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Iranian president: Iran can be a pioneer in gas and oil industries

Ebrahim Raisi

Raisi added that Iran can also be a pioneer in the oil and gas industries in the world as well.

The president made those comments during the inauguration ceremony of Phase One of the Hoveizeh Persian Gulf Gas Refinery in southern Iran.

Some 75 percent of the equipment used in this refinery has been made in Iran.

Iran has taken a long stride in the development of its oil and gas industries in the past few years.

This comes as the country has been under harsh sanctions imposed by the US and some other Western governments.

People in Iran’s Mashhad camp outdoors overnight after quake

Related pictures:

Harvest of roses in north-central Iran

Harvest of roses in Iran

The province of Qom, with 380 hectares of farms, has been one of the major centers for cultivation of roses.

This year, it is expected that the crops will exceed the 700-ton mark.

More in pictures:

US targets Russia’s FSB, IRGC’s intelligence unit over detention of Americans

White House

The sanctions also targeted four senior commanders within IRGC’s IO, although among them were at least one individual who had been already been subject to previous US sanctions.

FSB, which was targeted because officials said it was involved in the detention of at least one US citizen whose name was not disclosed, was also subject to previous US sanctions.

Speaking to reporters in a briefing call on the condition of anonymity, senior Joe Biden administration officials stated Thursday’s move aimed to show that there would be consequences for those who tried to use US citizens for political leverage or seek concessions from Washington.

“Our actions are a clear and direct warning to those around the world who wrongfully detain US nationals of the potential consequences of their actions,” US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement.

The move, the US officials noted, aimed to promote accountability, and by doing so prevent and deter further politically motivated detentions of Americans abroad, adding Thursday’s sanctions were just the beginning and that there was possibly more to come.

Last month, Russia’s FSB arrested Evan Gershkovich, a US reporter working for the Wall Street Journal and accused him of espionage, a charge he has denied. Paul Whelan, a former US Marine, has also been serving a 16-year jail sentence in a Russian penal colony over spying accusations. He denies any wrongdoing.

Ties between the United States and Russia have sunk to their worst in decades following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, however the two former Cold War foes have managed to carry out compartmentalized diplomacy which resulted in two prisoner swaps last year.

In one, Washington has secured the release of US basketball star Brittney Griner who was held in Russia on drug charges, by commuting the sentence of Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout.

The plight of Americans detained by foreign governments has moved into the spotlight with Griner’s case. Although the US government does not provide figures, there are more than 60 such detainees, according to the James Foley Foundation, named after an American journalist abducted and killed in Syria.

At least several of them are jailed in Iran.

Iran has repeatedly expressed its readiness for swift implementation of a prisoner swap deal with the US while urging Washington to free Iranians imprisoned in the US without tying the issue with irrelevant issues.

Back in mid-August, Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanaani reaffirmed Tehran’s commitment and determination to implement the agreement concerning the issue of prisoners, calling on the US to fulfill its commitments than “performing theatrical shows”.

UNSC calls on Taliban to ‘swiftly reverse’ crackdown on Afghan women’s rights

Afghan Women School

The resolution – drafted by the United Arab Emirates and Japan – describes the ban as “unprecedented in the history of the United Nations” and says it “undermines human rights and humanitarian principles”. The resolution also asserts “the indispensable role of women in Afghan society”.

UAE’s ambassador to the UN, Lana Nusseibeh, said more than 90 countries co-sponsored the resolution – “from Afghanistan’s immediate neighbourhood, from the Muslim world and from all corners of the earth”.

“This … support makes our fundamental message today even more significant – the world will not sit by silently as women in Afghanistan are erased from society,” she told the UNSC.

The UNSC vote came days before a planned international meeting, regarding Afghanistan, in Doha on May 1-2. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres will convene behind closed doors special envoys on Afghanistan from various countries to work on a unified approach to dealing with the Taliban.

“We will not stand for the Taliban’s repression of women and girls,” The United States deputy ambassador to the UN, Robert Wood, told the UNSC, adding, “These decisions are indefensible. They are not seen anywhere else in the world.”

“The Taliban edicts are causing irreparable damage to Afghanistan,” he continued.

