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FMs of Iran, Russia, Syria and Turkey likely to meet in May: Ankara

Mevlut Cavusoglu

Cavusoglu stated on Friday that Iranian, Russian, Syrian and top diplomat may hold a meeting on issues of the normalization of relations between Ankara and Damascus in early May.

“Several dates were suggested and we said which were convenient for us. Now we are waiting for an answer from other countries and then we will wait an invitation from Russia,” he stated in an interview with the TRT television channel.

“With a high degree of probability, a meeting between foreign ministers will be held in Moscow in the first ten days of May,” the senior diplomat added.

Ayatollah Khamenei says workers’ quality of life must be boosted

Ayatollah Khamenei

During a meeting with workers, members of worker unions, and officials on Saturday, Ayatollah Khamenei said wealth was directly related to working and striving.

“In Islam’s view, income should come from trying and working and making efforts; therefore, easy money and wealth, brokering, smuggling, bribery, renting… is against the Quranic logic and God’s orders,” he said.

Ayatollah Khamenei stressed the necessity of fighting domestic corruption and said failing to do so would take away one’s courage to stand up to a bullying governments like that of the United States.

He said protests by workers were justified and called them “helpful to the government and the system.”

“Wherever pertinent apparatuses, like the Judiciary, looked into the matter, they saw that the workers were right,” he said.

Ayatollah Khamenei also hailed workers for separating themselves from the enemy and disallowing ill-wishers from abusing protests and protest gatherings.

Earlier during the meeting, Iran’s Minister of Labor and Social Affairs Solat Mortazavi gave a briefing on the ministry’s plans in the area of employments, training workers, developing the cooperative sector, etc.

Iran secures safe exit of 65 nationals from crisis-torn Sudan with Saudi help

Sudan

Nasser Kanaani said Saturday that the Foreign Ministry had been pursuing the safe exit of Iranian nationals from Sudan since the onset of the crisis in the African country earlier this month.

“Necessary arrangements had been made for the transfer of 65 Iranian nationals from Khartoum to Sudan Port and then their departure for Jeddah port” in Saudi Arabia,” he said.

The official thanked Saudi Arabia and the Sudanese government for facilitating Iran’s efforts to pave the way for safe transfer of its citizens.

Hundreds of people have been killed and thousands more wounded in weeks of fighting between rival factions of the Sudanese military.

Govt. official: Iran’s Raisi set to make official visit to Syria

Iran Syria Presidents Raisi and Assad

In a tweet, Mohammad Jamshidi, the president’s deputy chief of staff, highlighted the achievements of the Iran-led resistance movement over the past years, saying, “West Asia underwent a 12-year-long period of highly tense geopolitical developments, in which Iran emerged as the definitive winner and the US as the definitive loser.”

“The celebration for the victory of the resistance will be held during Ayatollah Raisi’s visit to Syria,” he added.

Earlier, Syria’s al-Watan newspaper reported that Raisi will travel to Syria on Wednesday, which will make it the first time an Iranian president visits the country since the outbreak of foreign-sponsored militancy in the country in early 2011.

The report said Iran and Syria would sign a set of agreements aimed at promoting their bilateral relations, especially in the economic sector.

Tehran effectively helped the Syrian army, through advisory assistance, to cleanse almost all parts of the country of a myriad of terror groups, many of which had the support of the US and its allies.

VP says submitted proposal to Iran govt. for legal talks with US on damages of sanctions

Iran US Flags

Speaking to ISNA, Mohammad Dehghan said the best way to determine the amount of the damages caused by US actions against Iran is “via legal negotiations between Iran and the United States in the dispute resolution court between the two sides.”

Based on a ruling passed by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague, the amount of damages should be determined during two years of negotiations.

“Our proposal [submitted to the government] is to pursue these legal negotiations in the Iran-US dispute settlement court, which was established in The Hague 40 years ago. There are three arbitrators from Iran, three from America and three other arbitrators, who are appointed by the Supreme Court of the Netherlands,” he explained.

