”.

The PIJ responded to the Israeli attack by firing rockets into Israel.

Amnesty International went on to say that indiscriminate rocket fire by the PIJ killed both Israeli and Palestinian civilians and should also be subject to investigation.

PIJ rockets are “inherently inaccurate and their use against areas populated with civilians is indiscriminate, violates international humanitarian law and should be investigated as possible war crimes”, the report added.

The most significant portions of the report, however, were reserved for Israel.

“Israel’s impunity for the war crimes it repeatedly commits against Palestinians, and for its cruel ongoing 16-year illegal blockade of the Gaza Strip, emboldens further violations and makes injustice chronic,” said Heba Morayef, the Middle East and North Africa regional director at Amnesty International.

“That we have been documenting the same patterns of unlawful killings and destruction over and over again is an indictment of the international community’s failure to hold Israel accountable,” Morayef added.

Speaking to AFP, the Israeli army responded to the report, saying that it “carried out attacks only after a real-time assessment before the attack that the expected collateral damage to civilians and civilian property will not be excessive in relation to the military advantage anticipated”.

Amnesty International has rejected such claims, citing a “pattern of extensive destruction of property” as a result of Israeli strikes that “failed to meet the exceptions under which attacking homes and other civilian objects would be justified”.

During its investigation, Amnesty documented at least three cases of “neighbourhood-wide property destruction”.

In one recorded incident on 13 May, Israel targeted a three-storey building in the neighbourhood of Beit Lahia, in northern Gaza.

The building, home to 22 civilians, including 12 children, was completely destroyed and several other homes in the area were severely damaged. The bombing resulted in the internal displacement of at least 41 civilians.

Amnesty announced that it found no evidence that there was a military objective in destroying the buildings or that any members of the family had any military involvement.

“In our investigation, we heard vivid accounts of bombs obliterating homes, of fathers digging their little girls out from under rubble, of a teenager fatally injured as she lay in bed holding a teddy bear. More frightening than any of this is the near certainty that, unless perpetrators are held to account, these horrifying scenes will be repeated,” statedd Morayef.

A spokesperson for PIJ said the group “welcomes” the report.

“We are doing our part to defend ourselves against the crimes committed by Israel against the Palestinian people,” it added in a statement.

Iran MP: Nuclear deal rival talks likely to resume in near future

Nuclear Negotiations in Vienna

Shahriyar Heydari, who sits on the Parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Commission, said, in an interview with Shafaghna, that the latest regional developments and Iran’s cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) indicate that the talks on revitalizing the nuclear deal will resume either in Vienna or a third country.

The parties to the nuclear deal, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), expressed readiness to re-join the negotiations, he added.

The lawmaker said a series of factors such as the US elections, as well the reservations of Iran and other negotiating parties had delayed the revival of the JCPOA.

“Despite the fact that we do not have direct negotiations with America, this country has tried to have an active presence on the sidelines of the JCPOA,” he said.

“America demanded direct negotiations with Iran, which was not rejected. We requested negotiations in the framework of the JCPOA, and after the JCPOA [bears fruit], if America regrets its past, we are also open to the establishment of embassies,” he claimed.

One dead, five missing as severe flooding hits Iran’s NW regions

Iran Flood

Hassan Molaei, the governor of Garmi County, said the floods inflicted heavy damage on the facilities and infrastructure of roads in the region on Wednesday.

“All city officials and crisis management authorities are on full alert so that we can stand by the citizens,” the official said.

Two people have also been wounded in the natural disaster, said Molaei, adding that a search and rescue operation is ongoing in the region to find the missing and provide aid to those in need.

Saudi foreign minister ‘due in Iran on Saturday for high-level talks, mission reopenning’

Foreign Minister of Saudi Arabia Faisal bin Farhan Al-Saud

The top Saudi diplomat and his delegation will visit Tehran on Saturday to hold a series of talks with senior Iranian officials, Tasnim news agency reported.

Sources had earlier said the embassy of Saudi Arabia in Tehran will officially reopen during the visit.

In early June, the two top diplomats held a meeting in South Africa on the process of restoring ties and boosting bilateral and regional cooperation between Tehran and Riyadh.

Iran officially reopened its embassy in Saudi Arabia on June 7.

Iran and Saudi Arabia clinched a deal on March 10 to restore diplomatic relations and re-open embassies and other missions after seven years.

Oman says Iran, US ‘close’ on prisoner swap

Evin Prison

Albusaidi said in an interview Wednesday he senses “seriousness” on the part of both Washington and Tehran as their negotiators try to salvage the 2015 nuclear deal under which Iran agreed to curb its nuclear activity in exchange for sanctions relief.

“I can say they are close,” Albusaidi said of a potential prisoner agreement.

“This is probably a question of technicalities,” he added.

“They need to have a framework [and] a timeframe of how this should be orchestrated,” he said of the frozen funds, noting, “I think they’re ironing those things out.”

Albusaidi also stated that there is a “positive atmosphere” surrounding the nuclear issue, adding that Muscat believes the Iranian leadership is serious about reaching an agreement.

“As long as the other side also reciprocates in good faith, they’re willing to do this,” he continued.

In mid-March, Iran announced a deal reached with the United States for the exchange of prisoners between the two countries is a purely humanitarian issue, which should not be politicized.

“From the viewpoint of the Islamic Republic of Iran, the issue of exchanging prisoners is a completely humanitarian issue, which must not be subject to political games,” Foreign Ministry Spokesman Nasser Kanaani said.

The spokesperson added, “Since last March, a written agreement has been signed [between the two sides] through an intermediary with regard to exchanging prisoners.”

“An official representative introduced by the American side has also signed the agreement, but the deal has not been implemented so far by the US administration under various excuses,” he stated.

“Indirect messages have been exchanged [between Iran and the US] during recent weeks to update that [agreement],” Kanaani continued.

Iran has repeatedly urged Washington to release Iranian nationals who have been taken hostage on baseless charges of bypassing US sanctions, decrying Washington for tying the humanitarian issue with the revival of the 2015 nuclear deal. Tehran has stressed it is ready for a prisoner exchange with the United States based on the agreement and independent of the nuclear deal, which Washington unilaterally abandoned in May 2018 despite Tehran’s full and strict compliance.