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“Iran has never used its gas and oil as leverage”

Gas station Europe

Marandi noted that this is while Western governments have used sanctions as a weapon to pressure other countries.

Marandi noted that Iran only seeks normal relations with all legitimate and non-hostile governments.

The senior advisor to the Iranian negotiating team also accused the US of stonewalling over a few ambiguous (but very important) words that shoot up global energy prices.

He made those comments in a tweet.

In a separate tweet on Sunday, Marandi had said Iran will be patient regarding the negotiations over the revival of the Iran nuclear deal, JCPOA.

He added that the US under former President Barack Obama systematically violated the deal and under Donald Trump and current President Joe Biden it imposed the so-called maximum pressure against innocent Iranian citizens.

Marandi underscored that Iran won’t accept ambiguities or loopholes in the text of a deal, warning that winter is approaching and the EU is facing a crippling energy crisis in reference to the West’s urgent need for Iranian oil being pumped into the market.

Iranian Foreign Ministry: Lifting bans priority for Iran

Nasser Kanani

He added that any deal with the P4+1 and the US must guarantee that Iran will enjoy full economic benefit from the lifting of sanctions.

The Foreign Ministry spokesman however noted that a deal in Vienna hinges on the West’s political will.

He added that the Islamic Republic has acted responsibly to reach a deal and presented its views on the US’s response to the EU’s draft for the revival of the Iran nuclear deal, JCPOA.

Kanaani described Tehran’s response as sound and constructive, saying, “If the other side has the required political will and acts constructively, a deal will be at hand.”

He added that what the Islamic Republic did was meant to strengthen the text of the draft.

The Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman stressed that Iran wants guarantees that no further sanctions will be slapped on the country after they are lifted.

He underlined that gaining assurances from the other side tops the agenda of Iran’s Foreign Ministry in the Vienna talks.

Kanaani added the closure of the case of safeguard issues regarding the Iran nuclear deal is also of paramount importance to Tehran.

Kanaani urged the International Atomic Energy Agency, IAEA, to stop its politicization of the Iran nuclear program and talks aimed at reviving the JCPOA.

The Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman then spoke about a range of other regional issues.

On Iraq, he said Iran will use any opportunity to help establish peace and stability in its Arab neighbor.

He then turned to the issue of Yemen, reaffirming Iran’s stance and its insistence that the Saudi-led blockade on the impoverished Arab country must be lifted.

Kanaani said peace will not be possible unless the siege is removed.

As for Iran’s ties with Azerbaijan, the foreign ministry spokesperson said officials of the two countries are determined to push ahead with bilateral relations in a constructive and peaceful manner.

Kanaani added that economic ties between Tehran and Baku have been strengthened.

He further spoke about ties with Russia, saying the relations pertain to all spheres and will be bolstered.

Covid kills 24 people in Iran in 24 hours

COVID in Iran

Some 24 more Iranians have died from the coronavirus over the past 24 hours bringing the total deaths to 144,019, Iran’s Health Ministry said on Monday.

1,095 new cases of infection with COVID-19 were found over the past 24 hours, 237 of whom were hospitalized, it added.

The Iranian Health Ministry noted that 7,309,427 patients out of a total of 7,534,182 infected people have recovered or been discharged from hospitals.

816 COVID-19 patients are in critical conditions and in intensive care units, it continued.

The Iranian Health Ministry also announced that 65,023,367 Iranians have received the first dose and 58,410,397 people have so far received the second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine.

Moreover, 30,930,693 people have also received the third or fourth shots as the booster jab.

Israeli troops kill Palestinian youth in WB

Israeli Forces in West Bank

The 19-year-old, identified as Taher Mohammad Zakarneh, was shot early on Monday as the Israeli troops stormed the town of Qabatya, located six kilometers (3.7 miles) south of Jenin, according to the Shahab news agency.

The Wafa news agency, citing the Palestinian Health Ministry, reported that he was shot in the head, the right foot and the left thigh, and suffered burns as well.

Zakarneh was then taken to a hospital in the city of Jenin, where he was pronounced dead hours later.

Another Palestinian was also injured with live bullets and three others detained during the Israeli army raid on Qabatya, according to reports.

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.

Settler violence is rampant in the occupied Palestinian territories. The acts of violence and vandalism, known as price tag attacks which are committed by Israeli settlers against Palestinians and their property, have risen in recent years.

