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Raisi: Iran accepts no change to political geography of Caucasus

Raisi and Pashinyan

In a phone conversation with his Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Wednesday, Raisi described ties between the two countries as “deep-rooted” and “historical,” calling for the two sides to make plans toward increasing the level of their lasting economic cooperation.

He also said the best solution to establish peace and security in the Caucasus was commitment to the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire agreement and a resolution of the remaining outstanding issues through diplomacy and dialog.

The ceasefire deal put an end to a war between Azerbaijan Republic and Armenia over Nagorno-Karabak. It was signed by Pashinyan, President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev, and Russian President Vladimir Putin in November 2020.

President Raisi also highlighted remarks by Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei about Iran’s sensitivity to its borders in the Caucasus region in his meetings last month with the presidents of Russia and Turkey.

“Iran does not accept any change to the region’s political geography and is prepared to use all of its capacities to help establish peace and stability in the Caucasus and facilitate the region’s growth and development,” he said.
In turn, Pashinyan offered Raisi a detailed report on the recent clashes between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

He also expressed satisfaction with the growing ties between Tehran and Yerevan and said his country was ready to facilitate the transit of goods between the two countries and boost bilateral cooperation in the field of infrastructure, including that of roads and energy.

Report: Iran reviewing Vienna proposals at expert level

Iran’s top nuclear negotiator Ali Bagheri Kani

Nour News, a news outlet affiliated with Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, quoted anonymous sources as saying that the process of examining the ideas proposed by the EU’s Enrique Mora to restore the Iran nuclear deal – the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) – has started and continues.

Several rounds of talks have been held to lift sanctions against Iran and bring the United States back to the fold after its unilateral pullout from the deal in 2018 under former US president Donald Trump.

Nour News said Iranian officials will hold high-level meetings to review the proposals, after conclusion of expert-level assessment and after the initial results are presented to higher decision-making authorities and bodies.

The negotiators from Iran, the U.S., and the reaming parties to the JCPOA – Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany – are in their capitals for consultations on a text presented by the coordinator after four days of intensive talks to break the years-long impasse.

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 169

Russia Ukraine War

361 children have been killed and 705 children injured since war began

The Ukrainian parliament commissioner for human rights has issued updated figures for child casualties since 24 February.

As of 11 August, the commissioner announced that 361 children have been killed and 705 children have been injured. A further 204 are considered missing, and 6,159 have been deported.


Russia condemns Latvia’s ‘xenophobia’ for ‘terrorism sponsor’ statement

Moscow has condemned a resolution by Latvia’s parliament that designated Russia as a “state sponsor of terrorism”.

“Considering that there is no substance, except for animalistic xenophobia, behind this decision, it is necessary to call the ideologues nothing more than neo-Nazis,” foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova wrote on Telegram.


Europeans must be willing to ‘pay’ to support Ukraine: Top EU diplomat

Helping Ukraine in its fight against Russia comes at a price for Europe, which citizens should be willing to pay, the EU’s foreign policy chief has said.

A Russian victory would be Europe’s loss, Josep Borrell believes.

“We must explain to our citizens that this is not someone else’s war,” the diplomat said in an interview published by newspaper El Pais on Thursday.

“The public must be willing to pay the price of supporting Ukraine and for preserving the unity of the EU,” he noted.

“We are at war. These things are not free,” he added, acknowledging that the cost should be distributed “equitably.”

Borrell was referring to surging inflation and potential power shortages faced by European nations after deciding to punish Russia for attacking Ukraine by refusing to buy its energy. Brussels wants member states to cut consumption to be better prepared for peak demand this winter, but some countries have resisted the proposal.

Spain, Borrell’s home country, was among the dissenting voices. Energy Minister Teresa Ribera said last month that “imposing unfair sacrifices” was not the best way to deal with the crisis. She argued that, unlike people in some other nations, “Spaniards have not lived beyond our means from an energy point of view.”

Europeans “cannot show a lack of solidarity” with such squabbles, Borrell stated in the interview. He admonished Madrid for not appreciating “what this war represents to countries closest to it,” like Poland. Spain may benefit from the EU’s decoupling from Russia in the long run by becoming a major hub for supplying liquified natural gas to Europe, he added.

Borrell warned that Europe should be prepared for the conflict in Ukraine to continue for a long time. Commenting on European goals in the conflict, he said that “if Russia wins this war and occupies part of the Ukrainian territory, then we Europeans will have lost and will face a much greater threat.”

The Ukrainian government says it will only talk to Russia after pushing its military to where it was before 2014, which would include capturing Crimea. Borrell said Western nations have a “moral imperative” to back Kiev. He added the US and the EU have been in “absolute cooperation” on the issue, and suggested that this would not have been the case if the conflict started with Donald Trump in power in Washington.


