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Analyst: Israel trying to throw wrench in Iran-Saudi talks

Iran Saudi Flags

Sabah Zangeneh told ILNA that with a pause in the Vienna negotiations in revving the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, US officials have shifted their attention to other Middle Eastern issues, especially attempts to secure a normalization of ties between Riyadh and Tel Aviv.

Zangeneh, Iran’s former representative to the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), said Washington’s attempts to set the stage for talks between Israel and Saudi Arabia have overshadowed Tehran-Riyadh negotiations.

“In fact, the main obstacle to the [resumption] of Iran-Saudi ties are destructive attempts by Israel to prevent that”, an approach that has supporters inside the US, he said.

Earlier, Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian said he may meet his Saudi counterpart soon in a third country, amid “minimal but good” progress in Iraq-mediated talks between the two sides.

However, an unnamed Saudi Foreign Ministry official later rejected that statement in an interview with Reuters.

Commenting on the development, Zangeneh said the “daily developments in the region are unfolding in a way that Saudi Arabia does not see it harmful if such a meeting takes place at a later time, especially when there is no ceasefire in Yemen.”

Iranian police seize major drug consignment in Sistan and Balouchestan

Iran Police

Local Police Chief Brigadier General Ahmad Taheri says the narcotics were confiscated after armed skirmishes between police commandoes and smugglers.

Taheri said that several security teams were keeping watch on routes in Hirmand and Nimrouz in the north of the province and Saravan and Iranshahr in its south and ambushed the smugglers, before they were forced to abandon their vehicles and escape.

He added that six smugglers were arrested in the subsequent pursuit operation by the security forces.

Iranian security forces confiscate tons of narcotics every year in ambush operations against drugs traffickers.

Iranian police have lost around 4,000 lives in the fight against drug traffickers over the past four decades.

Tehran has called for international assistance to its push to choke off drug trafficking through its territory. It says European countries, which would be the destination of the drugs Iran pays heavy costs to block, should share the financial burden of the struggle

Iran extends census of illegal Afghan migrants for two weeks

Afghan migrants in Iran

Deputy Interior Minister for Security and Law Enforcement Majid Mirahmadi said the two-week extension would give more time to Afghan migrants to join the census and receive six-month residency permits.

The extension, he said, was meant to allay the concerns of Afghan migrants and prevent overcrowding at the registration centers.

The official said the census, which is aimed at gathering precise data on the number of Afghan nationals in Iran, has been widely welcomed.

The Iranian government and people have been hospitable to the Afghan people for decades, hosting some 3.6 million documented and undocumented Afghan refugees who left their country due to war and harsh living conditions.

Iran has been facing a new influx of refugees from Afghanistan since the country came under the control of the Taliban in August last year.

This is while the Iranian nation is facing unilateral US sanctions and the international humanitarian bodies are keeping silent on such inhumane bans.

Tehran has repeatedly criticized the international community for insufficient aid for the Afghan refugees in Iran.

Iran says opposed to Turkish military operation on Syria-Iraq border

Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh

“Such action will violate the national sovereignty and territorial integrity of the targeted countries, and will complicate the situation and escalate tensions,” Khatibzadeh stated.

He added that the Islamic Republic understands Turkey’s security concerns and believes that the only way to alleviate those concerns is dialog, respect for bilateral agreements with neighbors, as well as the agreements reached within the framework of the Astana negotiations.

The Astana talks were initiated by Iran, Russia and Turkey in 2017 to find a solution to Syria’s crisis that began in 2011.

The Iranian diplomat noted that developments in recent years have shown that military action does not only help resolve existing problems but will lead to humanitarian consequences and complicate the situation in the region.

Khatibzadeh also announced Iran’s readiness to help de-escalate the situation and avert conflicts that only leave victims among civilians and defenseless people.

On Monday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that his country will soon launch an attack on Kurdish groups based in northeastern Syria.

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 95

Russia Ukraine War

Turkey’s President says talks with Sweden and Finland on NATO bids did not happen “at desired level”

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Sunday that talks last week with Sweden and Finland regarding their NATO membership did not happen “at the desired level.”

“Unfortunately, the talks held by our delegation with Finland and Sweden were not at the desired level,” Erdogan stated while speaking to reporters on his plane following a trip to Azerbaijan, according to Turkey’s state-run Anadolu news agency.

Finland and Sweden formally applied to join NATO earlier this month, driven by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The decision represents a setback for Moscow, with the war in Ukraine triggering the kind of enlargement of the alliance that it invaded Ukraine to prevent.

Accession of new states, however, requires consensus among existing members — and that’s where Ankara comes in.