However, Israeli authorities rarely prosecute Israeli settlers for their assaults on Palestinians and their property and the vast majority of the files are closed due to deliberate police failure to investigate properly.

Many Palestinians have also sustained injuries or lost their lives in incidents due to allegations that they attempted stabbing or car-ramming attacks against Israeli settlers and forces.

As many as 74 Palestinians, including 37 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.

Top Iranian general warns threats posed by US spy drones won’t be tolerated

Major General Mohammad Baqeri

Major General Mohammad Baqeri said enemies are trying to make up for the drawdown of their forces in the region by employing different methods.

General Baqeri talked about the reports that new small spy drones are being deployed in regional waters stressing that they jeopardize maritime security.

The general added that Iran will complain to the International Maritime Organization and pursue other international tools to resolve the issue diplomatically.

He said, however, that Iranian vessels will not tolerate the presence of such unmanned equipment in their route and will make sure to counter them.

The Iranian general stressed that the country will protect its right to freedom and security of navigation in international waters.

The remarks come days after Iran seized two US surface drones in the Red Sea for endangering maritime traffic.

Two Russian embassy workers killed in Afghan blast

Russian Embassy Afghanistan

A suicide bomber detonated his vest around the corner from the main gate of the Russian embassy, apparently targeting locals queuing for visas, according to the local media.

The death toll has reached 25, with many more injured, according to the news network Al Jazeera.

The blast had occurred when an employee of the embassy went outside to people waiting in the line, a source told RIA-Novosti news agency.

Reuters earlier reported that the guards were able to spot the suicide bomber and fired shots at him.

Russia is among the few nations to have maintained an embassy in Kabul since the Taliban came to power in Afghanistan a year ago.

Despite not officially recognizing the Taliban government, Moscow has been in talks with the group on a deal to supply gasoline and other commodities to the country, which has been slapped with harsh international sanctions.

Iran seizes huge methamphetamine stash

methamphetamine

The stash, the sixth large consignment seized during the past six months, was stashed neatly under a tanker, the customs office in Mahirud said on Monday.

The seizure comes two weeks after 1.1 tons of Iran-bound methamphetamine hidden in two fuel tankers from Afghanistan was discovered.

Iranian officials say the confiscation of industrial drugs, particularly meth and heroin, has recently increased from Afghanistan.

Iran is a major transit route for drug trafficking from its eastern neighbor Afghanistan to European countries.

Afghanistan is the major supplier of the vast majority of the world’s opium and heroin even during the 20-year occupation of the county by US-led forces.

The Islamic Republic has been praised by international organizations for its role in cutting supply lines to the West.

According to official figures, 3,800 have been killed and more than 12,000 others wounded in Iran in the fight against drug trafficking since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Epidemiologist: 7th Covid-19 surge in Iran over

Iran COVID

Massoud Younesian told ISNA on Monday that the downward trend across the world, including in Iran, has been continuing for the past two weeks.

The optimism comes as Iranian students are ready to start the new school year after two years of distance learning which took its toll on the learning skills of the students, according to experts.

Younesian said over 80 percent of Iranian students have received two doses of vaccine for coronavirus, one of the highest rates among students in the world.

Younesian added currently there are no alarming Covid-19 variants in the world, raising hopes that the pandemic will gradually fade away.

The Iranian Health Ministry has reported a notable decrease in the number of cities classified as ‘red’ or ‘high-risk’ and ‘orange’ or ‘moderate risk’ on the country’s color-coded coronavirus map.

According to the latest updates, there are now only 8 red cities on the map, down from 64 since a few weeks ago.

The infectious disease has killed nearly 144 thousand people in Iran, a country of over 84 million people.

Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 194: Zelensky says three settlements liberated in southern and eastern Ukraine

Russia Ukraine War

Kremlin makes prediction about gas supplies to EU

The technical issues with gas deliveries to Europe via Nord Stream 1 will persist until the West lifts the sanctions it has slapped on Russia over the ongoing Ukraine conflict, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Monday.

In his telling, these restrictions hamper maintenance of the pipeline.

On August 31, Gazprom completely shut down gas deliveries via the pipeline. Although initially Nord Stream 1 was slated to resume gas transit on Friday, Gazprom announced that it would remain closed indefinitely due to technical issues.

