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Dozens killed, wounded in road accidents in Turkey

Road accidents in Turkey

Sixteen people including emergency workers and journalists died when a bus crashed into an earlier accident site, regional governor Davut Gul from south-eastern province of Gaziantep, said. Another 20 people were wounded and received treatment.

“At around 10.45 this morning, a passenger bus crashed here,” Gul stated, speaking from the scene of the accident on the road east of Gaziantep.

“While the fire brigade, medical teams and other colleagues were responding to the accident, another bus crashed 200 metres behind. The second bus slid to this site and hit the first responders and the wounded people on the ground,” Gul added.

Three firefighters, two paramedics and two journalists were among those killed on the highway between Gaziantep and Nizip, the interior minister, Süleyman Soylu, tweeted. Several of the fatalities were on the bus, he added.

The Ilhas news agency said two of its journalists were killed after pulling over to help the victims of the initial accident.

Television footage showed an ambulance with severe damage to its rear while a bus lay on its side alongside the highway.

Separately, a truck hit a site 250km (155 miles) to the east in the Derik district of Mardin, where first respondents were also attending to an accident, according to footage.

Sixteen people died and 29 others were injured as a result of the incident in Mardin, Turkey’s health minister, Fahrettin Koca, said, adding that eight of the wounded were in a critical condition.

Turkey has a poor record of road safety. According to the government, 5,362 people were killed in traffic accidents last year.

Armed forces spokesman: Israel’s anti-Iran rhetoric psychological warfare

Iranian Forces

Brigadier General Abolfazl Shekaarchi stressed that armed forces enjoy a high level of readiness, while Israel is suffering from “structural weakness”.

Shekaarchi was referring to the recent comments by the Israeli minister of military affairs who said “the Iranian nuclear and regional threat” is on the agenda of the Israeli military.

The Iranian general also talked about the latest Israeli onslaught on Gaza Strip that was countered with a strong response by the Palestinian Islamic Jihad in the Palestinian territory.

He said the Israeli “defeat” shows how ineffective and messed-up the regime is.

Shekaarchi added that all Israeli wars against the resistance front have led to the regime’s defeat.

He noted that the missiles of the resistance front can further tip the balance in favor of the resistance groups in the future.

Mohammad Salami, the commander in chief of Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guard Corps has recently said Iran will stand by Palestinians to the end.

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 179

Russia Ukraine War

Senior Ukrainian intelligence official found dead at home

A regional head of Ukraine’s SBU intelligence services has been found dead at his home in central Ukraine, the prosecutor general’s office announced.

Oleksandr Nakonechny was found by his wife with gunshot wounds in a room of their apartment in the city of Kropyvnytskyi late on Saturday after she heard gunfire, the office said on Telegram.

Police have opened an investigation into the death, but made no further comments.

A local politician, Andrii Lavrus, wrote on Telegram that Nakonechny had shot himself. The information could not be immediately confirmed.

Nakonechny has headed the SBU in the Kirovohrad region since January 2021.


Russia says it destroyed HIMARS ammunition depot in Odesa

Russia’s defence ministry says its sea-based Kalibr missiles destroyed an ammunition depot containing missiles for US-made HIMARS rocket systems and other Western-made anti-aircraft systems in Ukraine’s Odesa region.

The ministry also added it destroyed two M777 Howitzers in combat positions in the Kherson region, and a fuel depot in the Zaporizhia region that it said was storing more than 100 tonnes of diesel.


Four more ships leave Ukraine: Turkey’s defence ministry

Four more ships carrying foodstuffs have left Ukraine’s ports, Turkey’s Defence Ministry has announced.

That brings the total number of vessels to leave Ukraine’s Black Sea ports under a UN-brokered grain export deal to 31.


Russia says new Ukraine shelling at nuclear plant

Russian-installed officials have reported new shelling near the occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine.

Critical safety and control systems were not damaged, said the Russian military administration in the city of Energodar, where Europe’s largest nuclear power plant is located.

Vladimir Rogov, a representative of the Russian authorities, accused Ukraine of “nuclear terrorism”.

NATO-supplied munitions were fired from the opposite bank of the Dnieper River and hit the site in the vicinity of an administration building, Rogov said, adding four projectiles were registered.


