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Iranian director Asghar Farhadi elected president of Zurich film festival’s jury

Asghar Farhadi

Other members of the jury are British director Clio Barnard, Swiss screenwriter and director Petra Volpe, Swedish producer Piodor Gustafsson and American producer Daniel March Dreifus, who will pick the winner of the golden eye prize of the festival along with its $25,000 cash award.

Farhadi had also sat on the 2022 Cannes jury and awarded the festival’s Palm D’Or to “Triangle of Sadness” directed by Ruben Ostland.

The Iranian director has previously served as the president or jury member of several other international film festivals including Berlin film festival.

The Iranian filmmaker has received two Oscars for Best Foreign Language Film for “A Separation” and “The Salesman”, making him one of the few directors worldwide who have won the category twice.

Three Iranian movies are taking part in this year’s Zurich film festival. Ali Asgari’s “Until Tomorrow” will be competing in the feature films section while Jafar Panahi’s “No Bears” and Saeed Roustaei’s “Leila’s Brothers” will be screened in the gala and special screenings sections of the event.

The 18th edition of Zurich film festival will be held from September 22 to October 2 in Switzerland.

Iran health ministry reports 22 Covid deaths, 650 cases

COVID in Iran

Some 22 more Iranians have died from the coronavirus over the past 24 hours bringing the total deaths to 144,243, Iran’s Health Ministry said on Wednesday.

646 new cases of infection with COVID-19 were found over the past 24 hours, 130 of whom were hospitalized, it added.

The Iranian Health Ministry noted that 7,318,111 patients out of a total of 7,540,962 infected people have recovered or been discharged from hospitals.

432 COVID-19 patients are in critical conditions and in intensive care units, it added.

The Iranian Health Ministry also announced that 65,056,300 Iranians have received the first dose and 58,449,916 people have so far received the second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine.

Moreover, 31,099,175 people have also received the third or fourth shots as the booster jab.

Iran president leaves for Uzbekistan to attend SCO summit

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi

Heading a high-ranking Iranian delegation, including First Vice President Mohammad Mokhber, Raisi said improving the neighborhood policy, convergence, solidarity, and deepening multilateralism are among the goals of his visit to Uzbekistan.

President Raisi also said Iran will obtain full membership of the SCO during the summit and will officially become the ninth member state of the alliance.

Before embarking on the trip, the Iranian president said, “We have very good relations with Uzbekistan, and now our trade relations stand at 500 million dollars, but from the point of view of the two governments, this amount is not enough and should be increased.”

Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister for Economic Diplomacy Mehdi Safari proposed earlier this year a single currency for SCO members to facilitate economic integration among member states.

Based on official figures, Iran’s non-oil trade volume with permanent and observer member states of the SCO has increased by 29 percent in the second quarter of 2022 compared to the same period last year.

Iran’s application for full SCO membership was approved last September and the process of full membership kicked off.

The SCO was founded in Shanghai in 2001 by Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Russia and China to resolve territorial disputes. However, it expanded to cover more areas, including security, economy, energy, and culture.

Russia says anti-Iran resolution at IAEA BoG brought negative consequences

IAEA

The Permanent Representative of Russia to International Organizations in Vienna has announced that the anti-Iran resolution at the June Board of Governors brought negative consequences.

The Russian Permanent Mission to the International Organizations in Vienna in its Twitter account quoted Mikhail Ulyanov who also leads the Russian delegation at the Vienna negotiations as saying, “Poorly thought-through anti-Iran resolution at the June Board brought its negative consequences. Not only has it complicated Vienna talks situation but also created extra challenge for IAEA in terms of JCPOA-related verification measures.”

“We clearly remember warning our Western colleagues about consequences of their rash actions & called to forego this resolution scheme. Iran’s decision to remove cameras & monitoring equipment was a direct reaction to the resolution,” it added.

“Russia supports successful conclusion of Vienna Talks. All the conditions are there already. All parties worked equally hard. But we need to take into account political complexity & sensitivity of issues to be solved in JCPOA restoration context,” it noted.

The UN nuclear agency’s Board of Governors has adopted a resolution accusing Iran of not cooperating with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). The resolution, proposed by the US and its allies, was approved with 30 votes in favor, two against, and three abstentions.

The trigger for the latest Western move was a report issued by the IAEA after its director general Rafael Grossi made a controversial visit to Israel and met the regime’s leaders late last month. The nuclear agency has been on the receiving end of documents supplied by Israel about Iran’s nuclear program, which Tehran has rejected as fake and fabricated by Mojahedin-e Khalq Organization (MKO) terrorist group.

Official says number of Afghan students in Iran schools rises by 40%

Afghan migrants in Iran

Mehdi Fayyazi, the head of the Center for International Affairs and deputy minister of education, told IRNA on Wednesday that following remarks made by Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei in 2015 about educating all Afghan migrants students living in Iran legally or even illegally, the Ministry of Education has accepted around 800k Afghan pupils at schools throughout the Islamic country.

Pointing to the fact that some of these pupils have not registered their information on the proposed website yet, he stated that there are no precise statistics on the students and density in some areas.

The official added that the Ministry of Education is prepared to welcome Afghan pupils despite the fact that schools in some provinces such as Qom, Tehran, and Razavi Khorasan have reached their maximum capacity.

Fayyazi also urged Afghan migrants to receive special cards for education support and avoid trying to enroll at schools directly.

He further referred to schools for foreign nationals, which are non-governmental and are set up by some foreign investors, noting that those who want to establish schools for foreign nationals must go through the official procedures, so Afghan sponsors are expected to respect the law.

Following the change of power in Afghanistan and the re-taking of the helm in Kabul by the Taliban forces, thousands of migrant families poured into Iran; therefore, the number of Afghan refugees in the Islamic country increased.