In late March, the ICJ ordered the US to pay compensation to Iranian companies after ruling that Washington had illegally allowed courts to freeze their assets.

The United Nations’ top court, also known as the World Court, did not specify the exact amount in its ruling but said it would be determined in a later phase.

The case was initially brought by Tehran against Washington in 2016 for allegedly breaching a 1955 friendship treaty.

‘Red’ disappears from Iran’s Covid-19 map as coronavirus recedes

COVID in Iran

The updated map, published on Friday, showed the number of ‘red’ cities reached zero, down from 4 a week earlier.

Meanwhile, the number of ‘orange’ cities with a ‘moderate risk’ of infection with the virus went down from 39 to 9.

There are now 213 ‘yellow’ or ‘low risk’ cities, down from 235, while the situation in 226 cities returned to ‘blue’ or ‘normal,’ up from 170.

On Friday, the Health Ministry said it registered 234 Covid-19 patients within 24 hours, and that 12 people lost their lives to the respiratory disease.

Putin signs decree introducing life sentences for treason

Vladimir Putin

The decree was posted on the Kremlin website. Lawmakers had already voted to boost the longest sentences for treason to life, up from 20 years.

Legislators also approved raising the maximum sentence for carrying out “a terrorist act” – defined as a deed which endangered lives and was aimed at destabilising Russia – to 20 years, from 15 years at present.

Those found guilty of sabotage could also go to jail for 20 years, up from 15, while people convicted of “international terrorism” could be sentenced to life, up from 12 years. The decree did not explain what “international terrorism” is.

Russia announced such laws are required to protect the country from infiltration by Ukraine and Western intelligence agencies.

Putin said at a meeting with the Council of Legislators on Friday that Russia won’t isolate itself, but rather will expand relations with friendly countries.

“We are not going to isolate ourselves. On the contrary, we will expand pragmatic, equitable, mutually beneficial relations that are nothing less than partnerships with friendly countries in Eurasia, Africa, Latin America,” he added.

“In the United States, by the way, we have a lot of people that think along the same lines as we do. Same with Europe. The elites behave differently. But we know that the elites in these countries are far from always conducting the policies that benefit the interest of their own people. It will backfire on them,” Putin went on to say.

He stated Russia is ready to work with the foreign partners, global companies and corporations that “value their business reputation and want to cooperate with Russia.”

He expressed hope that the multiple meetings that the lawmakers in attendance will hold with their foreign counterparts will serve to strengthen ties and mutual trust between countries.

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 430

Russia Ukraine War

Ukrainian city under ‘intense artillery fire’, power cut

Russian occupational authorities in southern Ukraine said on Saturday that Ukrainian forces were subjecting the city of Novaya Kakhovka to “intense artillery fire” that had cut off electricity.

“Novaya Kakhovka and settlements around the district are under very intense artillery fire from the armed forces of Ukraine,” the city’s Russian-installed authorities said on Telegram.

It added that the shelling left the city “without power.”


On lethal aid to Ukraine, South Korean leader says Seoul considering its options

South Korea’s president, Yoon Suk-yeol, has said it is necessary to ensure Russia’s invasion of Ukraine does not succeed and that Seoul is considering its options when it comes to providing lethal aid to Kyiv.

Reuters reported that Yoon stated that the Russian invasion was a violation of international law and the rights of Ukrainians.

“We should prove that such attempts will never reach success, to block further attempts being made in the future,” he continued.

Yoon made the comments in a speech at Harvard University’s Kennedy School on the fifth day of a state visit to mark the 70th anniversary of the US-South Korean alliance.

Yoon was asked about the possibility of South Korea providing lethal aid to Ukraine and replied: “We are closely monitoring the situation that’s going on the battlefield in Ukraine and will take proper measures in order to uphold the international norms and international law.”

“Right now we are closely monitoring the situation and we are considering various options,” he stressed.


Crimean fuel tank on fire after suspected drone attack

A fuel tank was ablaze in the Crimean port city of Sevastopol in what appeared to be a drone strike, the governor said on Saturday.