UN, US, EU working to get Russian food to markets: UN

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has said the UN is working with the US and EU to overcome obstacles to Russian food and fertilisers reaching world markets.

He stated those countries that imposed sanctions on Russia for its invasion of Ukraine had made clear that the measures did not apply to food and fertilisers, but added there had nevertheless been a “chilling effect” on exports.

“There are a certain number of obstacles and difficulties that need to be overcome in relation to shipping … to insurance and … finance,” Guterres told a news conference alongside Turkey’s defence minister Hulusi Akar.


US warns Turkey over bypassing Western sanctions on Russia

US Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo has told Turkey’s Deputy Finance Minister Yunus Elitas that Russian entities and individuals were attempting to use Turkey to bypass Western sanctions imposed over Moscow’s war in Ukraine, according to the Treasury Department.

In a phone call, the two also discussed ongoing efforts to implement and enforce sanctions against Russia, the department announced in a statement.


Moscow accuses Kyiv of poisoning some of its soldiers in Ukraine

Russia’s defence ministry has accused Ukraine of poisoning some of its servicemen in the Russian-controlled part of Ukraine’s southeastern region of Zaporizhzhia in late July.

An adviser to Ukraine’s interior ministry noted in response that the alleged poisoning could have been caused by Russian forces eating expired canned meat.

The Russian defence ministry said a number of Russian servicemen had been taken to a military hospital with signs of serious poisoning on July 31. Tests showed a toxic substance, botulinum toxin type B, in their bodies, it added.

“Russia is preparing supporting evidence with the results of all the analyses,” the ministry announced in a statement.


UN chief says Russian food and fertiliser must get to market

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has said that governments and the private sector should cooperate to bring Russian food and fertilisers, as well as Ukrainian grain to world markets under a deal agreed last month.

“The other part of this package deal is the unimpeded access to the global markets of Russian food and fertiliser, which are not subject to sanctions,” Guterres told a news conference in Istanbul.

“It is important that all governments and the private sector cooperate to bring them to market,” he continued, adding, “Getting more food and fertiliser out of Ukraine and Russia is crucial to further calm commodity markets and lower prices for consumers.”

Covid infections keep declining in Iran

COVID in Iran

44 more Iranians have died from the coronavirus over the past 24 hours bringing the total deaths to 143,332, Iran’s Health Ministry said on Saturday.

1,835 new cases of infection with COVID-19 were found over the past 24 hours, 504 of whom were hospitalized, it added.

The Iranian Health Ministry noted that 7,226,357 patients out of a total of 7,503,369 infected people have recovered or been discharged from hospitals.

1,361 COVID-19 patients are in critical conditions and in intensive care units, it added.

The Iranian Health Ministry also announced that 64,906,094 Iranians have received the first dose and 58,286,921 people have so far received the second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine.

Moreover, 30,336,452 people have also received the third or fourth shots as the booster jab.

Advisor to Iran negotiating team: Removal of IRGC from terror list never a pre-condition

IRGC

Marandi said the removal of the IRGC from the list was never a precondition or a key demand of Iran.

He also dismissed the US blacklist as unimportant.

Marandi added Iran has also blacklisted the US forces in the Middle East, known as CentCom, as a terrorist organization.

The adviser to the Iranian negotiating team said if the US needs to sell the deal as something acceptable, then that’s their own business.

Iran and the P+41 group of countries, namely Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany, plus the US are making efforts to revive the 2015 nuclear deal, known as JCPOA.

But a couple of issues reportedly remain to be resolved before the revival of the JCPOA that will happen after the US’s return to the agreement.

The JCPOA plunged into disarray in 2018 after former US president Donald Trump left it unilaterally and imposed sanctions on Iran in violation of the deal and international law.

Iranian Judiciary says efforts underway to bring anti-Iran terrorists to justice

Kazem Gharibabadi

Kazem Gharibabadi was speaking during a meeting with the families of terrorism martyrs in the city of Sanandaj, the capital city of the western province of Kurdistan.

Gharibabadi said Iran’s top priorities in the international level are to fight sanctions, protect the rights of the victims of sanctions and also bring members of terrorist groups to justice and put them on trial.

The Judiciary’s deputy chief for international affairs said Iran is serious about fighting terrorist groups and their actions.

Thousands of people have been killed as a result of acts of terrorism following the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran.