Earlier this month, the Taliban began enforcing the ban on Afghan women working for the UN after stopping most women working for humanitarian aid groups in December. Since toppling the Western-backed government in 2021, the group has also tightened controls on women’s access to public life, including barring women from university and closing girls’ high schools.

The Security Council resolution also recognises the need to address substantial challenges facing Afghanistan’s economy, including through using assets belonging to Afghanistan’s Central Bank for the benefit of the Afghan people.

Washington froze billions of the bank’s reserves held in the US and later transferred half of the money to a trust fund in Switzerland overseen by US, Swiss and Afghan trustees.

“As of today, what we have seen is only that assets have been transferred from one account to another, but not a single penny returned to the Afghan people,” China’s deputy UN ambassador, Geng Shuang, told the UNSC.

Russia’s ambassador to the UN, Vassily Nebenzia, also called for the return of the Afghan Central Bank assets.

4.6-magnitude quake shakes northeastern Iran

Earthquake Iran

The epicenter of the tremor, which occurred at 2:09 a.m. on Friday local time, was around 41 kilometers from the city of Mashhad, the provincial capital, Iranian media reported.

The quake was felt in Mashhad and sent many onto the streets in panic.

Local officials said rescue teams were sent to suburban regions, but no damage had so far been reported.

FM underlines Iran’s support for stability, security in Lebanon

Hossein Amirabdollahian

Amirabdollahian made the remark in a meeting with Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikat in Beirut on Thursday.

The top Iranian diplomat emphasized the necessity of expanding ties between the two countries in various fields, especially in the field of economic and trade cooperation.

Expressing Iran’s readiness to cooperate in solving the energy and electricity crisis in Lebanon, Amirabdollahian stressed that the Islamic Republic of Iran is ready to provide Lebanon with the experiences and technical assistance needed in construction, commissioning an d maintenance of power plants.

He outlined Iran’s standpoints on developments in Palestine, Yemen, Sudan, Afghanistan, and Ukraine.

Mikati, for his part, called Iran an important country in the region while appreciating Tehran’s constructive stance toward Lebanon.

During a joint press conference with Lebanese Foreign Minister Abdallah Rashid Bouhabib on Thursday in Beirut, Amirabdollahian said that the Islamic Republic supports any agreement between different Lebanese groups to choose a new president and called on other countries to respect Lebanon’s choice without interfering in its internal affairs.

The senior Iranian diplomat stated that he had told his Lebanese counterpart that Tehran is ready to further expand economic, trade and tourism ties with Lebanon.

Amirabdollahian is on an official two-day visit to Lebanon, where he is expected to hold talks with senior Lebanese officials.

Before his visit to Lebanon, the minister traveled to Oman for high-level talks with the Arab country’s officials.

Turkey inaugurates its first nuclear power plant

Turkey nuclear power plant

On Thursday, Putin and Erdogan took part virtually in a ceremony inaugurating the Akkuyu nuclear power plant, which is Turkey’s first nuclear power plant built by Russia’s state nuclear energy company Rosatom.

The ceremony, during which Rafael Grossi, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) also made some remarks, saw first loading of nuclear fuel into the first power unit at the site in Turkey’s southern Mersin province.

“This is a flagship project. It brings both mutual economic benefits and, of course, helps to strengthen the multi-faceted partnership between our two states,” Putin said via a video-link, describing Akkuyu as “the largest nuclear construction project in the world.”

The Russian leader also noted that the new plant would mean that Turkey would import less Russian natural gas in the future.

“But Turkey will enjoy the advantage of a country that has its own nuclear energy, and nuclear energy, as you know, is one of the cheapest,” Putin stated.

Erdogan, for his part, tanked his Russian counterpart for his support on Akkuyu, adding that Ankara “will take steps to build a second and a third nuclear power plant in Turkey as soon as possible.”

“With the delivery of nuclear fuels by air and sea to our power plant, Akkuyu has now gained the status of a nuclear plant,” the Turkish leader further said during his virtual address to the first nuclear fuel delivery ceremony.

Although Turkey is a member of the US-led NATO, Erdogan has managed to maintain close relations with Putin despite the current war in Ukraine.