“Problems in [gas] deliveries arose due to sanctions that have been imposed on our country and a number of companies by Western countries, including Germany and the UK. There are no other reasons behind supply issues,” Peskov noted.

The Kremlin spokesman also claimed that it is not Gazprom’s fault that “the Europeans absolutely absurdly make a decision to refuse to service their equipment,” which they are contractually obligated to do.

Peskov stressed that all Nord Stream 1 operations hinge on “one piece of equipment that needs serious maintenance.”

On Sunday, his comments were echoed by Alexander Novak, Russian Deputy Prime Minister, who blamed the European Union for the problems that have prevented the resumption of gas supplies via the pipeline.

“The entire problem lies precisely on [the EU’s] side, because all the conditions of the repair contract have been completely violated, along with the terms of shipping of the equipment,” he added.

On Friday, Gazprom canceled the restart of Nord Stream 1 citing an oil leak in the turbine, which was detected during a joint inspection with manufacturer Siemens Energy at the Portovaya compressor station near St. Petersburg. At the same time, the malfunction could be remedied only in Canada, which has imposed sanctions against Moscow.

Despite the maintenance issues, Europe has accused Russia of weaponizing energy supplies, with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen describing Moscow as “not a reliable partner” in terms of gas supplies.


Plan for referendum on Kherson joining Russia put on hold

Plans to hold a referendum on the Ukrainian region of Kherson becoming a part of Russia have been put on hold, said Kirill Stremousov, the deputy head of the Russian-backed administration in the region.

“Kherson region is ready for a referendum on joining the Russian Federation, but a pause was taken due to the security situation,” he added, according to the Russian state news agency TASS.

Ukrainian and US officials have long criticized Russian efforts to hold sham referendums in Kherson and other Russian-occupied regions of Ukraine.

Stremousov’s remarks come a week after Ukraine announced its long-anticipated offensive to retake Kherson had gotten underway. Since then, there have been dozens of strikes against Russian forces and infrastructure in Kherson.

Deputy Prime Minister of Ukraine Iryna Vereshchuk described the referendum as “a farce and a circus,” and warned Ukrainian citizens against participating.

“For our citizens who will participate in this — this is, in fact, an article of the Criminal Code,” she said.

“Do not to take part in any ‘referendums.’ Neither pressure, nor forceful incitement, etc., will be able to justify the fact that a person went to the ‘referendum,'” she added.


EU signs deal with Ukraine for nearly $500m in aid

The EU has signed a deal to release a further $497 million (500 million euros) in planned aid to Ukraine, this time to support housing, education and agriculture.

The European Commission announced the package as senior officials hosted a meeting of the EU-Ukraine Association Council with Ukraine’s Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal in Brussels.


Ukraine says it has inflicted losses on Russian forces in Kherson

The Ukrainian military announced Monday that offensive action in the southern region of Kherson continued Sunday, with air strikes and artillery brought to bear against Russian forces.

The military’s Operational Command South said that the air force carried out 21 strikes, while “rocket and artillery units continue to carry out fire missions intensively. Crossings through the Dnipro and Inhulets (rivers) are under close fire control.”

The command added the Russians had lost six tanks and other equipment, including nine howitzers.

An ammunition depot at Tomyna Balka and a pontoon crossing near the village of Lvove were also destroyed, as well as the command post of the 35th Army in the Kakhovka district, it said.

But the Ukrainian General Staff noted that Russian forces continued to conduct defensive operations, attacking more than a dozen settlements in northern Kherson with artillery and air strikes.

“After intensive shelling by the Defense Forces of areas where the enemy is concentrated in the Kherson region, Russian invaders imposed a ban on the movement of local residents. In particular, people are prohibited from crossing the Dnipro River both by bridges and by watercraft,” the General Staff added.

The Kherson region military administration noted that amid the combat, most of the region was once again without electricity.


Ukrainian official suggests IAEA mission to  Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant was “ineffective”

A senior Ukrainian official says the government is still waiting for a report from the International Atomic Energy Agency on the situation at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant and has suggested the IAEA mission is “ineffective.”

“We do not understand whether everything is normal there in terms of safety, cooling of the reactors, with the personnel, whether they understand the algorithms by which they work. We did not see all this in the report, and this proves that international institutions, unfortunately, are completely ineffective,” Mykhailo Podolyak, adviser to the Head of the President’s Office of President of Ukraine, told Ukrainian television Monday.

