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Iranian movie ‘Summer with Hope’ wins award at prestigious Czech filmfest

Summer with Hope Movie

Directed by Iranian-Canadian filmmaker Sadaf Foroughi, the Iran-set sports drama clinched the Grand Prix award in the main Crystal Globe Competition of festival, which ran from July 1 to 9 in the city of Karlovy Vary.

The drama revolves around youthful competitive swimmer Omid as he struggles to train for a risky ocean competition.

The festival’s Grand Prix comes with a $25,000 cash prize to be shared equally between the director and producer.

‘Summer With Hope’ is Foroughi’s second film after ‘Ava,’ which debuted at Toronto, Canada in 2017, winning the Fipresci international critics prize.

The Karlovy Vary Festival, which is held annually, is one of the oldest in the world and has become Central and Eastern Europe’s leading film event.

Iran intelligence minister: Biden regional visit aimed at propping up Israel

President Joe Biden

Esmaeil Khatib says enemies have been plotting seditions against Iran for the past 40 years and have “dealt blows to the country in different forms including coup, war, sanctions, sedition and cultural encroachment.”

“But they have never succeeded and have suffered many defeats against the Iranian nation,” he said.

“Enemies believe and acknowledge that the Islamic Iran is now firm, powerful and stable and enemies’ measures are aimed at preventing the expansion and dominance of the devotion in the region. Therefore, enemies have picked a new path and seek to create new circumstances to undermine Iran’s power by encouraging discontent and disappointment among people.”

Iran is suffering from unprecedented inflation and a highly-devalued national currency amid US sanctions. But the country has adhered to the policy of self-resilience to offset the sanctions.

It has also called for regional cooperation to end the presence of the US and other powers in the region amid its push for normalization of ties between Israel and Arab countries, that are seen as a front against Iran.

Iran’s Covid taskforce urges public to receive booster shots as infections rise

COVID Vaccine

“Our advice for citizens is that those who were vaccinated more than six months ago should receive the reminder dose” ahead of what appears to be a new wave of the Covid-19 outbreak, said Alireza Zali.

The individuals classified in high-risk groups, including the elderly, those with a history of underlying diseases, health workers, and in general, all people who were vaccinated over six months ago should receive a booster dose, he emphasized.

The Health Ministry official also said besides rising numbers of people seeking medical care at health facilities, the number of hospitalizations were also changing.

On Saturday, the Iranian health ministry returned the mask mandate in both indoor and outdoor places in areas categorized as “red,” meaning high risk, and “orange,” or moderate risk, on the country’s color-coded coronavirus tracking map.

Officials have said the country is currently in the early stages of a new wave of infections driven by BA.4 and BA.5 sub-variants of the Omicron strain of coronavirus.

Iran’s response to media report on uranium enrichment: Steps coordinated with IAEA

Iran nuclear program

“The IAEA was informed of injection of gas into a new cascade of IR-6 centrifuges at least two weeks ago. The agency earlier announced this news and international media immediately published hyped reports with specific objectives in mind,” AEOI Spokesman Behrouz Kamalvandi said.

“Yesterday’s move by Iran to harvest 20 percent enriched product [uranium] from the cascade was the final technical part of the previously-announced move that was earlier made public by the IAEA and was recently verified.”

Kamalvandi added that the step taken by the AEOI is part of its legal obligations as part of internal planning to launch 1,000 IR-6 centrifuges in six cascades and inject gas into them.

Iran is facing western pressure and media hype concerning its civilian nuclear activities, after it rolled back part of its obligations under the 2015 nuclear deal in response to the withdrawal of the US from the agreement and the re-imposition of anti-Iran sanctions in 2018.

Iranian-made kits enable visual detection of impurity in liquid medicines

Science and Technology in Iran

Mojtaba Seyyedi, one of the researchers in the project that was conducted by a knowledge-based company affiliated with Tehran University of Medical Sciences, told ISNA that the kits can be used at production lines of pharmaceutical manufacturing factories.

The researcher explained that in the process of medicine production, some forms of impurity — either liquid or solid — may make their way into the final version and it is thus very important for the manufactures to spot and get rid of the impurities.

The kits, he added, allow the producers to visually detect any impurity in the final stage of the production, when liquid medicines are poured in vials.

“Up until now, this device was supplied from abroad, but we managed to obtain the technical know-how to manufacture it through these studies,” Seyyedi said.

Iranian cities hold Eid al-Adha prayers

Iranian cities hold Eid al-Adha prayers

The prayers were attended by President Ebrahim Raisi and Judiciary Chief Ayatollah Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejeie among other officials as well as many of the pious.

Eid al-Adha prayers were also held in other cities across the country including the h oly cities of Mashhad and Qom.

Eid al-Adha is one of the major festivities on the Muslim calendar and marks the apex of the annual Hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia.

Analyst: Brokers have raised cisys of agreement over JCPOA

Vienna talks

“Americans believe that Iran is using the negotiations to buy time. Iran also believes that the US does not offer the necessary guarantees for staying in the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. I believe, under the current circumstances, Iran and the US have reached a fixed resistance on the nuclear issue, that if the current trend continues, one cannot expect the collapse of the talks or a breakthrough,” Mahdi Motaharnia told ISNA.

