Sunday, January 18, 2026
Home Blog Page 1497

Army official: Some neighbors made Iran borders unsafe

Iran Border Guard

Brigadier General Amir Gholamalian said the Army is a factor in affecting regional equations.

He said Iran never takes the Zionist regime’s threats seriously because it does not consider this regime powerful enough to pose a threat to the Islamic Republic.

General Gholamalian added that Iran is preparing itself to deal with the US’s threats and that officials have worked out a strategy for this purpose.

He said the US is aware that if it makes a miscalculation like it did in 1980 and covets Iran’s borders, the Army will come down on the enemy like a ton of bricks and will deal a heavy blow to them.

Gholamalian stressed that Iran’s strategic depth has gone farther compared to several years ago.

He warned that in terms of missile and drone might, Iran cannot be compared with what it was in the past and it is capable of hitting the farthest bases of the enemy using its homegrown weapons.

Iran daily Covid deaths declining, 23 killed in 24 hours

COVID in Iran

“A sum of 354 new patients infected with COVID-19 have been identified in the country based on confirmed diagnosis criteria during the past 24 hours,” the Iranian Health Ministry’s Public Relations Center said on Friday, and added, “207 patients have been hospitalized during the same time span.”

It further announced that the total number of COVID-19 patients has increased to 7,605,784.

“Unfortunately, 23 patients have lost their lives in the past 24 hours, increasing the number of the dead to 145,962,” the ministry noted.

It expressed satisfaction that 7,355,044 coronavirus patients have recovered or been discharged from hospitals so far.

The center went on to say that 703 cases infected with COVID-19 are in critical conditions.

It added that 56,259,308 coronavirus diagnosis tests have so far been carried out across the country.

The health ministry public relations warned that 12 cities are red, 61 cities are orange, 270 cities are yellow, and 105 cities are blue.

UN says Taliban recognition not a focus of Afghanistan meeting in Qatar

Taliban

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is set to host a closed-door gathering in Doha on May 1-2 of special envoys on Afghanistan from several countries. His deputy, Amina Mohammed, suggested on Monday that the gathering “could find those baby steps to put us back on the pathway to recognition”.

“The Doha conference on the 1st and 2nd of May is not focusing on recognition and we don’t want there to be any confusion about that,” deputy UN spokesperson Farhan Haq said on Thursday, adding, “The point of discussion … is to build a more unified consensus on the challenges at hand.”

The Taliban seized power in August 2021 as US-led forces withdrew following 20 years of war.

In December, the 193-member UN General Assembly approved postponing, for the second time, a decision on whether to recognise the Afghan Taliban administration by allowing them to send a United Nations ambassador to New York.

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

The Taliban has announced it respects women’s rights in accordance with its strict interpretation of Islamic law.

Pakistan sees sharp drop in Eid al-Fitr shopping amid soaring inflation

Pakistan Bazaar

The lead up to Eid al-Fitr, expected to fall on Saturday in Pakistan to mark the end of the holy month of Ramadan, traditionally sees the highest sales of the year.

But this year, the country is experiencing a crippling economic crisis.

“There has been a 20 percent reduction in sales across all categories except women’s clothing,” Tariq Mehboob, chairman of the Chain Store Association Pakistan (CAP) and CEO of Royal Tag, a clothing brand for men, told Reuters news agency.

Inflation clocked in at 35 percent in March, fuelled by a depreciating currency, a rollback in subsidies, and the imposition of higher tariffs to secure a bailout package of $1.1bn from the International Monetary Fund.

Food inflation has risen to more than 47 percent, and even the wealthier professional class is making lifestyle changes to deal with rising prices.

“Pakistanis have lost more than 50 percent of their wealth in the last two years in the form of depreciation, so you’re now selling to people with 50 percent less available funds, while the cost has gone up 100 percent,” stated Asad Shafi, owner of female clothing brand Cross Stitch.

“The expectation of fashion retailers is so low that even meeting breakeven or bare minimum sales just to stay alive is acceptable,” he added.

Asfandyar Farrukh, co-founder of CAP and managing director of Hub, a leather goods store, said that Eid shopping appears to have started sooner and peaked earlier, coinciding with salary pay days, and customers anticipating price increases.

“Established brands are not seeing as big a drop in revenues as local markets as they are frequented more by upper-middle and upper-income customers,” added Farrukh.

Usually bustling markets and shopping centres targeting the middle and lower-middle class such as Anarkali and Liberty Market in the eastern city of Lahore have both reported fewer customers.

Ashraf Bhatti, president of the Anarkali Traders Association, told Reuters that there had been a 50 percent reduction in Eid shopping this year, while Sohail Sarfaraz Mani, President of Liberty Market Traders Association, estimated the drop had been around 35 percent.