Podolyak stated there should be a “nuclear audit” the plant, which included “a certain number of people who know nuclear physics and engineering technologies” working next to Ukrainian staff.

While occupied by Russian forces, the plant is run largely by Ukrainian technicians.

“There are Russian troops who do not understand what is happening there, they do not assess the risks correctly. But there is a certain number of our workers there who need some kind of protection, to have people from the international community standing next to them,” Podolyak added.

The weekend appears to have passed relatively quietly in the area around the plant, which has seen persistent shelling for weeks, some of which has damaged the plant’s infrastructure, according to the IAEA.

On Friday, IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi said the organization knows “much more” about the state of the plant after its visit last week. A team of inspectors will have “continued presence” at the plant, Grossi added.


Zelensky says Ukraine took three settlements in south, east

President Volodymyr Zelensky stated that his forces have taken two settlements in southern Ukraine, a third settlement in the east, and additional territory in the east of the country.

He did not say precisely where the territories were and provided no timeline, except to say he had received “good reports” at a meeting on Sunday from his military commanders and head of intelligence.

In his nightly video address, Zelensky thanked his forces for liberating a settlement in the eastern Donetsk region, the taking of “certain heights” also in an eastern area in the Lysychansk-Siversk direction and liberating two southern settlements.


More German troops begin arriving in Lithuania

About 100 German soldiers have arrived in Lithuania after Germany pledged to bolster its presence on NATO’s eastern flank. The troops drove off the ferry in the port city of Klaipeda.

They were to make up the command unit of a new brigade, a group usually made up of about 4,000 soldiers.

“Our message to our allies here, on the eastern flank, is that we are committed to ensuring security,” said the brigade’s commander, Christian Nawrat.

The command unit would remain permanently in the Baltic nation, while combat units would join them for exercises, he added.


EU energy ministers to consider gas price cap, other measures: Document

European Union countries’ energy ministers are set to consider options to rein in soaring energy prices including gas price caps and emergency credit lines for energy market participants, a document seen by Reuters suggests.

EU ministers will meet on September 9 to discuss urgent bloc-wide measures to respond to a surge in gas and power prices that is hammering Europe’s industry and hiking household bills after Russia curbed gas deliveries to the bloc.

The draft document says the ministers will discuss options including a price cap on imported gas, a price cap on gas used to produce electricity, or temporarily removing gas power plants from the current EU system of setting electricity prices.


‘Phosphorous munitions’ alleged in Kharkiv attack

Sixteen houses have been destroyed by Russian attack overnight Saturday into Sunday in the Ukrainian village of Bezruky, in the Kharkiv region.

Local officials announced it was the most intense round of attacks since the early days of the war, with the head of the Derhachi Hromada administration, Vyacheslav Zadorenko, alleging that “the enemy used cluster phosphorous munitions on civilian infrastructure”.

No residents were harmed in the strikes, with many having already evacuated. Some 1,000 people still live in the village, according to officials.


Ukraine PM visits Berlin, seeking more weapons

Ukraine’s Prime Minister Denys Shmygal has voiced hopes that Germany would become a leading player helping Kyiv to build up its air defences, as he sought more heavy weapons for Kyiv from Berlin.

Germany’s initial stuttering response on providing military support to Kyiv following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine had sparked consternation.

But Shmygal acknowledged during his visit that Germany has since significantly stepped up its military aid, with heavy armaments like the tank howitzer 2000 or MARS rocket launchers all “working well on the battle field”.

The air defence system Iris-T is expected to be delivered in the autumn, he said, adding that Ukraine “hopes that Germany will become one of the leaders in the process of developing Ukrainian air defence”.


Ukraine dispatches its biggest grain convoy of UN deal so far

Ukraine announced it has dispatched its biggest convoy of grain vessels under an UN-brokered deal so far after 13 ships set sail from its ports carrying 282,500 tonnes of agricultural products to foreign markets.

The cargo bound for eight countries was loaded at the Black Sea ports of Odesa, Chornomorsk and Pivdennyi. The ports had been completely blockaded by Russia’s invasion until a July 22 deal that was brokered by the United Nations and Turkey.

