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Tensions rise as Azerbaijan sets up checkpoint on sole land route from Armenia to Karabakh

Armenia Azerbaijan

Nagorno-Karabakh is internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan, but its 120,000 inhabitants are predominantly ethnic Armenians and the region broke away from Baku in a war in the early 1990s.

Azerbaijan said on Sunday that it had established a checkpoint on the road leading to Karabakh, saying the move was essential due to what it cast as Armenia’s use of the road to transport weapons.

Azerbaijan “took appropriate measures to establish control at the starting point of the road”, the foreign ministry noetd.

“Providing border security, as well as ensuring safe traffic on the road, is the prerogative of the government of Azerbaijan, and an essential prerequisite for national security, state sovereignty and the rule of law,” it added.

Armenia said the checkpoint at the Hakari bridge in the Lachin Corridor was a gross violation of the 2020 ceasefire agreement that ended a 2020 war.

It called on Russia to implement the agreement, which states that the Lachin Corridor, the only road across Azerbaijan that links Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh, must be under Russian peacekeepers’ control.

“We call on the Russian Federation to ultimately implement the trilateral statement,” Armenia’s foreign ministry said of the agreement that was brokered by Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Pictures of the bridge posted on social media by Azeri officials showed one side of it blocked by vehicles and soldiers.

Armenia’s defence ministry announced a soldier named Artyom Poghosyan was killed at approximately 07:50 GMT when Azeri forces opened fire on an Armenian position in Sotk, an Armenian village east of Lake Sevan. Azerbaijan denied it killed the soldier.

Azerbaijan then claimed that Armenian soldiers fired on Azeri units at approximately 11:10 GMT in the Lachin district, a claim Armenia denied.

In 2020, Azerbaijan retook territory in and around the enclave after a second war that ended in a Russian-brokered ceasefire upheld by Russian peacekeepers.

Azeri civilians identifying themselves as environmental activists have been facing off since December 12 with Russian peacekeepers on the Lachin Corridor.

Armenia says the protesters are government-backed agitators who are effectively blockading Karabakh. Azerbaijan denies blockading the road, saying that some convoys and aid are allowed through.

In recent months, Armenia has repeatedly called on Moscow to do more to support the peace and ensure unfettered access between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh through the Lachin Corridor.

Iranian health minister: WHO has confirmed eradication of measles and rubella in Iran

WHO

Einollahi added that WHO wrote Iran a letter to this effect.

He noted that the country has already effectively eradicated a number of other diseases.

The health minister further reiterated that the accomplishment was made by the Iranian scientists despite anti-Iran sanctions by the US and some of its allies.

Einollahi noted that Iran’s achievement comes at a time when many European countries have yet to receive a letter from WHO approving their elimination of measles and rubella.

The health minister expressed hope that with the joint efforts of people and the healthcare system of Iran, other contagious diseases will be stamped out in the near future.

Einollahi made those comments in Shiraz, the provincial capital of Far Province, where he has visited the Health Ministry’s development projects in recent days.

According to the WHO health profile, Iran has done a better job than many countries including the US in terms of controlling many contagious diseases like leprosy, dengue fever, tularemia and hepatitis B.

Jordan says Israel arrested MP on suspicion of smuggling arms and gold

Israeli Forces

Imad al-Adwan, a member of Jordan’s parliament who had crossed a main border crossing along the Jordan River earlier on Sunday by car, was being held and interrogated by Israeli authorities, Sinan Majali, a Jordanian foreign ministry spokesperson, said in a statement to state media on Sunday.

“The ministry and all relevant agencies in the kingdom are working to ascertain the details of this issue and address it as quickly as possible,” Majali stated.

Al-Adwan had been arrested “for interrogation in a case concerning alleged smuggling of quantities of weapons and gold”, he added.

A spokesperson for Israel’s foreign ministry declined to comment on reports of the arrest.

Al-Adwan, 35, is a member of the Jordanian parliament’s Palestine Committee.

Israeli media reported that he was arrested at the King Hussein Bridge (Allenby) border crossing in the occupied West Bank. There has been no official comment from Israeli authorities on al-Adwan’s arrest.

Prominent Jordanian legislator Khalil Atiya, who is known for his vocal opposition to Israel and has led campaigns to repeal the country’s peace treaty with Israel, said the government would be held responsible if it failed to act quickly.

“There should be no room left for the enemy to harm the dignity of Jordanians by detaining and jailing a member of the parliament,” Atiya added.

Israel enjoys close security ties with Jordan, the Arab neighbour it shares its longest stretch of border with, but political relations have soured in recent years over Israel’s stance on the right of Palestinians to a state.

Many of the kingdom’s citizens are of Palestinian origin.

Moscow says ‘will not forgive’ US after Russian journalists denied visas for UN visit

Russia FM Sergei Lavrov

“We won’t forget, we will not forgive this,” Lavrov stated on Sunday as he gets ready to chair UN Security Council meetings after his country assumed the presidency of the council in April.