The sales drop adds to the slowing of Pakistan’s $350bn economy, which has struggled in recent months amid tough stabilisation polices, including the central bank raising interest rates to a historic high of 21 percent.

Pakistan expects its economy to grow 2 percent during the current fiscal year. However, in April, the World Bank slashed Pakistan’s growth projections from 2 percent to 0.4 percent.

‘Khalil the Eagle,’ Iran’s strong athletic man, dies at 98

Khalil the Eagle

Tarighat-Peyman, know as ‘Khalil the Eagle’ had been hospitalized for 36 days in an organ transplant hospital and died of old age, leaving the Iranian sports community in mourning.

Born in 1924 in Shiraz, he managed to lift a weight of 450 kg by teeth at the age of 30.
He emigrated to Ireland in 1971 at the invitation of the Faust circus. He then went to the UK’s Jerry Cattle Circus, where he lifted the elephant.

Tarighat-Peyman continued to perform athletic performances in more than 37 countries.

He returned to Iran in 1991 and opened a first circus in Iran with the participation of 60 artists from Italy, Romania and Portugal.

Among his other performances are letting a truck and a bus pass over his chest, placing a 2-ton stone on the chest and enduring hammer blows, bending 14 and 12 iron beams with the neck, and stopping two heavy army vehicles from moving.

Iran news outlet: Why was Taliban’s unofficial envoy invited to Raisi’s Iftar banquet?

Taliban’s unofficial envoy Iran

In an article, Asr-e Iran news portal reacted to photos of the ceremony showing the Taliban envoy next to President Ebrahim Raisi and ambassadors and charges d’affaires of Islamic countries accredited to Iran.

“When the presence of the representative of the Taliban government in Tehran is unofficial, why should he be invited to the official meeting of the president and ambassadors?” it said, criticizing the Iranian officials and the Foreign Ministry for :breaking the diplomatic norms.”

Based on the frameworks of politics, the Taliban representative in Tehran is neither an ambassador nor a diplomat, the article said.

Iran says the interim Taliban rulers must take a set of measures to earn recognition from Tehran, including facilitating the formation of an all-inclusive government, effectively fighting violence and terror, and granting women their social rights.

Iran argues that it allowed the Afghan embassy to operate informally with the goal of keeping the door open to dialog with the neighboring country and help the war-stricken nation tackle its woes.

US says prefers diplomacy with Iran over nuclear program

Iran nuclear programe

“We have long said that we are absolutely committed to ensuring that Iran never acquires a nuclear weapon, and we still believe that diplomacy is the best way to achieve that,” Patel told reporters on Thursday.

“And at the same time, we’re also preparing for all possible options and contingencies in full coordination with our allies and partners on this,” the spokesperson added.

Iran denies seeking nuclear weapons, stressing its nuclear technology is solely for civil purposes.

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 JCPOA with six world states — namely the US, 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 US 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.

Iran tourism: Qajar-era Chah-Kouran Caravansary in Kerman

Chah-Kouran Caravansary in Kerman

Chah-Kouran Caravansary is one of those monuments. The Qajar-era building has been placed on the country’s National Heritage List and draws many tourists to the region.

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 422

Russia Ukraine War

Russians “advancing in some areas” in Bakhmut: Ukrainian deputy DM

As the Russian offensive in the east continues, Moscow’s forces in the south – in the Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions – are on the defensive, according to Ukraine’s deputy defense minister.

“The east remains the epicenter. There, the enemy continues offensive actions in four directions simultaneously – Marinka, Avdiivka, Lyman, Bakhmut,” Hanna Maliar posted on Telegram.

“Thanks to our defenders, the enemy is not able to advance in most of them,” she added.

Maliar said that the fiercely contested city of Bakhmut remained the hottest spot, noting, “The enemy is attacking. It is destroying houses and buildings to the ground. It is advancing in some areas.”

Elsewhere, she said, “the enemy tried to move in two more directions this week – Kupiansk [to the north in Kharkiv region] and Shakhtarsk [to the east].”

“But our soldiers repelled the attacks and the enemy did not advance,” she stated.

Maliar added that some settlements in the Chernihiv, Sumy, Kharkiv regions continue to be shelled. These northern regions border Russia and have frequently come under artillery and mortar fire.


US will begin training Ukrainian troops on Abrams tanks

The United States will begin training Ukrainian forces on how to use and maintain Abrams tanks in the coming weeks, as the it continues to speed up its effort to get them onto the battlefield as quickly as possible, US officials confirmed.

The decision comes as defence leaders from around Europe and the world are meeting at Ramstein Air Base in Germany in the ongoing effort to coordinate the delivery of weapons and other equipment to Ukraine.

According to the officials, 31 tanks will arrive at Grafenwoehr Training Area in Germany at the end of May, and the troops will begin training a couple of weeks later.