Erdogan accused the two countries of harboring members of the separatist militant Kurdistan’s Workers Party, also known as PKK. The PKK, which seeks an independent state in Turkey, has been in an armed struggle with that country for decades and has been designated a terrorist organization by Turkey, the United States and the European Union.

Erdogan has repeatedly asserted that both countries are effectively supporting terrorists.

“We cannot say ‘yes’ to the countries supporting terrorism to join NATO,” Erdogan noted in remarks published by the Turkish government.

the Turkish government announced Erdogan will hold separate phone calls with his Russian and Ukrainian counterparts on Monday to encourage the parties to maintain channels of dialogue and diplomacy to bring peace to Ukraine.

“I will have phone calls with both Russia and Ukraine on Monday. We will continue to encourage the parties to use the channels of dialogue and diplomacy,” Erdogan told reporters.


NATO wants to hold Turkey-Sweden-Finland meeting: Ankara

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg wants to hold a meeting between Turkey, Sweden and Finland, Turkish presidential spokesman Ibrahim Kalin said on Sunday.

“The NATO secretary general has some initiatives and intentions. There is also a desire to hold a meeting within NATO. Frankly speaking, we do not hold meetings just for the sake of holding a meeting. If we want to achieve some results, we expect that two delegations will give an answer in this direction, as we strive for a process that includes concrete steps focused on the results,” Kalin was quoted as saying by the Turkish Hurriyet newspaper.


Europol fears weapons sent to Ukraine will end up on European black market

Executive Director of Europol Catherine De Bolle has stated in an interview with Welt am Sonntag that her agency is bracing for an influx of illegal weapons in Europe originally shipped to Ukraine by Western countries to help Ukrainian troops fighting against Russia.

According to De Bolle, Europol is concerned with who will get these weapons once the hostilities are over. She noted that 30 years ago, large amounts of weapons surfaced in Europe following the end of the Yugoslav Wars and that these guns are used to this day by various criminal groups. This time, De Bolle wants Europe to be ready.

According to her, an international working group has already started exploring the options to deal with their potential issue.

De Bolle did not elaborate on the measures Europol plans to undertake to prevent the proliferation of weapons from Ukraine across the continent via the criminal groups.

Apart from monitoring the trafficking of guns, Europol is also keeping an eye on known terrorists and violent extremists, namely right-wing ones, trying to leave Ukraine for Europe, the head of the agency told Welt am Sonntag.


Zelensky visits front lines in first visit outside Kyiv region

Ukraine’s presidency says Volodymyr Zelensky visited troops on the front lines in the northeastern region of Kharkiv.

The visit marks his first official appearance outside kyiv region since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine on February 24.

“You risk your lives for us all and for our country,” the President’s office website cited him as saying to the soldiers, adding that he handed out commendations and gifts.


Russian envoy to UK says war crime allegations are “fabrications”

Allegations of war crimes in the Ukrainian town of Bucha are a “fabrication,” Russia’s ambassador to the United Kingdom claimed on Sunday.

Andrei Kelin made the comments during an interview on the BBC’s “Sunday Morning” program and denied that Russian forces were shelling civilians.

“The mayor of Bucha in his initial statement confirmed that Russian troops have left, everything is clean and calm, the town in a normal state. Nothing is happening, no bodies are on the street,” Kelin stated.

Russia’s month-long occupation of Bucha and other districts around Kyiv resulted in hundreds of deaths, with its troops retreating in late March after failing to encircle the capital.

Moscow has refused to accept responsibility for the atrocities, repeatedly claiming that the reports of indiscriminate killings, mass graves, disappearances and looting are false.

When pressed whether the evidence was made up, Kelin replied: “In our view it is a fabrication. It is used just to interrupt negotiations.”

Maintaining that Russia’s invasion was a “limited operation” and not a war, Kelin added: “I can assure you that it is not our idea to kill civilians.”


Russia says destroyed Ukrainian army arsenal

The Russian defence ministry has announced it destroyed a large arsenal of the Ukrainian army in the city of Kryvyi Rih in central Ukraine, Reuters reported.

The ministry also added that Russian anti-aircraft defence systems shot down a Ukrainian SU-25 fighter jet in Dnipro region, according to Russian news agency, Tass.


EU reportedly proposes partial oil embargo against Russia

The EU has called for a ban on seaborne Russian oil deliveries while delaying restrictions on imports from a key Soviet-era pipeline in a bid to break a deadlock over talks to clinch a deal on Brussels’ sixth package of sanctions against Moscow over its ongoing special operation in Ukraine, according to Bloomberg.