Reuters reported that the Moscow-installed governor, Mikhail Razvozhaev, wrote on the Telegram messaging app: “According to preliminary information, the fire was caused by a drone hit.”

Sevastopol, on the Crimean peninsula that Russia annexed from Ukraine in 2014, has come under repeated air attacks since Russia’s full-fledged invasion of its neighbour in February 2022. Russian officials have blamed the attacks on Ukraine.


Latest Russian missile attacks underline need for modern aircraft: Zelensky

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky offered condolences to the families of more than 20 Ukrainians killed in Russian missile strikes on Friday, almost all of them victims of a cruise missile that struck an apartment building in the city of Uman.

“Our Air Force managed to shoot down most of the Russian missiles – 21 out of 23. If not for this, the terrorist state would have managed to claim many more casualties, more lives,” Zelensky said.

He added Ukraine could “save people only with weapons. Air defense, modern aircraft, without which there is no fully effective air defense.”


UN condemns deadly air raids across Ukraine

The UN has condemned a wave of deadly air raids across Ukraine.

UN acting Humanitarian Coordinator in Ukraine Matthew Hollingsworth said that the indiscriminate attacks on civilian areas must stop.

“It is an important reminder that civilians and civilian infrastructure are protected under international and humanitarian law, and they must never be targeted,” UN Spokesperson Stephane Dujarric told reporters.


Death toll climbs to at least 23 after Russian missile strikes apartment building in Uman: Ukraine

The death toll from a Russian missile strike on an apartment building in Uman has increased to at least 23, according to the Ukrainian Interior Ministry. The death toll includes four children, officials said.

The strike in Uman, which is located in the central Cherkasy region, injured at least 18 other people, Ukrainian officials stated earlier Friday.

There were 46 apartments inside one of the buildings that were hit, of which 27 were completely destroyed, according to Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine Ihor Klymenko.

East of Uman, a woman and her 2-year-old child were killed in a strike in Dnipro, authorities added.


Ukraine calls for F-16 fighter jet training in meeting with European FMs

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba reiterated the country’s call for F-16 fighter jet training from allies in a meeting with foreign ministers from eight countries.

Kuleba, during a joint news conference at the summit in Odesa, asked allies “to make every effort to speed up the decision to start training Ukrainian pilots on such aircraft.”

Getting military training on how to maneuver the aircraft could be the first step in the country gaining access to the jets, Kuleba said.

“We have to get Russia out of the sky,” the foreign minister told reporters.

“To do this, we need not only air defense systems, which our friends have already provided us with, but also combat aircraft. We need combat aircraft to cover our brigades that will carry out a counteroffensive. We need combat aircraft to protect the Black Sea and our coastal areas,” he added.

Foreign ministers from Latvia, Denmark, Estonia, Iceland, Lithuania, Norway, Sweden and Finland attended the joint meeting.

Oleksiy Danilov, secretary of Ukraine’s National Security and Defense Council, emphasized the need for advanced military equipment and pointed to the death toll in Friday’s strike in Uman, which killed at least 22 people, including three children.

“Every day that the decision to supply Ukraine with modern combat aircraft is delayed means delaying the end of the war,” he said in a tweet.

Ukraine has long lobbied for the US and other Western allies to send the country F-16s to help stunt Russia’s invasion, but the fighter jets are sophisticated and can take months to learn how to fly.

The US and other Western allies have been skeptical of providing the jets to Ukraine. Russia has extensive anti-aircraft systems that could easily shoot the planes down, and some officials warn providing such equipment could be seen as provoking Russia.


Zelensky says grain import ban by several EU nations is destructive and “gives dangerous hope to Kremlin”

President Volodymyr Zelensky discussed what he called the “destructive” impact of bans on the import of Ukrainian grain by several European countries. The bans were enacted on the grounds that the imports were undercutting the other nations’ domestic prices.

He said Friday he had discussed the issue with the President of the EU Council, Charles Michel.