The Turkish leader could also broker, along the United Nations, a deal last year that allowed the resumption of Ukrainian grain exports from Black Sea ports.

According to a statement by Turkey’s presidential office, Erdogan held a phone call with Putin prior to the inauguration ceremony, discussing the situation in Ukraine and the Black Sea grain deal.

The $20-billion, 4,800-megawatt project to build four reactors in Akkuyu town will add Turkey to the small club of nations with civil nuclear energy.

“We plan to complete the physical launch [of the plant] next year … in order to be able to produce electricity on a steady basis from 2025, as we agreed,” said Andrei Likhachev, head of Rosatom, during the ceremony.

An intergovernmental agreement for the Akkuyu nuclear power plant was signed between Ankara and Moscow in May 2010, said Turkey’s official Anadolu news agency in a report, adding that the plant’s groundbreaking ceremony was held on April 3, 2018, after which construction started on the first unit.

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 429

Russia Ukraine War
Local residents and rescuers stand amidst the rubble at the site of a heavily damaged residential building hit by a Russian missile, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in the town of Uman, Cherkasy region, Ukraine April 28, 2023.

Death toll rises to 16 as two more bodies found in Uman after Russian strikes

The death toll from Russia’s strikes across Ukraine on Friday morning has risen to 16 after two more bodies were found in Uman, with the total of those killed in the city now standing at 14.

Two other deaths were reported earlier in the city of Dnipro.

Cruise missiles were launched at Ukrainian cities in the early hours of Friday morning.

In Dnipro, a 31-year-old woman and her 2-year-old child died, according to Dnipropetrovsk Regional Prosecutor’s Office in a post on Telegram. Two 10-year-old children are among the dead in Uman, Ihor Taburets, the head of the Cherkasy region, said.

Missiles and drones were also shot down over the capital Kyiv, in what authorities called the first missile attack on the Ukrainian capital in 51 days.

Fragments from a missile intercepted over the Kyiv region hit a multi-story residential building and injured two people, including a 13-year-old girl, the Kyiv region police chief Andrii Nebytov stated.


Putin signs decree on granting citizenship to annexed regions

President Vladimir Putin signed a decree giving people living in parts of Russian-controlled Ukraine a path to Russian citizenship, but those who decline or do not legalise their status face potential deportation.

The decree extends to four Ukrainian regions Russia has claimed as its own and partially controls: Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhia.

Those who do not take action to apply for citizenship by July 1 of next year will be regarded as foreign citizens who are at risk of being deported.

The decree also allows the authorities to deport people from the four regions if they threaten Russia’s national security or participate in “unauthorised protests”.


UN raises alarm on rights violations in Ukraine

A United Nations committee has raised the alarm over alleged Russian rights violations, including enforced disappearances, torture, rape and extrajudicial executions.

“The Committee was deeply concerned about the grave human rights violations committed during the ongoing armed conflict by the Russian Federation’s military forces and private military companies,” the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination said in a statement.

The committee listed abuses including the excessive use of force, arbitrary detentions, killings and the forcible transfer of children from Ukraine to Russia.

Russia has denied deporting Ukrainian children to Russia, saying it has evacuated them to keep them safe.


Russia claims overnight raids targeted Ukrainian army sites

The Russian Ministry of Defence says its forces launched long-range, high-precision strikes overnight on Ukrainian army reserve units and that all designated targets had been hit, the RIA news agency reports.

“The target of the strike was achieved. All designated facilities were struck. The advance of the enemy’s reserves into combat zones was thwarted,” ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said at a briefing.

While Russia denies targeting civilians, Ukrainian emergency services said at least 16 people, including three children, were killed in the attacks.


Ukraine wraps up preparations for counteroffensive

Ukraine is wrapping up preparations for a counteroffensive against Russian forces and is ready for it to go ahead, Defence Minister Oleksii Reznikov has said.

“As soon as there is God’s will, the weather and a decision by commanders, we will do it,” he told an online news briefing.

“Globally speaking, we are to a high percentage ready,” he stated while giving no date on when the operation would begin.

Kyiv hopes the offensive will change the landscape of the war and allow its forces to claim back territory taken by Russia.

Reznikov added that Ukraine had received a lot of modern equipment, including arms that would serve as an “iron fist”.


