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Azerbaijan to stop issuing visas to Iranians at airport from June 23

Heydar Aliyev International Airport

The Iranian Embassy in Baku said the decision was announced by the Azeri Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

It added that Iranian nationals who want to travel to the Republic of Azerbaijan need to visit the Azeri diplomatic missions in Iran to get their visas or apply for them on ww.mfa.gov.az, which is a website launched by the Azeri Ministry of Foreign Affairs for this purpose.

Relations between Tehran and Baku soured several months ago after a man attacked the Azeri Embassy in Tehran. Iran arrested the attacker, saying the man did the attack on a personal motive.

Other developments also increased tensions between Iran and Azerbaijan including Baku’s push to carve out a chunk of land for its Zangezur route that would obliterate Iran’s border with Armenia.

Tehran objected to this plan, vowing to not allow any change in the region’s geopolitical map.

Iranian pres.: Tehran seeks good ties with all countries

Ebrahim Raisi

Speaking upon his return from Latin America on Friday, Raisi said any country which would seek to have good and constructive ties with Tehran with a view to the interests of both sides, there are no obstacles to such a decision.

He however warned that any government that would seek enmity toward Iran, then Tehran’s policy is to resist hostility.

The Iranian president noted that any move by his administration is aimed at safeguarding the country’s national interests.

Raisi also spoke about his visit to the Latin American countries of Venezuela, Nicaragua and Cuba.

He said that during the 3-leg tour, the Iranian delegation signed 35 deals in such fields as energy, industry and mining in the countries.

Raisi also said the Iranian delegation accompanying him also concluded 5 knowledge-based contracts there worth 90 million dollars.

The president added that if the agreements go into force, positive developments will happen.

He said Iran and Cuba also agreed to form an working group to start technological cooperation, underling that the Latin American nation has a good capability in bio-technology.

Raisi stressed that South American countries are rich in natural resources.

The president further hailed the Latin American nations for their resistance against the bullying powers over the past decades and said Iran and those countries are on the same page in this regard.

Raisi visited Venezuela, Nicaragua and Cuba at the invitation of the presidents of those countries.

Iran’s ex-nuclear chief: Tehran’s success in producing 20% nuclear fuel shocked West

Iran nuclear program

Salehi added that when Iran said it was able to produce the fuel, the Western countries described thas as a bluff on part of Tehran. According to the former director of the AEOI, the Western states also set dozens of conditions for supplying the nuclear fuel to Iran and also said it would take 2.5 years for them to give it to the Islamic Republic.

Salehi stressed that after the Iranian parliament approved the strategic action law and required the government to produce 120 kilograms of 20% nuclear fuel within a year, the AEOI managed to produce 400 kilograms of it during that period of time.

He however noted that for all its acceptance of some restrictions on its nuclear program under the 2015 nuclear deal, otherwise known as the JCPOA, Iran did not sustain any loss by entering into the agreement.

Iran police engage drug smugglers in southeast, seize huge narcotics cargo

Iran Police

General Doustali Jalilian, a local police official, said law enforcement units in the province were tipped off that smugglers were transferring a huge cargo of drugs in the mountainous regions of Sistan and Baluchestan.

As police arrived on the scene, the smugglers opened fire and tried to escape, but police commandoes returned fire and killed two of the traffickers on the spot. Other bandits abandoned their vehicles and fled into the rocky regions, he explained.

General Jalilian said two smugglers were arrested. Two vehicles as well as a cache of Kalashnikov weapons, ammunition and wireless devices were seized in the operation.

Meanwhile, police confiscated 1.8 tons of narcotics including opium and Hashish.

Iranian media said a member of the local security personnel was also killed in the skirmishes.

Iran has been one of the main conduits for illegal drugs, which mainly originate in Afghanistan and are destined for markets in Europe and in the Persian Gulf region.

Iran has long been at the forefront of the global fight against narcotics and drawn the praise of the United Nations and the entire global community for its successful campaign against drug trafficking.

Around 4,000 people have died in Iran’s fight against drug traffickers over the last four decades.

Large hail falls harm farms, cars in northwestern Iranian town

Snow whitens Iranian town in spring

More in pictures:

Cuba president says will ‘definitely’ visit Iran by year end

Ebrahim Raisi and Miguel Díaz-Canel

Meeting with Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, the Cuban head of state said a visit to Iran had been planned much earlier but was put on hold due to some reasons, including the coronavirus pandemic.

He said the Iranian president’s visit to Cuba, at a time when the Latin American country is subjected to harsh US sanctions, strengthens the Cuban nation’s faith in Iran.

The friendship between Iran and Cuba is increasing day by day and it will definitely lead to an increase in political, commercial and economic relations between the two countries, Díaz-Canel added.