Eighty-six ships have since set sail from Ukrainian ports under the deal, carrying two million tonnes of agricultural products to 19 countries, the Ukrainian Infrastructure Ministry said in a statement on Facebook.


Sweden, Finland to offer liquidity guarantees to energy firms

Finland and Sweden have announced plans to offer billions of dollars in liquidity guarantees to energy companies in their countries after Russia’s Gazprom shut the Nord Stream 1 gas pipeline, deepening Europe’s energy crisis.

Finland is aiming to offer 10 billion euros ($9.95bn) and Sweden plans to offer 250 billion Swedish crowns ($23.2bn) in liquidity guarantees.


Berlin and Moscow trade blame over halted gas supplies

Berlin and Moscow are trading blame for the halting of gas flows through the Nord Stream 1 Baltic Sea pipeline between the two countries, the day after Russia failed to turn the taps back on after a planned period of maintenance ended.

“[Russian President Vladimir] Putin’s Russia has broken its contracts,” German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said, and has not been fulfilling its supply commitments for some time now.

“Russia is no longer a reliable supplier of energy,” he added.

For its part, the Kremlin blamed the EU for the suspension of gas deliveries via the Nord Stream 1 pipeline, news agency Interfax has reported.

Speaking in a television broadcast titled “Moscow. Kremlin. Putin”, Kremlin Press Secretary Dmitry Peskov said, “If the Europeans make an absolutely absurd decision, where they refuse to maintain their systems, or rather, systems belonging to Gazprom, then it is not Gazprom’s fault but the fault of the politicians who decided about the sanctions.”

According to Peskov, Europeans are contractually obliged to maintain the systems of the Russian energy giant Gazprom.


Kremlin: ‘Every confrontation ends with easing of tensions’

Even amid historic tensions between Russia and the West, the Kremlin expects relations to return to normal at some point, according to spokesman Dmitry Peskov.

“Every confrontation ends with an easing of tensions, and every crisis situation ends at the negotiating table,” Peskov stated on state TV, Interfax news agency reported.

“That will be the case this time as well,”he added.

It is likely, he said, that it will not happen so quickly, but it will happen, he said on the TV programme “Moscow. Kremlin. Putin.”


Zelensky discusses urgent aid, Russia sanctions with EU chief

President Volodymyr Zelensky says he has called on the EU to urgently allocate its next round of aid to Ukraine and pressed for a new wave of sanctions on Russia in a phone call with European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen.

“Discussed the allocation of the next tranche of #EU macro-(financial) aid ASAP. Emphasized the need to prepare the 8th package of (Western) sanctions (on Russia), including a ban on issuing visas to Russian citizens,” he wrote on Twitter.

Zelensky, who has warned Europeans to expect a difficult winter due to Russian oil and gas export cuts, also added he and von der Leyen coordinated “steps to limit Russia’s excess profits from the sale of oil and gas”.


Ukrainian flag raised in Kherson

A post on social media has shown Ukrainian troops raising a Ukrainian flag on the roof of a hospital in Vysokopillya in Kherson.

The photo circulating on Twitter comes amid a counterattack by Ukrainian forces to retake the city of Kherson from Russia.

Iran FM calls for lifting of Yemen siege

Amirabdollahian Grundberg

Hossein Amirabdollahian made the remarks in a Sunday meeting with Hans Grundberg, UN special envoy for Yemen’s affairs on Sunday in Tehran.

Amirabdollahian noted that only the Yemeni people can decide their future, saying the Islamic Republic of Iran wants peace, stability and security for the great nation of Yemen.

Amirabdollahian added that the Islamic Republic believes that Yemen’s stability and security can have a direct impact on the stability and security of the region and the Persian Gulf.

He said a lasting ceasefire in Yemen is contingent upon the complete removal of the humanitarian siege on the country.

Amirabdollahian also warned about the plight of more than 20 million Yemenis who are living under dire conditions in order to meet their basic needs such as medicine, food and sanitary water.

The top Iranian diplomat thanked the UN chief’s special envoy for Yemen for his efforts.

UN special envoy for Yemen’s affairs Hans Grundberg for his part said from the beginning of his mission, he was after a truce in Yemen.

Grundberg added, “I have always stressed that we should move toward establishing a lasting and permanent ceasefire with the participation of all sides.”

He also praised Iran’s effort aimed at putting an end to the Yemen war.