The news agency quoted unnamed sources as saying that the European Commission had sent a revised proposal to national governments in the EU countries that stipulates sparing shipments through the Druzhba pipeline, a main source of crude imports for Hungary, Slovakia, the Czech Republic and Bulgaria.

The sources claimed that under the proposal, EU members would phase out their imports of seaborne crude in six months and refined petroleum products in eight months. The proposal would also give more time to Budapest to find a technical solution that satisfies its energy needs, additionally addressing the concerns of Bratislava and Prague related to the banning of Russian oil imports from the Druzhba pipeline.

It comes after Budapest made it clear that a deal on the sixth package of sanctions against Moscow was out of reach until Brussels offers a “solution” to replace Russian oil in the Hungarian economy.


Ukraine claims 30,000 Russian troops killed since start of war

At least 30,000 Russian soldiers have so far been killed during the war in Ukraine, the Ukrainian General Staff said.

Some 250 Russian troops were killed over the past 24 hours, according to a Ukrainian General Staff statement.

It announced Ukrainian forces have destroyed 207 planes, 174 helicopters, 1,330 tanks, 3,258 armored vehicles, 628 artilleries, 203 rocket launchers, and 93 air-defense systems since the start of the war.

Russia has also lost 2,226 vehicles, 13 ships and light boats, and 503 unmanned aerial vehicles along with 116 cruise missiles, the statement added.

Russian figures for its soldiers killed have been far lower than Ukrainian figures.


Situation “more difficult” in Severodonetsk

Fighting is continuing in Severodonetsk in eastern Ukraine, where the situation is “even more difficult” and “the enemy keeps assaulting,” the head of the Luhansk regional administration said on Sunday.

In a statement, Serhiy Hayday has stated that 60 houses were destroyed in the region, and two people, including a girl, were found dead under the rubble.


Over 682 children killed or injured in Ukraine

More than 682 children have been injured or killed in Ukraine, the country’s Prosecutor General’s Office said on Telegram.

The statement added 242 have died and 440 have been wounded, adding that the figures were not final as it was difficult to confirm reports in places of active fighting. The largest numbers were in Donetsk (153), Kyiv (116) and Kharkiv (108).


Gazprom still shipping gas to Europe via Ukraine

Russia is continuing to ship gas to Europe through Ukraine, Russian gas producer Gazprom has confirmed.

The Russian gas producer has announced its supply of gas to Europe through Ukraine – via the Sudzha entry point – continues, despite the war.

An application to supply gas via another entry point, Sokhranovka, was rejected by Ukraine, according to Reuters.


Ukraine calls for long-range weapons

An adviser to Ukraine’s president has called on the West to supply his country with long-range weapons if it really wants Kyiv to win against Russia.

“It is hard to fight when you are attacked from a 70km distance and have nothing to fight back with. Ukraine can bring Russia back behind the Iron Curtain, but we need effective weapons for that,” Mykhailo Podolyak wrote on Twitter.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has also said he expects good news about the delivery of weapons from partner countries next week.

“Every day we are bringing closer the time when our army will surpass the occupiers technologically and by firepower. Of course, a lot depends on the partners. On their readiness to provide Ukraine with everything necessary to defend freedom. And I expect good news on this already next week,” he added.


Russia preventing Ukrainians from leaving Kherson: Zelensky

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky stated Russian forces are trying to prevent the departure of Ukrainians from occupied areas in southern Kherson region.

“They do not provide any humanitarian corridors. And closed the individual departure of people. Those who are confident in their position would definitely not make such decisions. This is clearly a sign of weakness,” Zelensky said in his evening address.

He stressed Russia’s war in the frontlines in Donbas and Kharkiv region “is very difficult”.

Wearing a t-shirt that read, “I’m Ukrainian”, Zelensky noted the Russian focus remains focused on the cities of Sievierodonetsk, Lysychansk, Bakhmut and Popasna.

He added: “I will remind the world that Russia must finally be officially recognized as a terrorist state and a state sponsor of terrorism.”

Zelensky said the time until Ukraine is liberated “grows shorter” every day, and that it is “just a matter of time” before Ukraine takes back Russian gains.

“Ukraine will take everything back [from Russia]. This is an imperative,” he added, “And it’s just a matter of time. Every day at this same time, the time until liberation grows shorter. Everything we do is for this.”


Ukrainian counteroffensive in Kherson region ongoing: ISW

The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) said an ongoing counteroffensive by Ukrainian forces in the Kherson region has reportedly pushed Russian forces back to “unfavourable borders” near the villages of Andriyivka, Lozove, and Belohirka in Kherson.