“I emphasize that this not only violates the existing Association Agreement between Ukraine and the European Union but also gives dangerous hope to the Kremlin. The hope that in our common European home, someone’s wrong decisions can prevail over common interests,” he said.

Zelensky added: “It is necessary to find a normal, constructive way out of this situation in the European spirit.”


Ukraine receives $1.25bn grant from US: Report

According to Ukraine’s Ministry of Finance, Kyiv has received a $1.25bn grant from the US, The Kyiv Independent has reported.

According to the ministry, “the money will be used for paying pensions and salaries to Ukrainian emergency and healthcare workers, and social payments, including payments for internally displaced persons,” it reported.


Russia says extension of deal for Ukrainian grain exports unlikely

Despite receiving a letter from the top UN official promoting an extension of a deal that would allow the continued exports of Ukrainian grain through the Black Sea, the Russian government believes an extension is unlikely.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov acknowledged that Putin had received the letter from UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, but said no progress for the Russian side had been made.

Russian fertiliser manufacturers, for example, continue to have problems exporting their goods. Russia complains that the sanctions imposed in the wake of the war in Ukraine are hampering deliveries.

Israeli troops kill Palestinian teenager in Bethlehem, WB

Israeli forces West Bank

Palestine’s official Wafa news agency said the 16-year-old Palestinian, identified as Mustafa Amer Sabbah, was killed on Friday by Israeli “live fire” during confrontations that broke out in the village of Tuqu, to the southeast of Bethlehem.

“Confrontations broke out at the western entrance of Tuqu village, during which Israeli occupation soldiers fired live bullets, teargas canisters, and stun grenades at the village residents, shooting and critically injuring a teenager in the chest,” the news agency added.

Sabbah was rushed to hospital in a critical condition due to a serious gunshot wound to the chest, where he was pronounced dead.

Palestine’s Shehab news agency also reported the development, adding that the Israeli occupation forces sealed off the western entrance of the village with a flying checkpoint after the teenager was pronounced dead.

The fatal shooting came a day after Israeli forces killed a Palestinian man in the central part of the occupied West Bank over an alleged stabbing and car-ramming attack against the regime’s troops.

The victim, identified as 39-year-old Ahmad Yaqoub Taha, was shot dead near the illegal settlement of Ariel, located close to the Palestinian city of Salfit, with the Israeli military claiming in a statement that he tried to run over soldiers who were at a junction in the area.

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 focused on the West Bank cities of Nablus and Jenin, where Israeli forces have been trying to stifle a growing Palestinian resistance against occupation.

At least 106 Palestinians have been killed by the Israeli occupation forces so far this year, including an elderly woman and at least nine children, according to Wafa.

Iran Intelligence Ministry: Poisonings at schools not caused by toxic agents, escalated after riots abated 

Iran School Girls

In the statement, the ministry said the Islamic establishment was firmly resolved from the very beginning to decisively deal with those who caused and fueled the incidents.

The statement noted that what was clear about the issue in the schools was that when the riots in Iran abated, the poisonings escalated.

The statement was referring to the protests and deadly riots that happened in Iran a few months ago following the death of a young girl in police custody.

It said that at the beginning of the mission, the Iranian intelligence agents faced four questions about the substance used to make the students feel sick, the humans behind the incidents, the network orchestrating the incidents, and other factors involved in the poisonings.

The Intelligence Ministry said that actually, the cause of the poisonings was not sophisticated nor were the substances used to make the students feel sick toxic agents.

It went on to single out what happened at a school in the northern city of Nour, blaming the incident on a student who released pepper gas at the classroom to force the school authorities to call it a day.

One device, the statement noted, that was used to make students feel sick was what is known as the “smelly bomblet” that can be bought easily online and is usually used to make practical jokes for mere amusement.

The Intelligence Ministry however noted that in some cases, it arrived at the conclusion that those behind the incidents did it deliberately to make the Iranian intelligence and security apparatus appear weak and inefficient.

According to the ministry, the vast majority of those who felt sick following the poisoning incidents were treated on an outpatient basis at medical care centers and a very small number of them were hospitalized.