UN chief urges parties to withdraw military personnel and equipment from Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant

The United Nations Secretary General said he is “gravely concerned” about the situation at Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine,

Reports of “further deeply worrying incidents” in the past few days could “lead to disaster,” António Guterres stated.

He called for the involved parties to withdraw any military personnel and equipment from the plant “and refrain from any further deployment of forces or equipment to the site.”

“We must be clear that any potential damage to Zaporizhzhia or any other nuclear facilities in Ukraine, or anywhere else, could lead to catastrophic consequences not only for the immediate vicinity, but for the region and beyond,” he continued, adding, “This is wholly unacceptable.”


German Chancellor pledges further arms deliveries to Ukraine in “near future”

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said on Thursday that Germany will continue to provide Ukraine with arms deliveries for its fight against Russia.

“Germany has broken with its tradition and supplied weapons to a war zone,” Scholz told journalists at a press conference in Berlin.

“We will continue to do so in the near future,” Scholz noted, without giving specific details.

In July, the German government released a list of lethal and non-lethal military aid provided to Ukraine.

The military equipment sent by Germany to Ukraine to date includes 14,900 anti-tank mines; 500 stinger anti-aircraft missiles; 10 Panzerhaubitze 2000 self-propelled howitzers; and 2,700 Strela man-portable air defense systems; as well as anti-drone devices, artillery ammunition, and handguns.


UK to send more rocket launcher systems to Ukraine

Britain will supply Ukraine with more multiple-launch rocket systems that can attack targets up to 80km (50 miles) away.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said the supply of weapons would help Ukraine defend itself against Russian heavy artillery.

“This latest tranche of military support will enable the Armed Forces of Ukraine to continue to defend against Russian aggression and the indiscriminate use of long-range artillery,” Wallace stated in a statement.

“Our continued support sends a very clear message, Britain and the international community remain opposed to this illegal war and will stand shoulder-to-shoulder, providing defensive military aid to Ukraine to help them defend against [Vladimir] Putin’s invasion,” he added.


Denmark to give additional 110 million euros to Ukraine for weapons, equipment and training

Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen announced on Thursday that Denmark will give another 110 million euros ($113.7 million) in financial aid to Ukraine for “weapons, equipment and training.”

“I hope that we here today can agree on even more contributions. And of course, Denmark is ready to do our part,” Frederiksen stated at an international donor conference in Copenhagen.

UK Defense Secretary Ben Wallace and Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov were present at the conference in Denmark’s capital.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky also made a virtual appearance to thank the participants.


Latvian parliament declares Russia ‘state sponsor of terrorism’

Latvian MPs have adopted a statement declaring Russia a “state sponsor of terrorism” and said its actions in Ukraine constituted “targeted genocide against the Ukrainian people”.

The statement said the parliament “recognises Russia as a state sponsor of terrorism, and calls on other like-minded countries to express the same view”.

MPs stated they considered “Russia’s violence against civilians committed in pursuit of political aims as terrorism”.

They also condemned its use of cluster munitions “to sow fear and indiscriminately kill civilians”.

Russia “uses suffering and intimidation as tools in its attempts to demoralise the Ukrainian people and armed forces and paralyse the functioning of the state in order to occupy Ukraine,” the statement added.

The parliament also urged the European Union to stop issuing tourist visas for Russian and Belarusian citizens and to cut down on entry visas in general.


Russia says Switzerland cannot represent its interests in Ukraine

Russia announced it has turned down a Swiss offer to represent Ukrainian interests in Russia and Moscow’s interests in Ukraine because it no longer considers Switzerland a neutral country.

Switzerland has a long diplomatic tradition of acting as an intermediary between countries whose relations have broken down, but Foreign Ministry spokesperson Ivan Nechayev said this was not possible in the current situation.

“The Swiss were indeed interested in our opinion on the possible representation of Ukraine’s interests in Russia and Russia’s in Ukraine,” Nechayev told reporters.

“We very clearly answered that Switzerland had unfortunately lost its status of a neutral state and could not act either as an intermediary or a representative. Bern has joined illegal Western sanctions against Russia,” Nechayev added.

Neutral Switzerland has mirrored nearly all the sanctions that the European Union imposed on Russia over its military intervention in Ukraine.


Airstrikes hit Russian targets in south: Ukrainian military

Ukraine’s military said it carried out six airstrikes against Russian targets in southern Ukraine on Wednesday.

