Monday, January 19, 2026
Home Blog Page 1745

Iranian students start new school year

Over 16 million students started the new school year in 110 thousand classrooms across the country.

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi rang the bell of a school in the capital Tehran, marking the start of the new school year throughout the country.

The in-person education was given the go-ahead after the number of coronavirus cases and deaths receded during the past months.

Over 80 percent of students have received the vaccine for the infectious disease, according to official figures.

Interior minister: There’s evidence Amini not subjected to beating in custody

Mahsa Amini

In an interview with the IRIB on Friday night, Ahmad Vahidi said he had been tasked with following up on the case of Amini’s tragic death upon an order by President Ebrahim Raisi, and that the investigations made swift progress with the reports of medical and legal officials as well as inquiries on the site.

“Based on objective observations, interviews with witnesses, reports from relevant agencies, and other investigations, there was no beating involved,” he said.

He criticized those who initially rushed to make claims about her mistreatment “irresponsibly and without any information,” adding that such accusations helped those seeking unrest to exploit the public feelings.

The interior minister said “organized” groups were operating to perpetrate acts of sabotage and set public property ablaze during the scattered protest gatherings over Amini’s death.

These groups, he added, have nothing to do with the case and only take advantage of the tragedy to create chaos and problems for people.

The interior minister said the restrictions temporarily imposed on the Internet served security purposes and were meant to keep the rioters under control.

IRIB says 35 people, including security forces, have so far been killed in the spate of violence in different Iranian cities. Authorities have yet to release official figures.

Iranian president: We will not yield to violent riots

Iran Protests

The remarks by Ebrahim Raisi, fresh from a five-day trip to New York to address the annual session of the United Nations General Assembly, came upon his return at Mehrabad airport in Tehran.

He said the rallies in support of the Islamic Republic on Friday portrayed the power and honor of the establishment, adding “the will of the people in defense of their country rendered the enemies’ plot ineffective.”

Rallies were held in Tehran an other cities nationwide after Friday prayers to condemn the recent violent riots, which erupted following the death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman who lost her life in a hospital in Tehran on September 16 after her detention by police over her “improper attire.”

Police have reported that she died of a heart attack and a thorough investigation into her death is underway. Mahsa’s family blames police misbehaviour for her death, an accusation denied by the police .

President Raisi also said the nation is united behind the Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei and will not allow the opportunists to create chaos in the country.

According to unofficial figures, the angry protests across the country have left at least 35 people dead and many more injured.

Austrian FM says ready to play role in resolving issues in nuclear talks

Nuclear Negotiations in Vienna

Alexander Schallenberg, in a meeting with Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian, on the sideline of the 77th meeting of the UN General Assembly in New York, welcomed Iran’s initiatives in the Vienna negotiations over the revival of the Iran nuclear deal, JCPOA.

He described an agreement between Iran and the P5+1 as within the reach.

The Austrian foreign minister also underscored the willingness of Austrian companies for presence in new markets in the West Asia region, including those in Iran, and said his country is prepared to take part in drawing up a roadmap to speed up cooperation.

Amirabdollahian for his part touched on the history of diplomatic ties between Iran and Austria and the constructive role of the country in the Vienna talks, and reiterated Iran’s will and determination for the further development of bilateral ties.

Elsewhere in his remarks, the Iranian foreign minister also outlined the potential of the two countries in the areas of economic, trade, cultural and parliamentary ties and underlined Tehran’s readiness to draw up a roadmap for relations.

Iran FM: Swedish court ruling against Iran national illegal

Amir Abdollahian and Linde

Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian made the remarks in a meeting with his Swedish counterpart, Ann Linde, in New York on Friday.

Amirabdollahian added, “Third parties should not be allowed to negatively influence the two countries’ historical and deep relations in line with their own group-related or political interests.”

Nouri has been sntenced to life imprisonment by a Swedish coury over ‘rights violations’ some 30 years ago. He was arrested by security forces upon arrival in Sweden in 2019.

The top Iranian diplomat also expressed hope that the long-running relations between the two countries will be further enhanced with the two sides’ efforts.

The Swedish foreign minister, for her part, referred to the spirit of law and the existence of independent approaches in issuing rulings among judicial apparatuses of different countries.

She said that continued consultations between the Iranian and Swedish foreign ministers on this topic would facilitate achieving a common understanding of consular issues, including reviews of some dossiers.

The two sides stressed the continuation of political consultations between the two states at various levels.

They also exchanged views on bilateral subjects and the grounds for joint cooperation.

Iran summons Swedish charge d’affaires over embassy attack

Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Islamic Republic of Iran

The Swedish envoy was summoned in the absence of the Swedish ambassador to Tehran.