Lavrov denounced the US’ refusal to issue visas to Russian journalists as “stupid”, stressing, “A country that calls itself the strongest, smartest, freest, and fairest, chickened out.”

He added that this “showed the worth of their (the Americans’) solemn assurances on freedom of speech.”

Presidency of the Security Council rotates alphabetically among its 15 member nations and Russia has assumed the rotating presidency of the council for a month.

Russia’s UN mission, for its part, joined Lavrov in condemning Washington, saying on Twitter that “the United States violated again its obligations” under the UN headquarters agreement by denying visas to Russian journalists.

Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov has warned of more retaliatory steps in response to Washington’s measure.

“We will find formats to respond to this so that the Americans remember for a long time that such things must not be done,” Ryabkov was quoted as saying by Russian news agencies.

“The Americans pulled yet another outrageous and totally unacceptable trick in preparation for the participation of Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov in the events of the outgoing Russian presidency of the UN Security Council. A group of Russian journalists who were to accompany Lavrov on this trip were not issued visas until the very last moment. The Americans pretended that they were working and that a solution was about to be found,” he told reporters.

Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova also stressed that the US’ denying the visas was a blatant manipulation of the freedom of speech issue and of journalists’ rights.

The US State Department, however, claimed that the development had to do with, what it called, Russia’s restrictions on the US embassy staffing in Moscow.

Filing Russian visa applications as early as possible “is especially important because of Russia’s unwarranted actions against our Embassy in Russia, including the forced termination of local and third country national staff, have severely limited our staffing and therefore our capacity to process visas,” a spokesperson for the department said.

3 EU states importing Iranian oil despite US sanctions: Report

Iran Oil

Figures by EU’s statistics agency Eurostat covered in a Sunday report by the IRNA news agency showed that the bloc’s imports of crude oil from Iran had reached 4,181 metric tons (mt) last year.

EU importers of Iranian oil shipments were Romania, Poland and Bulgaria, according to the Eurostat figures which indicated that over 4,000 mt of the shipments ended up in Romania.

The figures showed that Bulgaria was the latest EU country to start oil imports from Iran since 2018 when the United States imposed its sanctions on Tehran.

Bulgaria took delivery of a 168 mt of oil from Iran in December and continued imports in January this year by receiving an 83-mt shipment.

The IRNA added in its report that EU’s imports of Iranian oil, although very small in amount, is a sign that European countries tend to ignore the US sanctions on Iran amid a crunch in global energy markets that has been exacerbated by the war in Ukraine.

The report said the fact that an EU agency has mentioned Iranian oil imports in its official figures shows that the bloc wants to signal its dissatisfaction with US policy of keeping sanctions on Iran.

Washington imposed sanctions on Iran in early 2018 after a former US administration decided to unilaterally withdraw from an international deal on Iran’s nuclear program.

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 425

Russia Ukraine War

Wagner boss says forces will kill POWs

Head of the Wagner Group, Yevgeny Prigozhin, stated that his mercenary forces fighting in Bakhmut would kill Ukrainian soldiers and take no more prisoners.

Prigozhin was reacting to a Wagner-affiliated Telegram channel posting a recording of what it said were two Ukrainians deciding to shoot a Russian prisoner of war.

“We will kill everyone on the battlefield. Take no more prisoners of war!” Prigozhin said in an audio recording on Sunday.

He admitted that under international law, his group was obliged to “take care, treat, not hurt,” any prisoner of war.


China respects status of independent states: Beijing

China’s foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said China respects the status of the independent sovereign nations after Beijing’s envoy to Paris sparked a diplomatic storm.

“The Chinese side respects the status of the member states as sovereign states after the collapse of the Soviet Union,” Mao stated, adding that China was one of the first countries to establish diplomatic relations with those countries.

China respects the sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of all countries and upholds the purposes and principles of the United Nations Charter, Mao said.

“The Soviet Union was a federal state, and externally as a whole, it had the status of being a subject of international law, so conversely, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the various republics have the status of sovereign states,” she added.


EU’s top diplomat expresses confidence in ammunition deal

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell has expressed confidence that the bloc will finalise a plan soon to buy ammunition for Ukraine.

“Yes, still there is some disagreement, but I am sure everybody will understand that we are in a situation of extreme urgency,” Borrell told reporters as he arrived for a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Luxembourg.

“I am sure that in the following days we will reach [an agreement],” he added.

Last week, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba expressed frustration at the slow pace and said on Twitter, “For Ukraine, the cost of inaction is measured in human lives.”


Baltic countries summon Chinese envoys

EU members Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania have summoned Chinese envoys over remarks by Beijing’s ambassador in Paris, who questioned the sovereignty of ex-Soviet nations.

Lithuania’s Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis stated the diplomats would be asked to explain if the “Chinese position has changed on independence and to remind them that we’re not post-Soviet countries, but we’re the countries that were illegally occupied by Soviet Union.”