Officials stated that the troop training will last about 10 weeks.

The training tanks will not be the ones given to Ukraine as it fights against Russia’s invasion. Instead, 31 M1A1 battle tanks are being refurbished in the United States, and those will go to the frontlines when they are ready.


Russia tells taxi drivers and supermarket stackers to join army in latest advert

Russia is calling on young men working in menial jobs such as driving taxis to sign up for war and prove they are “real men” in a slick new recruitment advert released by the ministry of defence.

The clip aired on Wednesday night and marked the first time the Kremlin has turned to television to boost the size of its battered army.

The country is gripped by rumours that Moscow may announce another mobilisation to shore up its defences ahead of an expected Ukrainian counter-offensive, with parliament recently tightening laws on dodging the draft.


US says allies have provided $55 billion in security assistance to Ukraine

US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said Western defense leaders are ready to build upon “impressive progress” while delivering opening remarks at the start of the 11th Ukraine Defense Contact Group meeting in Germany on Friday.

“It’s been nearly one year ago since this group first met right here at Ramstein,” Austin added, “this contact group started from a place of moral clarity.”

“More than a year later, Ukraine is stall standing strong,” Austin said, adding that the group has provided more than $55 billion in security assistance.

Austin outlined the military equipment countries in the group have provided Ukraine, including ammunition and Leopard tanks. The group, formed in June 2022, consists of more than 40 countries.

“This contact group also provided air defense systems to protect Ukraine’s skies and infrastructure,” Austin stated, adding, “That includes Patriot systems from the United States, Germany, and the Netherlands.”

The Patriot missile defense system, which is highly effective at intercepting ballistic and cruise missiles, is broadly seen as one of the most advanced and effective air defense systems.

“Our common efforts have made a huge difference to Ukraine defenders on the battlefield,” the defense secretary continued.

Austin thanked fellow counterparts for their unwavering support, mentioning the European Union’s plan to increase the production and delivery of ammunition to Ukraine.

“This contact group is more united than ever,” Austin concluded, adding, “we will not let anything fracture our unity.”


NATO chief reaffirms Ukraine will eventually join alliance

All NATO allies have agreed that Ukraine will eventually become a member of the alliance but the main focus now is to ensure the country prevails against Russia, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said on Friday.

Speaking ahead of a meeting of the Ukraine defence contact group at Ramstein air base in Germany, he also told reporters that, once the war in Ukraine ends, Kyiv must have “the deterrence to prevent new attacks”.


China says no country has right to interfere in its ties with Russia

China’s foreign ministry announced that no country has the right to interfere in its relationship with Russia.

Ministry Spokesperson Wang Wenbin made the remark at a news briefing when asked to comment on US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen saying that China’s “no limits” partnership with Russia indicated it was not serious about ending the war in Ukraine.


Russian drones attack Ukrainian capital Kyiv

At least 12 drones were launched on the Ukrainian capital Kyiv early Friday, according to the Air Force of the Ukrainian Armed Forces.

Ukraine’s air defense destroyed eight of the drones, which the military said were launched from the Bryansk region of Russia.

“After 25 days of calm, the capital of Ukraine has been subjected to another air attack by the enemy,” Serhii Popko, head of Kyiv city military administration, wrote on Telegram.

No casualties or damage have been reported, Popko added.


Now is not time to discuss Ukraine NATO membership: Germany

German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius rejected a quick decision on Ukraine’s membership at Nato, the Western alliance that has supported Ukraine throughout its war with Russia, with member states supplying it with weapons.

Kyiv wants the military alliance to offer it membership.

“The door is open a crack, but this is not the time to decide now,” Mr Pistorius said late on Thursday on ZDF’s Maybrit Illner program, adding that Ukraine was aware of the decision-making situation.

Mr Pistorius said the decision of Ukraine joining the alliance could not be made just out of solidarity but “with a cool head and a hot heart. Not the other way around.”

Ukraine’s possible membership in Nato or the European Union will not be discussed at the fourth Ukraine Defence Contact Group meeting at Ramstein US Air Base in southern Germany on Friday, the minister added.


Russian plane drops munitions over Russian border city, causing large explosion

A Russian fighter jet was forced to make “an emergency drop of aviation munition” over a Russian city Thursday, causing a large explosion in a central neighborhood, according to a state news agency and local officials.

A Russian Air Force Su-34 jet was flying over the border city of Belgorod, just north of Ukraine, when it was forced to drop the explosives for reasons that are still under investigation, according to Russian news agency RIA Novosti, which cited the Russian defense ministry.

Officials have not immediately reported any casualties, Belgorod Gov. Vyacheslav Gladkov said in a Telegram post.