West’s aim in Ukraine is to secure monopoly: Russian defence chief

Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu says the West’s fundamental aim in Ukraine is to strategically defeat Russia and maintain its monopoly position, state-owned news agency RIA reported

He added that “almost all” NATO countries had deployed their military capabilities against Russia.

Speaking at a meeting of defence ministers from the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation in India, Shoigu also stated the United States and its allies, “under the pretext of helping in the fight against terrorism, are trying to restore their military presence in Central Asia”.


Death toll from Russia’s missile strikes rises to 14

The death toll from Russia’s deadly, early-morning missile strikes across Ukraine on Friday has risen to 14, officials said, after two more bodies were pulled from the rubble of a residential building in the city of Uman.

“As of 11:50 a.m., the body of one more dead person was removed from the rubble of a residential building,” Ukraine’s state emergency service said on the Telegram messaging app.

The press office of Ukraine’s Minister of Internal Affairs later added another body had been found.

The search operation in Uman continues.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Twitter earlier that one apartment building in Uman had been “destroyed” and many others damaged before dawn on Friday.

According to the Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine, Ihor Klymenko, there were 46 apartments inside the building that was hit, 27 of which were completely destroyed. He said it may take a day to clear all the rubble.

Klymenko added authorities had set up tents for survivors and their neighbors to wait in “until the local authorities provide them with places of refuge.”

“At the moment, the authorities have provided everyone with food. There is also a hotline that can be contacted by relatives and friends of our citizens who lived in this and other houses that were damaged in this area,” he continued.

Bridget Brink, America’s ambassador to Ukraine, responded to Friday’s attack in a tweet.

“More lives tragically lost as Russia’s missiles hit another apartment building. Russia still hasn’t learned that its brutality only reinforces Ukrainian resolve and deepens our commitment to support in the fight,” she stated.


Missile attacks are “Russia’s response to all peace initiatives”: Ukrainian FM

Russia’s missile attacks on Ukrainian cities overnight is Moscow’s “response to all peace initiatives,” Ukraine’s foreign minister has said.

“Missile strikes killing innocent Ukrainians in their sleep, including a 2-year-old child, is Russia’s response to all peace initiatives. The way to peace is to kick Russia out of Ukraine. The way to peace is to arm Ukraine with F-16s and protect children from Russian terror,” Dmytro Kuleba wrote on Twitter.

Cruise missiles were launched at Ukrainian cities in the early hours of Friday morning, killing at least 12 people.

Missiles and drones were also shot down over the capital Kyiv, in what authorities called the first missile attack on the Ukrainian capital in 51 days.

Fragments from a missile intercepted over the Kyiv region hit a multi-story residential building and injured two people, including a 13-year-old girl, the Kyiv region police chief Andrii Nebytov stated.


Most missiles launched at Ukraine Friday were intercepted: Air force

Most missiles launched at Ukraine in the early hours of Friday morning were intercepted, the country’s air force said in a Telegram post.

The Air Force of the Armed Forces of Ukraine announced it intercepted 21 out of 23 cruise missiles and destroyed two drones.

“On April 28, at about 4 a.m., the Russian occupiers attacked Ukraine from Tu-95 strategic aircraft from the Caspian Sea area,” it added.

“The anti-aircraft missile units of the Air Force of Ukraine, in cooperation with the air defense of other units of the Defense Forces, destroyed 21 of 23 Kh-101/Kh-555 cruise missiles, as well as two operational and tactical UAVs [unmanned aerial vehicles],” it noted.

At least 12 people have been killed in the attacks, Ukrainian officials say. This includes a 31-year-old woman and her 2-year-old child who died in the attack in central Ukraine’s Dnipro, according to the Dnipropetrovsk Regional Prosecutor’s Office.

In the city of Uman in the central Cherkasy region, 10 people were killed when Russian rockets hit several high-rises, including residential buildings, according to Ihor Klymenko, Ukraine’s Minister of Internal Affairs.


Zelensky sends condolences to victims of Friday’s Russian missile attacks

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky sent condolences to victims of Russian missile attacks across the country on Friday.

“People are still trapped under the rubble [in Uman],” Zelensky said in a post on his official Telegram channel.