The policy research organisation announced earlier on Saturday that a ground attack launched by Russian forces near Kherson-Mykolaiv had been unsuccessful.

It was the first such Russian attack near Kherson for several weeks.


Ukraine official says agreements with Moscow not worth ‘broken penny’

Ukrainian presidential adviser and peace talks negotiator Mykhailo Podolyak said any agreement with Russia could not be trusted, adding the only way to stop Moscow’s invasion was by force.

“Any agreement with Russia isn’t worth a broken penny,” Podolyak wrote on the Telegram messaging app, adding, “Is it possible to negotiate with a country that always lies cynically and propagandistically?”

“Russia has proved that it is a barbarian country that threatens world security,” Podolyak said, adding, “A barbarian can only be stopped by force.”

Russia and Ukraine have blamed each other after peace talks stalled, with the last known face-to-face negotiations on March 29.


Pro-Moscow Kherson official sees decision ‘towards next year’ on joining Russia

A senior pro-Russian official in the occupied Ukrainian region of Kherson has told Reuters that nearby fighting could affect the timing of its formal bid to join Russia and a decision was likely “towards next year”.

Kirill Stremousov, deputy head of the Russian-backed Kherson Military-Civilian Administration, also stated that the process might involve a referendum, backtracking on previous comments that none would be needed.

Asked about the timetable for joining Russia, he replied: “It won’t happen by autumn. We’re preparing an administrative system and then towards next year we will see what the situation is like.”


Ukraine condemns arrival of Russian vessel in Mariupol port to load metal

Ukraine has condemned Russia for sending a ship to the captured Ukrainian city of Mariupol to load a shipment of metal bound for Russia.

The Ukrainian parliament’s commissioner for human rights Liudmyla Denisova announced in a statement that the Russians were “sending 3,000 tons of metal products by the first ship from Mariupol to Rostov-on-Don (in Russia). In addition, for more convenient removal of the loot, the occupiers have begun to restore railway connections in Mariupol and Volnovakha.”

Russian state news agency TASS reported Saturday that a Russian ship entered the seaport of Mariupol. It quoted a representative of the port administration as saying the vessel would load 2,700 tons of metal and depart for Rostov-on-Don on Monday.

Denisova claimed that the Mariupol port housed about 200,000 tons of metal and cast iron worth $170 million prior to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.


Severodonetsk military chief says Ukraine’s forces are in “tough defensive position”

Oleksandr Striuk, the head of the civil military administration in the embattled Ukrainian industrial city of Severodonetsk, said Ukrainian forces were in a “tough defensive position” as fighting raged on the outskirts of the city.

In remarks on national television, Striuk stated some of the most intense fighting was concentrated around the Mir Hotel on the outskirts of the city.

“A real battle can be heard in the main bus station area,” he continued, adding, “Our military is in a tough defensive position. The city is being constantly shelled. The humanitarian headquarters that is located in the city was practically immobilized today, because it is not safe to move around the city, and the work of the headquarters was suspended.”

Striuk described a dire situation, saying there were no mobile telephone communications and that electricity has been cut. His comments come just hours after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky noted in his nightly address on Saturday that the time until Ukraine is liberated “grows shorter” every day, and that it is “just a matter of time” before Ukraine takes back Russian gains.

“We supplied water to the city with the help of electricity, pumping stations,” he stated, adding, “The water that is available is from open wells with generators. There are about six or seven wells in the city. It is extremely dangerous, as soon as people gather for water, shelling begins there.”

Striuk, however, expressed some confidence the city would be able to hold out with some limited supplies delivered over the road.

“There are still opportunities for reaching the city,” he said, adding, “There are opportunities for delivery of minimum loads. This is extremely difficult, but still possible. ”

“The evacuation is very unsafe, few people, priority for the wounded. Only an initial level of medical care is available in the city,” he continued.

In a statement, the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine claimed Russian forces had suffered losses and retreated to some previously occupied positions in the direction of Severodonetsk, but added that the Russians were continuing to conduct reconnaissance of the area to identify and strike elements of the Ukrainian armed forces.

Fedir Venislavskyi, a member of the Ukrainian parliament’s Committee for National Security, Defense and Intelligence, said the next few days “will be decisive” in the battle for Severodonetsk.

“Our forces pushed the enemy back to the positions he had previously held,” he continued, noting, “But we must understand that Russian troops are practically on the outskirts of Severodonetsk.”


Ukrainian FM: Sanctions on Russia have ‘no connection’ to global food crisis

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba stated Saturday that Western sanctions on Russia have “no connection” to the unfolding world food shortage.