The explosion rocked an intersection in the city’s center and left a “huge impact crater” that was 20 meters (about 65 feet) wide, Gladkov continued.

“Windows in a nearby apartment building were damaged, as well as several parked cars. Electricity poles were downed,” he added.

An overturned car landed on the roof of a store near a residential high-rise building, according to RIA Novosti. Emergency teams are at the scene, the outlet said.

Belgorod is located about 40 kilometers (roughly 25 miles) north of the border with Ukraine.


Zelensky appeals to Mexico’s Congress

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky appealed to Mexico’s Congress Thursday to help defend the territorial integrity of Ukraine.

“Your vote in the UN General Assembly and other international organizations is very important,” Zelensky said via video.

“It is the vote to defend the principles and objectives of the UN Charter and therefore to defend the territorial integrity of Ukraine and all nations of the world,” he added.

Zelensky received a standing ovation from lawmakers before and after his speech.


Biden and Macron discuss Ukraine on call: White House

US President Joe Biden discussed Ukraine with French President Emmanuel Macron in a call Thursday, according to the White House.

The leaders in the call “reiterated their steadfast support for Ukraine in the face of Russia’s brutal aggression.”

The two also talked about Macron’s visit to China as well as “their ongoing efforts to advance prosperity, security, shared values, and the rules-based international order in the Indo-Pacific region.”

“China had a role to play in contributing, in the medium term, to an end to the conflict in accordance with the principles and purposes of the United Nations Charter,” a readout of the call from Elysee Palace stated.

Both heads of state also agreed on the “importance of continuing to engage” the Chinese authorities on this basis.


Russian FM to meet with UN chief on Monday in New York

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov will meet with United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres in New York on Monday, Russian state media TASS reported Thursday.

Almost all members of Lavrov’s delegation to the UN Security Council were issued visas to attend, Russia’s Permanent Representative to the UN Vasily Nebenzya told state television Russia 24, according to TASS.

He said visas had not yet been issued to journalists.

Earlier this week, Nebenzya stated that Lavrov is set to discuss the Black Sea grain deal with Guterres during his visit to New York.

Russia took over the presidency of the UN Security Council on April 1 in what Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba called “a bad joke.”


NATO membership for Ukraine will be “high on agenda” at alliance’s summit in July: Chief

The topic of Ukraine’s NATO membership and security guarantees will be “high on the agenda” at July’s NATO summit in the Lithuanian capital of Vilnius, the military alliance’s chief stated on Thursday.

Answering questions from reporters during a news conference in Kyiv, Jens Stoltenberg said that he recognizes that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky will “raise the issue of membership, of security guarantees” at the summit.

“Ukraine’s future is in NATO. All allies agree on that,” Stoltenberg continued, adding that the main focus of the alliance now is “to ensure that Ukraine prevails.”

The official noted that he expects NATO allies to “agree to further strengthen NATO’s package for Ukraine” at the July summit.

He stated that Ukraine’s “rightful place is in NATO”.

Stoltenberg added he had discussed a “multiyear support initiative” with Ukrainian Zelensky, which would help Ukraine transition from Soviet-era equipment and doctrines to “NATO standards.”

This would “ensure full interoperability with the alliance,” he stressed.

Asked about Friday’s meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group at Ramstein Air Base in Germany, which Stoltenberg will be attending, he said he expects NATO allies “will make new announcements on concrete military support to Ukraine.”

Iran FM says Saudi technical team visit to Tehran, Mashhad good

Iran and Saudi FMs Hossein Amir Abdolalhian and Faisal bin Farhan

During a telephone conversation with his Saudi counterpart, Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian also congratulated Faisal bin Farhan Al-Saud on Eid al-Fitr, marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan.

Amirabdollahian described his recent meeting with Faisal bin Farhan as well as the exchange of technical delegations tasked with reopening the embassies of the two countries as good.

Amirabdollahian added, “My colleagues at the Foreign Ministry and the delegation sent to Riyadh and Jeddah are trying reopen the Embassy and consulate general of the Islamic Republic of Iran in Saudi Arabia as scheduled and before the Hajj season.”

He further described the outcome of the Saudi technical team’s trip to Tehran and Mashhad as good.

The Saudi foreign minister for his part congratulated Amirabdollahian on Eid ul-Fitr.

Faisal bin Farhan Al-Saud expressed hope that the two top diplomats will soon meet each other in Tehran and Riyadh.

The Saudi foreign minister said his country will provide the necessary facilities for Iranian Hajj pilgrims and for the purpose of reopening the Iranian Embassy and consulate general in Riyadh and Jeddah.

Amirabdollahian and Bin Farhan Al-Saud underlined that the trend of the work of the two countries’ technical delegations has been positive and constructive, and that Iran and Saudi Arabia are moving toward increased cooperation.