The Islamic Republic of Iran’s Ministry of Education tasked schools to enroll children of foreign nationals living in the country legally; thus, schools in different cities and provinces embark on enrolling foreign national students, especially Afghan pupils.

Dramatic car crash leaves two dead, another injured in Iran’s capital

Dramatic car crash Tehran

The spokesman for the Fire Department in Tehran, Jalal Maleki, said on Wednesday that the deadly car accident happened a little after midnight as the Peugeot 207 was travelling through Sadr Expressway with three passengers onboard.

He said the car was diverted from the main road and then rammed into the guard rails for unknown reasons before falling from the upper deck of the double-decker expressway and going up in flames.

Two men, 17 and 18 years old, died on the spot, while a woman sustained injuries and was transferred to hospital in critical condition.

According to figures provided by the police, at least 600 people die and 20,000 more are injured every year in traffic-related accidents in Tehran.

Generally, Iran has one of the highest death tolls from road traffic accidents in the world.

Iran FM warns IAEA board against issuing ‘unconstructive statement’

Iran FM Hossein Amirabdollahian

Hossein Amirabdollahian, in a phone conversation with his Omani counterpart, was referring to the ongoing meeting of the IAEA board of governors in the Austrian capital, Vienna.

Iran’s nuclear work tops the agenda of the negotiations in Vienna.

Iran’s top diplomat emphasized Tehran’s commitment to the process of talks over the revival of the nuclear deal, JCPOA, and exchanges of messages for securing the removal of the sanctions.

He pointed to efforts exerted by all sides over the past several months, saying the key to achieving the desired point for an agreement under the current circumstances is for the US to focus on realism and to show the necessary will.

Amirabdollahian reiterated Iran’s will and good faith to reach a good, strong, and lasting nuclear deal.

For his part, Omani Foreign Minister Sayyid Badr al-Busaidi emphasized the importance of reaching a nuclear agreement and the return of all sides to their commitments under the deal.

He stressed the necessity of making efforts toward achieving positive results from months of talks.

Talks between Iran and the remaining parties to the JCPOA are at a critical juncture with the sides saying only some crucial points should be resolved.

The US withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal in 2018 under former President Donald Trump, leaving the internationally recognized agreement in disarray.

Iran’s FM says Tehran eager to broaden ties with UAE

Hossein Amir Abdollahian and Saif Mohammed Al Zaabi

The meeting was held in Tehran on Tuesday after the return of the Emirati ambassador to the Iranian capital to resume work.

The Iranian foreign minister, in the meeting, stressed the importance of enhancing regional cooperation to stabilize tranquility in the region.

Further, Amirabdollahian called for making use of the current capacities to boost bilateral ties, form a commission to follow cooperation, organize consular relations, and facilitate medical, service, and educational activities.

For his part, the Emirati official expressed satisfaction over his presence in Iran once again.

He referred to trade and economic capacities in both countries as an important factor in fostering bilateral ties.

The diplomat elaborated on the viewpoints of his country’s officials about ties with Iran and exchange of delegations between the two countries.

Two Palestinians killed by Israeli troops in WB

Israeli forces storm al-Aqsa Mosque

The Israeli military said in a statement that the two Palestinians were detected near a security barrier close to the village of Jalamah, which lies north of the West Bank city of Jenin, early on Wednesday morning.

The statement further alleged that soldiers from the Nahal Brigade surrounded the pair and attempted to arrest them, but they opened fire on the troopers. The soldiers returned fire and neutralized the suspects.

The two were named by Palestinian media as Ahmed Abed and Abdul Rahman Abed, from the village of Kafr Dan near Jenin.

The Jerusalem Post daily newspaper also reported that an Israeli soldier was killed in the exchange of fire. No other details were immediately available.

Jalamah is located adjacent to the security barrier just north of Jenin, where a number of Palestinian retaliatory operations earlier in the year originated and where the Israeli military has concentrated much of its clampdown.

The incident comes less than 24 hours after an engineering vehicle belonging to the Israeli ministry of military affairs came under gunfire as it was working along the security barrier in the same area. There were no injuries, but the vehicle was damaged.

On Monday, Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh warned that the intensified Israeli military crackdown in the occupied territories will inevitably push the West Bank to the verge of a major explosion, arguing that Israeli factions are fueling the violence for the sake of their own political interests.

Israel is hiding behind the absence of a political horizon and the world’s preoccupation with the fallout of the Ukraine conflict. The legislative elections, which will be held on November 1, cannot cover up the Israeli regime’s crimes, Shtayyeh noted at the opening of a weekly cabinet session in the central West Bank city of Ramallah.

He called on the international community to wake up and look at what Israel is doing to the “oppressed and occupied” Palestinian nation.

Israeli forces continue their near-daily raid-and-arrest operations in various parts of the West Bank, wounding or killing Palestinians.

Such raids are carried out while Israeli settlers also conduct acts of violence against Palestinians and their property.

Dozens of Palestinians, including Palestinian children, have been killed so far this year, many as a result of the use of lethal force by the Israeli authorities in a manner described by the UN Human Rights Office in the Occupied Territories as a violation of international human rights law.

Official: Sabotage behind fire at Iranian oil field, production to resume soon

Iran Oil

Ghobad Nasseri, who heads the Maroun Oil and Gas Production Company (MOGPC), said that the blaze broke out early on Tuesday after “unknown individuals tampered with” one of the wells at the oil field.

Firefighters and forces of the Iranian Central Oilfields responded to the situation quickly and contained the fire.

He said a team of experts were currently working to assess the extent of damage caused to the oil field, but the production operations would soon restart shortly.

The fire apparently occurred at one of around 20 active wells in Shadegan, whose estimated production capacity is about 70,000 barrels per day.