“Unfortunately, there are casualties, including a child,” he added.

The president stated a child was killed following the shelling on Dnipro in central Ukraine, adding that “my condolences to everyone who lost their loved ones because of the Russian terror!”

Attacks were reported in the central Ukrainian cities of Dnipro, Uman in the Cherkasy region, and the city of Ukrainka, located some 45 kilometres (28 miles) south of the capital Kyiv.

“This Russian terror must face a fair response from Ukraine and the world. And it will,” he said, adding, “Every such attack, every evil act against our country and people brings the terrorist state closer to failure and punishment.”


12 people killed in Russian missile attacks on central Ukraine

Twelve people have now been confirmed dead in Russian missile attacks across Ukraine early Friday.

Three more bodies were pulled from the rubble of a building in the city of Uman, in central Ukraine.

That brings the total of people killed in the Uman attack to 10.

“Unfortunately, the death toll in Uman has increased. Rescuers have just pulled three more bodies of dead Uman residents from the rubble,” Ihor Klymenko, Minister of Internal Affairs, wrote on Facebook.

In central Ukraine’s Dnipro, a 31-year-old woman and her 2-year-old child died in the attack, according to the Dnipropetrovsk Regional Prosecutor’s Office.


Relationship with European countries at lowest level: Kremlin

The Kremlin announced that relations with European countries are at the lowest possible level and that each wave of expulsions of Russian diplomats reduces the space available for diplomacy.

Moldova, Sweden and Norway have all expelled Russian diplomats, prompting retaliatory measures from Moscow.


Wagner chief says ceasing fire was a ‘joke’

The head of Russia’s Wagner Group of mercenaries says he was joking when he said his men would suspend fire in Bakhmut to allow Ukrainian forces to show the city to visiting US journalists.

Earlier on Thursday, Yevgeny Prigozhin, Wagner’s founder, stated in an audio message published by his press service: “A decision has been taken to suspend artillery fire so that American journalists can safely film Bakhmut and go home.”

However, in a later audio message, Prigozhin noted: “Guys, this is military humour. Humour, and nothing more… It was a joke.”


European grain issues will happen again: Ukraine

Issues with Ukrainian exports to central Europe will happen again unless the EU sets out a clear position on its food import policy for the next five years, Ukrainian producers said.

Some EU member states have imposed temporary bans on Ukrainian agricultural products, after an excess affected the local market and angered farmers.

“The main problem for most European countries is agrarian Ukraine, which will enter the EU with 30 million hectares [74 million acres] of land,” stated Alex Lissitsa, who heads the association “Ukrainian Agribusiness Club”.

“They [EU] don’t know what to do with subsidies and they don’t know what to do with the domestic market,” he continued.

Lissitsa added Kyiv must negotiate with Brussels rather than with separate states and that a long-term solution was needed that would last five years when EU membership talks are expected.


Russia’s defence ministry claims four blocks in Bakhmut

Russia’s Defence Ministry says its forces have taken four blocks in northwestern, western and southwestern Bakhmut, Tass news agency reported.

According to Tass, the ministry’s official representative, Lieutenant-General Igor Konashenkov, told journalists, “In the Donetsk direction, the assault detachments captured four quarters in the northwestern, western and southwestern parts of the city of Artemovsk [Bakmut].”

“Airborne troops pin down the enemy on the northern and southern outskirts of the city and support the actions of the assault detachments,” Konashenkov added.

Iran’s Navy seizes foreign ship after it collided with Iranian vessel in Persian Gulf

Iran Navy

The Navy said in a statement that Iran’s naval forces seized the ship after they received reports that it had collided with an Iranian vessel in the Persian Gulf.

Following the collision, two crew members of the Iranian vessel went missing and several others sustained injuries while the ship tried to flee the Persian Gulf.

The Iranian Navy added that the ship was obliged to assist the vessel and those who had been injured on board under international law.

Iran’s naval forces later tracked down and seized the ship which has been described as a Marshall Islands-flagged one.

The ship was taken to an Iranian port.

The US says the ship’s name is Advantage Sweet and that it was transiting international waters in the Gulf of Oman.

The US also urged Iran to immediately release the ship.