Motaharnia added that the refusal of Iran to hold direct talks with the US on the nuclear deal has activated “brokers” that “raise the costs of an agreement”.

He noted that the talks are also impeded by the US’s call for a resolution to all cases in which Iran is somehow involved, despite Tehran’s emphasis that the discussions only focus on the JCPOA and the nuclear issue.

Another obstacle, he said, is Iran’s call for removal all sanctions even those related to alleged issues of human rights and terrorism.

“Neither Iran nor the US is ready to stand down and their sticking with this has created such circumstances that they no longer can stand down on their positions,” he said.

Motaharnia also said Europe has internal and regional reasons not to want the nuclear deal to be fruitless.

He, however added Europeans are also reliant on the US and this means they will be ultimately playing on the US’s ground.

Russia and China, he added, have always used Iran as leverage to score points against the west, especially the US, and as such they resist a resolution to the nuclear issue.

“Last winter in Vienna, the negotiations were just one step away from being finalized, but Russia openly used the JCPOA for its own interests and delayed the revival of the agreement. That is why I believe that with the current level of resistance to the deal in place, talks with or without liaisons will lead nowhere,” he said.

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 137

Russia Ukraine War

Rescue efforts underway in Chasiv Yar apartment building

Rescue efforts are underway after Russian missiles destroyed a five-storey apartment building in the eastern Ukraine town of Chasiv Yar, killing at least 15 people.

Chasiv Yar is about 20km south-east of Kramatorsk, a city that is expected to be a major target for Russian forces moving west.

Pavlo Kyrylenko, the governor of the Donetsk oblast, stated the rocket struck on Saturday evening.

Five people were reportedly pulled from the rubble alive and the regional emergency service announced that 24 more people could still be trapped.


US sees Russia food blockage as factor in Sri Lanka

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has said Russia’s restriction on Ukrainian grain exports may have contributed to recent turmoil in Sri Lanka triggered by severe shortages of food and fuel.

“We’re seeing the impact of this Russian aggression playing out everywhere,” Blinken told reporters in Bangkok.

Renewing a demand that he has made repeatedly, he called on Russia to let an estimated 20 million tonnes of grain leave Ukraine, which Moscow invaded in February.


UN: Ukraine forces share blame for nursing home deaths

A new UN report has found that Ukraine’s armed forces bear a large, and perhaps equal, share of the blame for what happened in a nursing home near Stara Krasnyanka, which is about 580km southeast of Kyiv.

A few days before the attack, Ukrainian soldiers took up positions inside the nursing home, effectively making the building a target.

The UN’s Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights announced, “A fire started and spread across the care house, while the fighting was ongoing”.

Dozens of elderly and disabled patients were trapped inside without water or electricity. At least 22 of the 71 patients survived, but the exact number killed remains unknown.


Death toll after strike on east Ukraine building hits 15: Rescuers

Rescuers have recovered 15 bodies after a Russian missile strike hit a residential building in Chasiv Yar town, eastern Ukraine, according to officials.

“During the rescue operation, 15 bodies were found at the scene and five people were pulled out of the rubble,” alive, the local branch of the Ukrainian emergency service said on Facebook, adding that rescuers were in contact with three people alive under the rubble.


Russia hits hangars storing US-made artillery weapons

Russian forces struck two Ukrainian army hangars storing US-produced M777 howitzers, a type of artillery weapon, according to Russian defence ministry.

The hangars are located near Kostantinovka in the Donetsk region, the defence ministry announced.


Canada plans to expand anti-Russian sanctions

Global Affairs Canada reported that it plans to expand its sanctions against Russia.

“The Honourable Melanie Joly, Minister of Foreign Affairs, today announced that Canada intends to impose further sanctions in relation to Russia,” according to the statement.

Ottawa will expand restrictions with regards to the gas, oil and manufacturing sectors.

On Friday, the Canadian authorities expanded sanctions against Russia, adding 29 private individuals and 15 organizations to the list, including Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and All Russia.


Russian gas cutoff most likely scenario: French FM

French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire has said a cutoff of Russian gas shipments is currently the most likely scenario.

“Let’s prepare for a cut off Russian gas. Today it’s the most likely scenario,” he told a business and economics conference in southern France.


Russia intends to annex part or all of Kharkiv region: Think-tank

A US-based research institute is warning that the Russian government has broader territorial aims than capturing Ukraine’s Donbas and likely intends to annex part or all of the north-eastern Kharkiv region.

The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) based its assessment on statements by Russia-backed authorities in the region claiming Kharkiv is an “inalienable part of Russian land”.

It said the Russia-backed authorities made the claim while unveiling a new flag for the region, which contained the Russian imperial double-headed eagle and symbols from the 18th century Kharkiv coat of arms.

It added, “The Kharkiv Oblast occupation government’s speed in establishing a civilian administration on July 6 and introducing martial law in occupied Kharkiv Oblast on July 8 further indicates that the Kremlin is aggressively pursuing the legitimization and consolidation of the Kharkiv Oblast occupation administration’s power to support this broader territorial aim.”