Russian forces were hit in the Beryslav district of Kherson and ammunition depots were destroyed in Bashtanka and Barvinka, officials stated.

Russian command posts, one located in the village of Chervonyi Maisk along the Dnipro River, were also destroyed, they added.


Moscow and Kyiv trade blame over nuclear plant attack

Ukraine has accused Russia on Wednesday of killing at least 13 people and wounding 10 with rockets fired from around a captured nuclear power plant in the centre of the country, in the knowledge it would be risky for Ukrainian forces to return fire.

“The cowardly Russians can’t do anything more so they strike towns ignobly hiding at the Zaporizhzhia atomic power station,” Andriy Yermak, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s chief of staff, said on social media.

Ukraine announced about 500 Russian troops are at the plant, where Ukrainian technicians continue to work.

Meanwhile, Russian news agencies reported that Russian anti-aircraft defence systems had thwarted Ukrainian attacks the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, as well as on the occupied Ukrainian city of Enerhodar.


UK: Russia’s military industrial capacity is ‘under significant strain’

Russia has long considered the defence industry to be one of its most important export successes.

But the British ministry of defence said that Russia’s military industrial capacity is “under significant strain”, and that the credibility of many of its weapon systems has been undermined by their association with Russian forces’ poor performance in the Ukraine war.

In its daily brief, the UK also added that Russia will face difficulties in carrying out some export orders for armoured fighting vehicles, due to Western sanctions and the exceptional demand for vehicles for Russia’s own forces in Ukraine.


Heavy fighting near Donetsk

Heavy fighting raged around the eastern Ukrainian town of Pisky as Russia pressed its campaign to seize all of the industrialised Donbas region.

An official with the Russia-backed Donetsk People’s Republic stated Pisky, on the front lines just 10km (6 miles) northwest of provincial capital Donetsk, was under the control of Russian and separatist forces.

“It’s hot in Pisky. The town is ours but there remain scattered pockets of resistance in its north and west,” the official, Danil Bezsonov, noted on the instant messaging service Telegram.

Ukrainian officials denied that the heavily fortified town, a key to the defence of Donetsk, had fallen.


Zelensky says military will respond to Russian shelling of Marhanets killed at least 13 people

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said the country’s military will respond to Russia’s shelling of Marhanets, which killed at least 13 people and injured another 10.

“The Armed Forces of Ukraine, our intelligence, and our law enforcement agencies will not leave today’s Russian shelling of the Dnipropetrovsk region unanswered,” Zelensky stated in his nightly address on Wednesday.

The Ukrainian president went on to say the quickest way to end the war would be to inflict as many casualties as possible on Russia.

“The question of time actually directly depends on the question of the losses that Russia will suffer,” he continued, noting, “The more losses the occupiers have, the sooner we will be able to liberate our land and guarantee Ukraine’s security.”

“This is what everyone who defends our state and helps Ukraine should think about: how to inflict the greatest possible losses on the occupiers so that the time of the war is shorter,” he added.

Zelensky went on to reiterate the Ukraine would liberate the entire country from Russian occupation.

“We expelled the Russian army from the northern regions. We expelled the invaders from our Zmiinyi island. They already feel that the time has come to flee from Kherson and from the south of our country in general,” he said.

“There will be a time when they will flee from the Kharkiv region, from Donbas, from Crimea… And everyone who can help this should help this,” he added.


Ukraine urges EU, G7 states to stop issuing visas to Russians

Ukraine’s foreign minister has urged European Union and G7 countries to stop issuing visas to Russian citizens, citing what he said was their support for the invasion of Ukraine.

“Russians overwhelmingly support the war on Ukraine. They must be deprived of the right to cross international borders until they learn to respect them,” Dmytro Kuleba tweeted.

His plea echoed an earlier call by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy for Western countries to impose a one-year travel ban on Russians, stating they should be forced to “live in their own world until they change their philosophy”.


First wartime wheat shipments from Ukraine expected next week: UN

A top UN official has said the first wartime wheat from Ukraine should ship next week under a landmark deal also signed by Russia aimed at tackling the global food crisis.

The first 12 ships to leave the three Black Sea ports designated by the agreement were carrying 370,000 tonnes of corn and foodstuffs, according to Frederick Kenney, interim UN coordinator at the joint centre in Istanbul overseeing the deal.

But that should change once the ships docked in Ukraine amid Russia’s invasion leave their ports, and new ones come in to pick up wheat that has accumulated with this year’s harvest, Kenney told reporters.


Six killed in Russian attacks on eastern Ukraine city of Bakhmut: Governor

Alleged Russian attacks on the eastern Ukrainian city of Bakhmut have killed at least six people and left three others injured, the regional governor claimed.