Most of the killings were committed by the terror group Mojahedin-e-Khalq Organization (MKO), which is now supported by the US and a few European states.

A number of Iranians have also died as a result of what Tehran calls oppressive sanctions by the US.

Iran is now under hundreds of such bans and is trying to get them lifted.

Iranian interior minister denies female spectators banned from entering stadiums

Iranian female spectators

Vahidi said there is no ban on women entering stadiums.

The interior minister said women’s entry into sports complexes to watch matches is only contingent upon measures to prepare those places for the required purpose.

He added that naturally, it takes time to make necessary preparations in stadiums.

Vahidi however said stadiums like Azadi in Tehran are those women can enter to watch matches.

The interior minister added that sending signals to FIFA to insinuate that in Iran women cannot watch football in stadiums is at odds with national duties.

He said it seems that some people from inside Iran give information about the issue to FIFA.

Vahidi stressed that these people can express their views without telling others that are outside Iran.

Iran says 50 million Covid jabs stockpiled, ready to export

COVID Vaccine

Einollahi added that Iran is ready to export Covid jabs to other countries and will not sign contracts with domestic vaccine producers for now.

The health minister said more than 96 percent of Iranians have received one shot of the Coronavirus vaccine and over 86 percent have got the second dose while more than 55 percent are triple-vaxxed.

Einolalhi also said before President Ebrahim Raisi took office, 50 thousand people referred to vaccination place daily and as many as 700 people died of the Coronavirus each day.

According to him, after Raisi’s term began, the number of people showing up at vaccination centers and getting inoculated rose to 8.6 million people each week.

Einollahi said since last autumn, 11 thousand people have died of the virus in Iran while after the onset of the pandemic up until mid autumn of last year, 132 thousand people had died of Covid.

He pointed to other measures by the government to fight the Coronavirus, saying the health ministry manufactured the Omicron diagnostic kit inside the country, and during the outbreak of this variant of Covid, it doubled the number of ICU beds for children as many of them were contracting the disease.

Einollahi noted that more than 2.5 million foreign nationals, even though they were in Iran illegally, received Covid services.

Russia says to ditch dollar and euro in bilateral trade

Dollar

“Against the growing geopolitical pressure from the ‘collective West’, the only way to guarantee stable trade, economic, and investment ties between Russia and its partners is to avoid the use of currencies that have become ‘toxic’, primarily the US dollar and the euro, and switch to settlements in acceptable alternatives, primarily in national currencies,” Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Pankin stated in an interview with TASS.

The diplomat noted that the current global financial system built by Washington has proven to be “unsuitable for the conditions of a multipolar world order and has essentially become an instrument for achieving political goals of one group of countries.”

“It is quite obvious that in the current conditions the West intends to continue to abuse its privileged position,” Pankin continued.

“It is encouraging to see that many nations, seeing extraordinary and illegitimate sanctions against Russia, are thinking about the need to de-dollarize foreign economic activity to ensure their sovereignty. As it turned out, if there is political will, the issue is quite solvable,” he added.

On February 24, President Vladimir Putin stated in response to a request by the heads of the Donbass republics he had made a decision to carry out a special military operation. The Russian leader stressed that Moscow had no plans of occupying Ukrainian territories.

The US, the EU, the UK and a number of other states have impose sanctions against Russian legal entities and individuals.

Russia has officially become the most sanctioned country in the world, surpassing Iran, Syria and North Korea, after launching the military operation against Ukraine.

Report reveals billion-dollar corruption in Iran’s steel factory

Iran’s steel factory

The request for an investigation into Mobarakeh Steel was put to a vote in the Iranian parliament on January 13, 2021 and was approved by a large majority of the members.

The report said the revenues of Mobarakeh Steel Company, which is the impetus behind 3,000 factories and companies and has employed 350,000 people across Iran, was almost 14 percent of the country’s budget last year.

However, the side of the report revealed major mismanagement and corruption cases, including violations in production and sales, and helping Iran Khordro and Saipa car manufacturing companies to profiteer from the steel surplus at low costs.

It also said the company paid handsome salaries to ghost and non-existent advisors and employees on top of the astronomical salaries paid to the CEO, who took office in 2018, and other high-ranking directors.

The probe also said that the company officials sought to divert the investigation from its course through bribes, media campaigns, and other means.