Chinese Ambassador Lu Shaye said in an interview aired on French television on Friday that “these ex-USSR countries don’t have actual status in international law because there is no international agreement to materialise their sovereign status”.


EU leaders will discuss bloc’s stance towards China

EU leaders will discuss the bloc’s stance towards China and its future relations with the country during their next summit in June, EU Council President Charles Michel stated on Monday.

“EU-China policy will be on the agenda of our European council in June,” Reuters reports Michel said in a post on Twitter.

“Foreign affairs ministers will prepare this discussion under the leadership of the High representative Josep Borrell,” he added.

Several EU foreign affairs ministers, speaking before a joint meeting on Monday, expressed their dismay over recent remarks by China’s ambassador to France, who questioned the sovereignty of former Soviet states such as Ukraine, and EU member states Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia.

China’s foreign ministry has since attempted to clarify that the country’s official position is that it respects the sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of all countries.


Russia claims drone attack on Crimean port repelled

Russia’s Black Sea Fleet repelled a drone attack on the Crimean port of Sevastopol in the early hours of Monday, the Moscow-installed governor of the city has said on the Telegram messaging app.

“According to the latest information: one surface drone was destroyed … the second one exploded on its own,” governor Mikhail Razvozhaev wrote, adding, “Now the city is quiet but all forces and services remain on alert.”

No damage was reported, according to Razvozhaev.

Sevastopol, along with the rest of the Crimean peninsula, was declared annexed by Russia in 2014 but is internationally recognised as part of Ukraine.

There was no immediate reaction from Ukraine. Kyiv almost never publicly claims responsibility for attacks inside Russia and on Russian-controlled territory in Ukraine.

Explosions were last heard in Sevastopol in February, according to Ukrainian media, when Razvozhaev stated Russian air defences had shot down a drone over the Balaklava Thermal Power Plant.

Crimea and Sevastopol, home to the headquarters of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet, have been the sire of regular explosions since August.

In October, a blast crippled the heavily guarded Kerch bridge connecting Crimea to the Russian mainland, a key logistics link for Russian troops in southern Ukraine.

Iran has first female sea captain  

Raheleh Tahmasbi

Raheleh Tahmasbi started her seafaring career in 2010 with a sailor certificate in Bandar Lengeh port city, southern Iran.

After 7 years of relentless efforts and seafaring activity, she was promoted to the rank of a lieutenant officer. The same year, Tahmasbi was chosen as Iran’s exemplary seafarer and the first female one.

Captain Tahmasbi already holds a Master’s degree in computer. She started her activity in the field of teaching marine courses by receiving a TFT certificate and has been working as an instructor of sea survival techniques.

The shining page of captain Tahmasbi’s career is that she was selected as an influential woman in Iran in 2018, and she has successfully completed a three-month commanding course this year, currently serving as the first female naval captain in Iran and the Middle East.

Perspolis defeat Estaghlal in 100th derby of Iran’s capital Tehran 

Perspolis Estaghlal

The two teams played a lackluster game in front of about 40,000 spectators in the first half. But Perspolis stepped up pressure in the initial hours of the second half and soon netted.

In the 50th minute, the striker of the reds, Issa Al Kasir, who replaced another player in the second half, scored the winning goal. After the goal, Esteghlal increased pressure on Perspolis to draw but all their efforts were thwarted by a solid defense on part of their rivals.

Thanks to the victory they scored in the match against Esteghlal, Perspolis moved to the top of the table with 57 points, two points above Esteghlal.

Sepahan are now third with 55 points.

Esteghlal and Persepolis have faced off each other 100 times. Both teams have won 26 matches each and 48 matches ended in a draw. Sepahan’s next match that will happen on Monday will be crucial for the team. They are going to host Malavan in Esfahan.

If they win, the Eafahani team will go to the top of the table. A draw or a win for Malavan will guarantee Perspolis’s grip on top.

Police: 116 killed in road crashes during Eid ul-Fitr holiday in Iran 

Iran's Road

General Hassan Momeni said 1600 people were wounded in the incidents.

Momeni blamed most of the road accidents on failure by drivers to watch out for the front, speeding up and deviating to the left.

Hundreds of people also died in road crashes during the Nowruz holiday last month.

The destinations of most of the trips during the Eid ul-Fitr holidays were the same as Nowruz and included the northern parts of Iran, tourist cities of Isfahan and Shiraz, and the holy city of Mashhad.

People in their millions rush to these regions during holidays each year.

Saudi airline requests three weekly flights between Iran, Saudi Arabia: Minister

Iran Airport

Mehrdad Bazrpash said on Sunday that Saudi Arabia’s flag airline had forwarded the request to the Civil Aviation Organization of Iran.

He said the three flights would not include Hajj-related flights.

Bazrpash said relevant Iranian organizations would do their best to schedule the flights.

Iran and Saudi Arabia announced an agreement to reestablish relations on March 10 followibg seven years of cut ties.

The two countries are expected to reopen their embassies before Hajj season in June.