“The Russians bombed the city with a multiple rocket launcher, hitting a residential area. According to initial information, 12 residential buildings have been damaged and four are on fire,” Pavlo Kyrylenko wrote on Telegram.


Ukrainian attack hits bridge in Russian-occupied south: Military

Ukraine hit one of two bridges across the Dnieper river in the Russian-occupied south and added to damage that was inflicted by earlier attacks, the southern military command has said.

The attacks on the Kakhovskyi bridge aim to create problems for Russian logistics, the command said in a Facebook post. The bridge is “unfit for use”, it added.


‘Big uptick’ in applications for Ukraine grain shipments expected: UN

The United Nations expects to see a “big uptick” in applications for ships to export Ukraine grain after transit procedures were agreed upon by Russia, Ukraine, Turkey and the United Nations, a senior UN official has stated.

The number of inbound vessels is expected to “grow in the near future” as grain deals are made, said Frederick Kenney, interim UN coordinator at the Joint Coordination Centre for the Black Sea Initiative.


China calls US ‘main instigator’ of Ukraine crisis

China, which Russia has sought as an ally since being cold-shouldered by the West over its invasion of Ukraine, has called the United States the “main instigator” of the conflict.

In an interview with Russian state news agency TASS published on Wednesday, China’s ambassador to Moscow accused Washington of backing Russia into a corner with repeated expansions of the NATO transatlantic military alliance.

“As the initiator and main instigator of the Ukrainian crisis, Washington, while imposing unprecedented comprehensive sanctions on Russia, continues to supply arms and military equipment to Ukraine,” Zhang Hanhui was quoted as saying.

“Their ultimate goal is to exhaust and crush Russia with a protracted war and the cudgel of sanctions,” he added.

Zhang also noted Sino-Russian relations had entered “the best period in history, characterised by the highest level of mutual trust, the highest degree of interaction, and the greatest strategic importance”.


Ukraine: 9 Russian warplanes destroyed in Crimea explosions

Ukraine’s air force has said that nine Russian warplanes were destroyed in the explosions that rocked a Russian air base in the annexed Crimean Peninsula on Tuesday.

The air force’s claim, posted on Facebook alongside the overall losses Kyiv says Russia has suffered during the war, came amid speculation the blasts were the result of a Ukrainian attack that would represent a significant escalation in the conflict.

The explosions, which killed one person and wounded 14 others, according to Crimea’s governor, sent tourists fleeing in panic as plumes of smoke towered over the nearby coastline.

Russia has announced the explosions were detonations of stored ammunition, not the result of an attack. Kyiv, for its part, has suggested the blasts could have been caused by Russian incompetence or an attack by partisans.


Second grain ship docks at Ukrainian port for loading: Minister

The second commercial ship to arrive in a Ukrainian port since the start of Russia’s invasion has docked in the port of Chornomorsk and is ready to load grain, Ukraine’s infrastructure minister has noted.

“OSPREY S is ready to export 30 000 thousand tons of corn. Let’s keep working!,” infrastructure minister Oleksandr Kubrakov wrote on Twitter.

Iranian official denies VP made faux pas on Johnny Depp look-alike

Earlier, a tweet made the rounds on  social media that apparently showed an account by the name Mohammad Mokhber praising Depp for mourning alongside other people the martyrdom anniversary of Imam Hussein (PBUH) the third Shia Imam.

Now Mokhber’s deputy Kaveh Estehardi says the vice president has no account on social media, be it Twitter or Instagram.

The Iranian look-alike of Depp was later identified as Amin Sa’les, a model from the city of Tabriz, who was among Ashura mourners in the capital Tehran. His video went viral in Iran after people noticed he bears a striking resemblance to the American actor.

Western social media users also took note, as they commented on the man who appeared in the video.

President Raisi offers condolences over passing of Iranian poet Ebtehaj

Iran President Ebrahim Raisi

President Raisi said Ebtehaj opened a new and lasting page in Persian ode and created many works with social and political themes that promoted the spirit of freedom-seeking and anti-arrogance fighting.

The president praised Ebtehaj for his effective role in the preservation of the Persian literature’s rich treasure and in the promotion of the Iranian culture.

Ebtehaj was a distinguished Iranian poet whose small but influential body of work made him a major figure in Iran and in world literature. He died of kidney failure on Wednesday in Cologne, Germany.
Ebtehaj, known by his pen name “Sayeh” or Shadow, was 94.

Condolences poured in from huge numbers of Iranians on social media, as well as from Iranian cultural institutions and embassies.

Iran’s Embassy in Berlin said it was mourning with “all the lovers of Persian culture and literature in the entire world.”