Díaz-Canel condemned the cruel US sanctions on Iran and expressed Cuba’s readiness to help the Islamic Republic neutralize the bans.

Addressing Raisi, he said, “The message of your trip to Latin America is that countries want to live in a new environment far from what imperialism wants to impose on nations. We are united and we will not back down from our beliefs in any way.”

Iran, Cuba ink 6 cooperation agreements

Iran and Cuba

The MoUs were focused on judicial issues, political cooperation as well as on customs and information technology, according to a report by Iran’s official IRNA news agency.

Along with Raisi, Cuban president Miguel Díaz-Canel watched on as ministers and senior officials of Iran and Cuba signed the deals in the Palace of the Revolution in the Cuban capital Havana.

The agreements came less than a day after Raisi’s delegation signed three similar cooperation deals with officials in Nicaragua. Those agreements were in the fields of judicial cooperation, trade and supply of medical equipment, according to the IRNA.

Unconfirmed reports by Iranian media outlets suggested Tehran had secured tens of billions worth of economic and trade deals during Raisi’s four-day tour of Latin America where he has visited Venezuela, Nicaragua and Cuba.

The tour is part of Iran’s efforts to diversify its trade partners and to join ranks with countries that have been targeted by foreign sanctions.

Raeisi had said before leaving Tehran for Latin America earlier this week that Iran views relations with independent countries of the region as “strategic”.

Iranian and western officials say Tehran and Washington in talks to ease tensions

Iran US Flags

These steps would be cast as an “understanding” rather than an agreement requiring review by the U.S. Congress, where many oppose giving Iran benefits.

Having failed to revive a 2015 Iran nuclear deal, Washington hopes to restore some limits on Iran to keep it from getting a nuclear weapon that could “threaten Israel and trigger a regional arms race.”

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.

The U.S. government has dismissed reports it is seeking an interim deal, using carefully constructed denials that leave open the possibility of a less formal “understanding” that could avoid congressional review.

State Department spokesman Matt Miller denied there was any deal with Iran.

However, he said Washington wanted Tehran to “de-escalate tensions and curb its nuclear programme, cease support for regional proxy groups that carry out attacks, halt support for Russia’s war on Ukraine and release detained U.S. citizens.”

“We continue to use diplomatic engagements to pursue all of these goals,” he added, without giving details.

The spokesman for Iran’s Foreign Ministry, Nasser Kanaani, has also rejected reports of an interim agreement with the U.S. as media speculation.

He told reporters on Monday that no framework other than the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) is being considered and all reports on an interim deal are politicized and aimed at undermining the current talks.

An Iranian official stated: “Call it whatever you want, whether a temporary deal, an interim deal, or a mutual understanding – both sides want to prevent further escalation.”

In the first instance, “that will involve prisoner exchange and unblocking part of Iran’s frozen assets”, he continued.

Further steps might include U.S. sanctions waivers for Iran to export oil in return for ceasing 60% uranium enrichment and greater Iranian cooperation with the U.N. nuclear watchdog, he added.

“I’d call it a cooling-down understanding,” said a Western official on condition of anonymity, adding there had been more than one round of indirect talks in Oman between U.S. National Security Council official Brett McGurk and Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator, Ali Bagheri Kani.

U.S. Special Envoy for Iran Rob Malley has also met Iran’s ambassador to the U.N. after months of Iran refusing direct contact.

The Western official stated the idea was to create a status quo acceptable for all, getting Iran to avoid the Western redline of enriching to 90% purity, commonly viewed as weapons grade, and possibly even to “pause” its enrichment at 60%.

In addition to the 60% pause, both sides are discussing more Iranian cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency and not installing more advanced centrifuges in return for the “substantial transfer” of Iranian funds held abroad, the official continued.

The official did not specify whether the pause meant Iran would commit not to enrich above 60% or whether it would stop enriching to 60% itself.

The order of the steps and how they might relate to a release of three detained U.S. citizens held by Iran was also unclear.

Officials have previously stated freeing them might be connected to the release of frozen funds.

Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson said on Monday the two nations could exchange prisoners soon if Washington showed goodwill, adding there were talks through intermediaries, without giving details.

The Western official said the key U.S. objective was to keep the nuclear situation from worsening and to avoid a potential clash between Israel and Iran.

“If (the) Iranians miscalculate, the potential for a strong Israeli response is something that we want to avoid,” he added.

Iran has cautioned the United States that the window of opportunity for an agreement on reviving the nuclear deal will not remain open forever, urging Washington to adopt a constructive approach to salvage the accord.

Iran showed to the world the peaceful nature of its nuclear program by signing the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) with six world states — namely the U.S., Germany, France, Britain, Russia and China. But, Washington’s unilateral withdrawal in May 2018 and its subsequent re-imposition of sanctions against Tehran left the future of the deal in limbo.