During the meeting, the strong protest of the Islamic Republic of Iran was lodged with the Swedish government over the violent attack and the failure of the Swedish police to take timely and adequate security measures, in accordance with the Vienna Convention.

The Swedish charge d’affaires expressed regret over the incident and stated that he would convey the issue to the Swedish government.

Also, following a similar attack against the Iranian embassy in Brussels, the foreign ministry and the Iranian embassy in Brussels lodged the Islamic Republic’s strong protest with the Belgian foreign ministry and reiterated the responsibility of the government of the country to protect diplomatic venues, in accordance with the Vienna Convention.

Raisi: UNGA events provided opportunity to present Iran’s views

Ebrahim Raisi

The president returned to Tehran from New York, where he held meetings with world leaders and delivered a speech at the General Assembly, among other things, as part of an intensive agenda.

Referring to his speech at the UNGA, President Raisi said he voiced Iran’s protest against unilateralism and double standards on issues of terrorism, human rights and nuclear work.

The president said his mission was also focused on making the Iranian nation’s voice heard about the need to remove the cruel sanctions against the country and about the desire for interactions with both the East and the West.

“The enemies had planned for the voice of the nation not be heard, but they failed,” Raisi added, referring to a series of scattered riots in Iranian cities fueled by foreign-tied thugs and a simultaneous media propaganda campaign against the country.

Raisi praised the demonstrations held countrywide on Friday against the violent riots, describing them as a “manifestation of the Islamic Republic’s dignity and power.”

He also pointed to his meetings on the sidelines of the UNGA session, underscoring different countries’ willingness to boost economic and trade cooperation with the Islamic Republic and calling on relevant authorities to make efforts to activate those potentials.

Iran intel forces foil terror bomb attacks in Tabriz amid riots

Iran Security Forces

The local division of the Intelligence Organization of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRC) said in a statement on Friday that elements tied to the so-called Mujahedin-e-Khalq Organization (MKO) terror group and monarchists attempted to target people with hand-made bombs during gatherings in different locations of Tabriz.

Thanks to the vigilance of the intelligence forces, however, the terrorists were arrested and their explosive devices were confiscated.

Exploiting protests in different cities over the death of a woman in the custody of morality police, Mahsa Amini, rioters have in recent days entered the scene and launched attacks on security forces and public property.

Media reports say 35 people, including security forces, have so far been killed in the unrest. There is still no official confirmation though.

Iranian authorities have warned foreign hands are involved in the deadly chaos.

Amini’s death is still under investigation. Many, however, blame it on morality police, an accusation roundly dismissed by the force.

The Iranian Armed Forces have vowed to stand by the police in defending the country against the foreign-linked riots.

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 213

Russia Ukraine War
A billboard promoting contract army service with an image of a serviceman and the slogan reading "Serving Russia is a real job" sits in Saint Petersburg, Russia.

Referendum voting in occupied regions continues

Voting continues in the Moscow-backed referendums in occupied Ukrainian areas, dismissed by Kyiv and its Western allies as a sham with no legal force.

In the five-day voting in the eastern Luhansk and Donetsk regions and Kherson and Zaporizhzhia in the south that began on Friday, election officials accompanied by police officers carried ballots to homes and set up mobile polling stations, citing safety reasons.

The votes are set to wrap up on Tuesday when balloting will be held at polling stations.


Europe should open to fleeing Russians: European Council president

Charles Michel, the president of the European Council, has urged Europe to show an “openness to those who don’t want to be instrumentalised by the Kremlin”, according to Politico.

The remarks came following Michel’s address at the United Nations general assembly in New York on Friday, and come ahead of a key meeting of EU ambassadors on Monday within the framework of the EU Integrated Political Crisis Response (IPCR).

“In principle I think that … the European Union [should] host those who are in danger because of their political opinions. If in Russia people are in danger because of their political opinions, because they do not follow this crazy Kremlin decision to launch this war in Ukraine, we must take this into consideration,” he said.

He added: “I agree on the idea that we should very quickly cooperate and coordinate because this is a new fact — this partial mobilisation.”


Queue at Russian border stretches 10km as people flee

Hours after the Kremlin shocked Russia by announcing the first mobilisation of at least 300,000 troops since the second world war has led to a rush among men of military age to leave the country.

The line at the border between Russia and Georgia is approximately 10km long, according to the BBC, where people have reportedly been waiting more than 20 hours to cross.

Options to flee are limited, people fleeing previously told the Guardian.

Earlier this week, four of the five EU countries bordering Russia announced they would no longer allow Russians to enter on tourist visas.