Iran reports 58% increase in transit of foreign goods

Iran Trade

Rouhollah Latifi added that these figures show a 4% rise in weight and a 31% increase in value compared to the same period in the previous year.

As for exports, Latifi said some 113 million tons of goods worth $48.198bn accounted for Iran’s non-oil exports in the 11 months since Raisi’s administration took office.

He added that Iran has imported 12.875 million tons of foreign goods during the period which shows a 58% increase compared to the same period in the previous year.

Iran’s 13th administration has based its foreign policy on expansion of ties with neighbors and regional countries. This has resulted in a rise in trade transactions with those nations.

Iranian expert: West should prevent IAEA from intervening in Iran nuclear case

IAEA

Sabah Zangeneh told ISNA if the West has the required determination, it can agree to the idea of preventing the UN atomic agency, IAEA, from intervening in the nuclear case.

Zangeneh noted that in 2015, the P5+1 group of countries closed the safeguards case when the two sides agreed on a deal.

He said at that time, the P5+1 concluded that the PMD was not relevant and that they group’s members reached a political decision to sign the nuclear deal, known as JCPOA. Zangeneh also said the IAEA director general’s views are now political provocation and they are no longer technical.

He stressed that as far as the Non-proliferation Treaty and the IAEA’s rules and regulations are concerned, Iran has lived up to its obligations and it has even allowed the agency to do inspections at its nuclear facilities and install extra surveillance cameras there.

As for the progress of the Vienna talks, Zangeneh said the current crises facing the West have persuaded them to acquiesce to minimum acceptance by Iran of its commitments under the JCPOA.

In that case, he noted, Iran can help break the deadlock in energy markets of the world.

He also spoke about the Zionist regime’s take on the talks in Vienna. Zangeneh said Israel seeks to derail the negotiations.

Iran records 90 more deaths, 5,635 new infections from Covid

COVID in Iran

According to the Health Ministry on Wednesday, 5,635 cases of new infections were also registered over the past 24 hours.

The ministry also says 1,472 people are now in critical condition due to the virus infection.

The figures take the total caseload so far to over 7.4 million people and the fatalities to 142,654 people.

Iran has so far injected over 153 million doses of the Covid vaccine. While this covers a majority of Iran’s population of nearly 85 million, many people remain inoculated with just one dose of the jab, despite warnings that that would not be enough to avoid a severe infection with Covid.

According to Majid Mokhtari, who is a member of the national taskforce against the coronavirus, Iran is now heading for the peak of the seventh wave of infections in around two weeks.

Mokhtari says this means there will be a further rise in the number of infections and deaths.

He said, however, that observation of health protocols will be a deciding factor here as the more counter-Corona restrictions are loosened, the more rapid becomes the rate of infections.

Woman planning to carry out terror attack arrested in SE Iran

Iranians mourn Imam Hussein on Ashura and Tasu’a

The woman, who was not identified by name, was arrested in Sistan-and-Baluchestan Province’s Saravan before she could carry out the attack on Sunday, on the eve of Ashura, which marks the anniversary of martyrdom of Imam Hussein, the third Shia Imam and the grandson of Prophet Muhammad.

Iranian media outlets released footage of the moment when the terrorist was arrested by the intelligence forces.

Millions of Iranians perform mourning rituals across the country throughout Muharram each year, but the climax of the religious rituals takes place on Ashura, and the day before it, which is known as Tasu’a.

Last Thursday, Iran’s Intelligence Ministry arrested 10 Daesh terrorists who had been planning to carry out a bombing operation among mourners.

The ministry said those terrorists were acting on behalf of the Israeli regime spy agency, Mossad.

The security forces found explosives, communication devices, and weapons in the terrorists’ possession. Two Iranian forces were injured during the operation to capture the terrorists.

Iran navy thwarts attack in Red Sea, piracy foiled

Iran Navy

Rear Admiral Mostafa Tajeddini, the Iranian navy’s deputy head of operations, told Iran’s IRINN news channel on Wednesday that an Iranian trade vessel made a mayday call after coming under attack overnight.

He added the attacking boats fled the scene after an Iranian naval flotilla was deployed to ward off the attack.

“The escorting flotilla of the Islamic Republic of Iran Navy, under the command of the all-Iranian destroyer Jamaran, which is carrying out a mission in the Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea, was promptly deployed to the scene last night after receiving a request for help from an Iranian ship in the Red Sea, and engaged with the attacking boats,” Rear Admiral Tajeddini said.

Iran has stepped up its naval presence in the region to safeguard Iranian and foreign merchant vessels and oil tankers against pirates.