Ukrainian soldiers begin UK training programme

The United Kingdom has announced the start of a new military programme that aims to train up to 10,000 Ukrainian soldiers in the coming months.

In a statement, it said the first cohort of Ukrainian participants has now arrived in the UK.

“Using the world-class expertise of the British Army we will help Ukraine to rebuild its forces and scale-up its resistance as they defend their country’s sovereignty and their right to choose their own future,” stated British Defence Secretary Ben Wallace, who visited the training programme this week.

The training will give volunteer recruits with little to no military experience the skills to be effective in front-line combat. Based on the UK’s basic soldier training, the course covers weapons handling, battlefield first aid, fieldcraft, patrol tactics and the Law of Armed Conflict.


Russian troops trying to advance towards Kharkiv: Report

Ukraine’s General Staff has said that “Ukrainian troops had repelled a Russian offensive towards the villages of Kochubeivka and Dementiivka north of Kharkiv,” the Kyiv Independent has reported.

“Ukrainian forces also routed a Russian reconnaissance group near the villages of Male Vesele and Petrivka in Kharkiv Oblast,” the General Staff added.


Germany secures long-term supplies of ammunition to Ukraine

The German government has secured long-term supplies of ammunition for the Gepard anti-aircraft systems promised to Ukraine, the Der Spiegel magazine has reported citing government sources.

The office of Chancellor Olaf Scholz, together with the Ministry of Defence, has found a manufacturer in Norway that can produce more ammunition for the anti-aricraft system, according to the report.

The additional ammunition from the Norwegian manufacturer is to be tested as early as next week at the Bundeswehr shooting range in Putlos in the Schleswig-Holstein state, Der Spiegel further reported.

The delivery of the Gepard anti-aircraft systems, which are to help Ukraine protect critical infrastructure, is to start in July.


US pledges Ukraine $368m in humanitarian aid

Washington has promised to provide further humanitarian aid to Ukraine.

“Today, I can announce the United States will provide nearly $368m in additional support, including food, safe drinking water, cash assistance, emergency health care, shelter, as well as support to coordination among humanitarian organisations that are doing so much of this critical work on the ground,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement after the G20 foreign ministers’ meeting in Bali.

So far, the US, as the main donor country, had pledged more than $1.28bn in humanitarian aid to Ukraine since Moscow began the war, he added.


Blinken asks Wang to stand up against Russia’s war in Ukraine

Secretary of State Antony Blinken stated he pressed his counterpart, Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi, to oppose Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine when they met at the G-20 summit in Bali on Friday.

Blinken told reporters after meeting with Wang for five hours that remaining neutral in the conflict, as China has declared itself, is a difficult position to have because there is a “clear” aggressor and victim.

“There is a clear challenge not only to the lives and livelihoods of people in Ukraine, but there is a challenge to the international order that China and the United States as permanent members of the Security Council are supposed to uphold,” he said.

But Blinken also cast doubt on the claim that the Chinese government remained neutral on the conflict, arguing that it is amplifying Russian propaganda and has continued to support Russia in the United Nations.

“But even if you accept that as a premise, I don’t think that China is, in fact, engaging in way that suggests neutrality,” he added.

China was one of 24 countries to vote against a United Nations resolution in April that suspended Russia from the Human Rights Council following the start of the invasion.

Blinken said Chinese President Xi Jinping told President Joe Biden in a phone call last month that he stands by a partnership he made with Russian President Vladimir Putin in February. The two leaders affirmed a cordial relationship between their countries in announcing the agreement.

Blinken added he urged Wang that all countries need to stand up against Russia’s invasion, to demand that Russia allow other countries access to food supply from Ukraine and end the war.

Iran parliament chief urges consultation between legislative bodies of Muslim countries

Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf

Ghalibaf said consultation between parliaments of Islamic countries can help resolve their problems.

He said the Iranian parliament is ready to strengthen and expand friendly relations between Muslim nations.

Ghalibaf made those comments in a message on the occasion of Eid al-Adha. He congratulated all Muslims on the Eid.

Ghalibaf expressed hope that peace and security will be established in all Muslim countries and friendship among them will be strengthened under the auspices of the occasion.

Iranian president congratulates Muslim leaders on Eid al-Adha

President Ebrahim Raisi

In the messages, President Raisi described Eid al-Adha as the purest symbol of surrender to Allah and the choosing of Abraham as the role-model for the faithful.

Raisi expressed hope that all Muslims move in the direction of unity under the auspices of the Eid so that “we will witness increasing dignity and prosperity for the Muslim ummah in all international arenas.”

Eid al-Adha is the second and biggest of the two main holidays celebrated by Muslims.

The Eid honors the willingness of the Prophet Abraham to sacrifice his son Ishmael as an act of obedience to Allah’s command.

All Muslims around the world celebrate the occasion.

Hajj pilgrims perform their own rituals to mark Edi al-Adha in Mecca, Saudi Arabia.
This year, the Eid occasion falls on Sunday.