“I will be driving across the border tonight,” said a 29-year-old sergeant in the Russian reserves, Oleg, on Thursday.

“I have no idea when I’ll step foot in Russia again,” he added, referring to the jail sentence Russian men face for avoiding the draft.


Russian deputy defence minister removed

Russia’s deputy defence minister Dmitry Bulgakov has been removed from office and transferred to “another post”, the Defence Ministry in Moscow has announced.

He is to be replaced by Colonel General Mikhail Mizintsev, who was seen as responsible for the heavy attacks on the southern Ukrainian city of Mariupol which was captured by Russia at the end of May.


Zelensky urges people in Russian-controlled areas to help weaken occupation

The ongoing referendums in the Russian-occupied regions and Russian mobilization in those areas are crimes, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a nightly address on Friday.

They “are not just crimes against international law and the law of Ukraine. These are crimes against specific people, against the nation,” he stated.

Four Russian-occupied areas of Ukraine began voting in referendums on joining Russia, according to their separatist leaders, in a move that raises the stakes of Moscow’s invasion seven months after fighting began.

“The world will react absolutely fairly to the pseudo-referenda — they will be unequivocally condemned, as well as to the criminal mobilization that the occupiers are trying to carry out in Crimea and other parts of Ukraine that they still control,” Zelensky added.

Ukraine’s president urged people in the Russian-run areas to help to weaken the occupation.

“If you do get into the Russian army, then sabotage any enemy activity, interfere with any Russian operations, pass us all important information about the occupiers — their bases, headquarters, ammunition depots. And at the first opportunity, join our positions. Do everything to save lives and help liberate Ukraine,” he continued.

Ukrainian forces have recaptured about 9,000 square kilometers of territory (3,500 square miles) “since the beginning of active actions in the east of our country,” Zelensky said.

“Nearly 400 settlements have been liberated. This tangible result has been achieved due to the fact that our people in the temporarily occupied territory help us. Please do everything to increase such assistance,” Zelensky added.


Biden says US will never recognize Russia’s referendums in Ukraine

President Joe Biden stated the United States will never recognize Russia’s referendums in occupied parts of Ukraine.

“The United States will never recognize Ukrainian territory as anything other than part of Ukraine. Russia’s referenda are a sham — a false pretext to try to annex parts of Ukraine by force in flagrant violation of international law, including the United Nations Charter,” Biden said in a statement.

The American president noted the US will continue to work with allies to “impose additional swift and severe economic costs” on Russia.

“The United States stands with our partners around the world — and with every nation that respects the core tenets of the UN charter — in rejecting whatever fabricated outcomes Russia will announce,” the statement added.

Four Russian-occupied areas began voting Friday in referendums on joining Russia, according to their separatist leaders, in a move that raises the stakes of Moscow’s invasion.

The referendums, which are illegal under international law and dismissed as a sham by Western governments and Kyiv, could pave the way for Russian annexation of the areas, allowing Moscow to frame the ongoing Ukrainian counteroffensive as an attack on Russia itself.


Ukraine to ‘significantly reduce’ Iran diplomatic presence

Kyiv announced it has decided to reduce Iran’s diplomatic presence in Ukraine over “sending weapons to Russia”.

Ukraine has chosen “to significantly reduce the number of diplomatic personnel of the Iranian embassy in Kyiv”, Ukraine’s foreign ministry said in a statement.

Earlier on Friday Kyiv claimed that one civilian was killed during a Russian attack with drones on the southern port city of Odesa and that one Iranian-designed unmanned vehicle was shot down by Ukrainian forces.


US prepared to impose more costs on Russia over referendums

The US is prepared to impose additional economic costs on Russia in conjunction with allies if Moscow moves forward with Ukraine annexation, the White House has stated.

“We know that these referenda will be manipulated,” noted White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre.


European Council president says Russia should be suspended from UNSC

European Council President Charles Michel called out the United Nations Security Council for allowing Russia to continue participating despite its invasion of Ukraine.

“When a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council starts an unprovoked and unjustifiable war, a war condemned by the UN General Assembly, its suspension from the Security Council should be automatic,” Michel said during his address to the UN General Assembly on Friday, adding that the Kremlin is trying to “mobilize the entire world against an imaginary enemy.”

“We are here in the United Nations, the house that brings the people of the world together. And we all know that a robust multilateral system requires mutual trust. … The use of the veto should be the exception, but it is becoming the rule,” he continued.

Michel urged reform, which he stated is “necessary and urgent.”


436 bodies exhumed from a mass burial site in Izium and most showed signs of violent death: Official

A total of 436 bodies have been exhumed from a mass burial site in Izium, according to Oleh Syniehubov, head of the Kharkiv region military administration, who said the work was completed Friday.