Negotiations between the parties to the landmark agreement kicked off in Vienna in April 2021, with the intention of bringing the U.S. back into the deal and putting an end to its “maximum pressure” campaign against Iran.

The discussions, however, have been at a standstill since August 2022 due to Washington’s insistence on not lifting all of the anti-Iran sanctions and offering the necessary guarantees that it will not exit the agreement again.

World pledges over $6bn for Syrians at EU conference

Syrian Refugee

The pledges include nearly $5bn for 2023 and $1.1bn for 2024 and beyond to support those inside Syria and other neighbouring countries hosting Syrian refugees.

The European Union pledged nearly $4.2bn in grants, of which $2.3bn would come from the European Commission and nearly $1.9bn from EU governments.

The UN warns that only a tenth of the financing needed has been secured for 2023.

“As the biggest donor for the Syrian people, the EU needs to – and we want to – make sure that their situation remains high on the international agenda,” said Josep Borrell, the EU’s high representative for foreign affairs.

“The conference is not only the biggest annual pledging event for Syria, it is also a platform to reiterate the commitment of the international community to an overall and comprehensive political solution to the conflict that is in its 13th year,” he added.

Since 2011, more than 14 million Syrians have fled their homes and about 6.8 million are displaced in the country, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees has announced.

“We cannot afford to lose yet another generation. Syria should no longer be a place from which people are running away,” Dan Stoenescu, EU head of mission to Syria, stated.

In February, the death toll of the devastating earthquake in Turkey and Syria topped 50,000 people. While it was easy to get support into Turkey, there were numerous obstacles in getting aid into northern Syria.

The region, largely controlled by rebel groups opposed to the government of President Bashar al-Assad, had already been dependent on aid agencies to a large extent for many years, with its people enduring poverty, homelessness and repeated bombing campaigns by the government and its allies.

The earthquakes exacerbated an already fragile situation, destroying much of the crumbling housing and infrastructure of the region as well as the routes that already existed for aid convoys.

Arab Parliament calls on world body to end silence on Israeli atrocities

Israeli raid on Gaza

The legislative body of the Arab League further slammed the Israeli regime’s continued expansion of settlements as “unlawful and tantamount to flagrant violations of international law and resolutions of the international community.”

The Arab Parliament also called on Washington to take “immediate measures to stop Israeli plans seeking to expropriate large swathes of the Palestinian land, undermining the [so-called] two-state solution.”

It went on to call for “serious” consideration of the so-called “peace process” and engagement in “real” negotiations that would lead to ending the Israeli occupation within a certain time frame based on the UN resolutions and the 2002 Arab Peace Initiative — which conditions normalizing ties with the Israeli regime on the establishment of an independent, sovereign Palestinian state within the 1967 borders — but has never been realized.

Emboldened by the persisting US support, the Tel Aviv regime has brazenly expanded its unlawful settlement construction efforts, in sheer defiance of the UN Security Council (UNSC) Resolution 2334, which unequivocally condemned the establishment of settlements in the West Bank and East al-Quds as a gross violation of international law.

The vast majority of the international community considers such settlements in the occupied territories as illegal.

More than 600,000 occupying settlers live in over 230 settlements built since the 1967 Israeli occupation of the West Bank and East al-Quds.

The UN Security Council has issued multiple resolutions condemning the Israeli regime’s settlement activities in these occupied territories.

Palestinians insist on having the West Bank as part of a future independent state with East al-Quds as its capital.

The last round of Israeli-Palestinian talks collapsed in 2014. Among the major sticking points in those negotiations was the Tel Aviv regime’s continued illegal settlement expansion.

Meanwhile, Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh has lambasted the Israeli regime’s brutal military actions in the West Bank, insisting that the moves amount to re-occupation of the occupied region.

He made the remarks in a meeting with Japan’s Senior Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs Shigeo Yamada and Japan’s Ambassador for Palestinian Affairs Yoichi Nakashima in the central West Bank city of Ramallah on Wednesday.

Shtayyeh further emphasized that the atrocities perpetrated by the Israeli regime across Palestinian territories, including daily incursions, extrajudicial killings, detention raids, encroachments upon the al-Aqsa Mosque compound and land grab to make room for colonial settlement expansion and settler colonialism, all amount to re-occupation of the West Bank.

He also noted that Tel Aviv is reneging on the commitments and agreements it has signed, blocking Palestinians from holding elections in al-Quds.

The Palestinian prime minister also called for exerting further pressure on the Israeli regime to compel its compliance with all of its signed agreements, particularly allowing the holding of elections across the occupied Palestinian territories, including al-Quds, as well as halting all deductions from the Palestinian tax revenues and releasing all frozen funds.

He finally hailed Japan for its unwavering support for Palestine and maintaining distinguished bilateral ties with the Arab nation.