In a statement on Twitter, Kuleba said: “Sanctions on Russia have no connection to the unfolding global food crisis.

Kuleba claimed that “the sole reason for shortages, rising prices, and threat of hunger is the Russian military physically blocking 22 million tonnes of Ukrainian food exports in our seaports.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov noted on Thursday that Russia does not accept Western accusations of blocking grain exports from Ukraine, instead saying that the actions of these countries led to such a “blockade,” TASS reported.

Russia is waiting for Ukraine to accept its demands and realize the real situation, Peskov added.

Russia and Ukraine are huge exporters of some of the world’s biggest staple foods and between them are responsible for 53 percent of global trade in sunflower oil and seeds and 27 percent of the wheat trade, according to the UN Conference on Trade and Development.

Iranian Foreign Ministry: Greek ships’ crew in good health, safe

Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Islamic Republic of Iran

Saeed Khatibzadeh, in a tweet, also said the crew members of the two Greek tankers seized by Iran are safe and in good health.

Meanwhile, Iran’s Ports and Navigation Organization has said the crew members of the Greek ships have not been taken into custody and are safe and all necessary services are being given to them.

Iran captured the two Greek oil tankers in the Persian Gulf on Friday after Athens seized a ship carrying Iranian oil off its coast.

Greece made the move at the order of the US, giving the oil cargo to Washington. Iran called the move as piracy.

Iranian government declares public day of mourning over building collapse

Iran building collapse

The administration issued a statement, saying following the report of the interior minister regarding the tragic collapse of Metropol Building, the cabinet once again offers condolences to the bereaved families and people of Khuzestan Province and declares Sunday as a public day of mourning across Iran in tribute to the victims of the incident.

The incident has killed 29 people so far and injured a number of others.

Iran’s leader Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei earlier ordered an investigation into the collapse of Metropol Building collapse and demanded those blamed for the incident be brought to justice.

The building tumbled down due to non-standard construction.

The owner of the building was named as the prime suspect but he was later found to be dead in the collapse

Iranian official vows revenge against Israel over IRGC officer’s assassination

IRGC Colonel Hassan Khodaei

Ahmad Reza Pourkhaghan was addressing judicial officials of Fars Province south of Iran.

Pourkhaghan said assassination is no privilege for the Zionist regime and that Iran will soon take revenge in the heart of occupied Palestine.

He added that Israel has been dealt a blow by the axis of resistance.

Pourkhaghan also said the Zionists and their supporters learned lessons during the 33-day war in Lebanon and the Syria conflict that they had made a mistake by waging war on the axis of resistance.

Iran movie “Leila’s Brothers” wins Fipresci prize in Cannes

Leila’s Brothers Movie Iranian Director Saeed Roustaee

The critics’ jury awarded the film directed by Saeed Roustaee as best film in Cannes main competition, “for the director’s ability to craft an engaging story, very dense of cultural insights, drawing a microcosm of dysfunctional patriarchy.”

The Iranian film director presented his award to the bereaved people of Abadan over the deadly building collapse in the southern Iranian city.

Previous great filmmaker who won this award include David Lean for “Brief Encounter”, Luis Buñuel for “The Exterminating Angel”, Wim Wenders for “Paris, Texas”, Andrei Tarkovsky for “Nostalghia” and “The Sacrifice”, and Alain Resnais for “Hiroshima mon amour”.

Critics chosen by the Fipresci (The International Federation of Film Critics) have been giving out awards during film festivals such as the Cannes Film Festival, the Vienna International Film Festival, etc. since 1946

Iranian Team Melli’s manager angry at “lack of planning”

Dragan Skočić, manager of the Iranian national football team (Team Melli)

Media reports say Skočić did not imagine that Team Melli would be deprived of the first match, that is, against Canada.

He is said to be contemplating ways to not lose time anymore.

This came after Canada’s football federation unilaterally cancelled a friendly match against Iran.

Meanwhile, Iranian international Sardar Azmoon, who has scored many important goals for Team Melli, described it as the messiest national team of the world. Azmoon made the comment in a story he posed on his Instagram account. Apparently, he was reacting to the cancellation of the match against Canada.

Mehdi Taremi, another Iranian international who plays in the Portugese soccer league, asked in a tweet, “Does anybody have an idea when the Team Melli’s camp will start?”.

The cancellation of the match against Canada stunned many people in Iran as well as Iranians living in Canada.

Over 20 thousand Iranian expats in Canada and elsewhere had bought tickets to the match, but got disappointed at the news of its cancellation