Most of the bodies showed signs of violent death, and 30 had traces of torture, Syiehubov said in a post on Telegram.

“There are bodies with a rope around the neck, with hands tied, with broken limbs and with gunshot wounds. Several men had their genitals amputated. All this is evidence of the terrible torture to which the occupiers subjected the residents of Izium. Most of the bodies are civilians, 21 are military,” the post added.

Syniehubov vowed to find out the circumstances of each of the deaths “so that their relatives and friends know the truth and the killers are punished.”

He thanked the 200 people — forensic experts, police officers, and employees of the State Emergency Service — who had been working at the site in the Kharkiv region, which had been recently recaptured from Russian forces.

Syniehubov added that there were at least three more mass burial sites in other liberated areas of the Kharkiv region.

“All crimes of the occupiers will be documented, and the perpetrators will pay for what they have done,” Syniehubov said.

Izium was subject to intense Russian artillery attacks in April. The city, which sits near the border between the Kharkiv and Donetsk regions, became an important hub for the invading military during five months of occupation. Ukrainian forces took back control of the city on Sept. 10, delivering a strategic blow to Russia’s military assault in the east.


G7 condemns Russia’s ‘scam’ Ukraine referendums

The leaders of the Group of Seven leading industrial democracies have condemned Russia’s “sham” referendums, saying it was an attempt by Moscow to create a “phony” pretext for changing the status of Ukrainian sovereign territory.

“We will never recognise these referenda which appear to be step toward Russian annexation and we will never recognise purported annexation if it occurs,” they wrote in a joint statement sent by the German government spokesperson.


NATO promises more help for Ukraine in response to ‘sham’ votes

NATO will ramp up its help for Kyiv in response to Russia’s “sham” referendums in occupied territories of Ukraine, Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg has said.

He spoke as Moscow launched the votes on the four regions joining Russia, in what Kyiv and its allies say is a ruse to annex the territories and escalate the seven-month-old war.

“Our answer, NATO’s answer, is to step up support,” Stoltenberg told CNN in an interview.

“The best way to end this war is to strengthen the Ukrainians on the battlefield further so they can, at some stage, sit down and reach a solution which is acceptable for Ukraine and that preserves Ukraine as a sovereign, independent nation in Europe,” he added.

The votes have raised fears that Moscow could incorporate the four areas and then portray attacks to retake them as an attack on Russia itself.

“That’s exactly what we need to be prepared for, that Russia will use these sham votes to further escalate the war in Ukraine,” Stoltenberg stated when asked about that scenario.

“But these votes have no legitimacy and of course, they don’t change anything. This continues to be a war of aggression by Russia against Ukraine,” he added.


Up to 1.6 million Ukrainians may have been deported: US envoy

A US envoy says Russia may have forcibly deported between 900,000 and 1.6 million Ukrainians, citing unnamed sources, and urged a UN-mandated commission of inquiry to investigate.

“We urge the commissioners to continue to examine the growing evidence of Russia’s filtration operations, forced deportations and disappearances,” US Ambassador Michele Taylor told the Geneva-based Human Rights Council, referring to a commission of inquiry into Ukraine.

“Numerous sources indicate that Russian authorities have interrogated, detained and/or forcibly deported between 900,000 and 1.6 million Ukrainian citizens,” she added.

Iran Army condemns rioters, vows to stand by police in defending nation

Iran Protests

“Today, the enemies of the Islamic establishment, who have been frustrated in various fields of hostility with the Islamic establishment, exploit any excuse and ploy to rid the people of peace and cause insecurity,” the Army said in a statement on Friday.

The Army strongly condemned deadly assaults on law enforcement forces responding to ugly riots in different cities as well as the desecration of the Holy Qur’an, the national flag, and other sanctities.

“These desperate schemes are the enemy’s evil strategy devised to undermine the status of the Islamic establishment as well as the dignity and convergence of the Iranian nation and sacrificial guardians of the country’s security and people in the Police Force,” it added.

The Iranian nation and Armed Forces will not allow any exploitation of the current security situation by the enemies, the Army said.

The Army urged the nation to stay vigilant in the face of the enemy’s “large-scale psychological and media operation” against the country, assuring everyone that the Army staffers stand prepared to confront various enemy conspiracies and defend the nation’s interests.

Taking advantage of protests in different cities over the death of a woman in the custody of morality police, rioters have in recent days entered the scene and launched attacks on security forces and public property.

Iranian officials say foreign hands are once again involved in the unrest.

The case of the deceased woman, Mahsa Amini, is still under investigation. Many, however, have blamed that on morality police, an accusation roundly dismissed by the force.