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Accidents caused by floods kill 7 people in Iran

Iran flood

Valipour, the head of the Iranian Red Crescent Society’s Rescue and relief Organization said over the past days, it has been raining cats and dogs in 12 Iranian provinces, mainly in the northwest and west of the country, as well as in the central part of Semnan and Yazd provinces.

He added that the heavy downpours have triggered flash floods in some regions.
Valipour noted that in 39 counties, 3 cities, 26 villages and 14 nomadic areas, Red Crescent rescuers were deployed and provided services to the people affected by the flooding.

According to the official 100 houses inundated by floods were evacuated and food and hygiene items were distributed among the people.

Valipour said unfortunately, two people have died due to lightning and fire.

He added that two traffic accidents happened in Yazd and Golestan provinces in which five people died of severe injuries.

Official: Iran to increase flights to Europe

Iran Air

Mohammadi-Bakhsh stated that Iran Air also plans to fly Hajj pilgrims to Saudi Arabia and launch flights to Syria too.

Another plan, he added, is to conduct flights to Iraq for taking pilgrims of Arbaeen that marks 40 days after martyrdom of Imam Hossein.

Mohammadi-Bakhsh noted that important changes have taken place at the Civil Aviation Organization over the past several months.

He said that organizational reforms, the development of the aviation fleet and cooperation with knowledge-based centers are among those changes.

He made the comments during the inaugural ceremony of Shamsoddin Farzadipour, the new caretaker of Iran Air.

Farzadipour stated that he knows the problems that Iran Air is facing and stressed that efforts should be made to resolve those problems and promote the airline.

Iranian intelligence denies having made anti-Afghan statements

Afghan Refugees in Iran

The Intelligence Ministry said in a statement it never published such stuff and the allegations are part of desperate efforts by the common enemies of the nations of Iran and Afghanistan aimed at driving a wedge between the two countries.

The statement also said any comment by the ministry will be pushed on its website and those released by any other outlet have no credibility.

It noted that the rumors are the continuation of the serial bombings that have targeted Shia and Sunni mosques and killed innocent fasting worshippers in Afghanistan.

The Intelligence Ministry reiterated that the allegations are just meant to cause fratricide among Muslims.

The ministry then offered condolences to the families of people killed in the recent terrorist attacks in Afghanistan and wished fast recovery for those injured.

Funeral procession, burial ceremony held for Iranian filmmaker Nader Talebzadeh

Funeral procession for Nader Talebzadeh

The procession began at the headquarters of the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB), from where Talebzadeh’s body was carried to the cemetery, accompanied by colleagues, family, and friends.

A veteran Iranian documentary maker, Talebzadeh died of cardiac arrest at a hospital in Tehran on Friday evening. He was 69.

His body was buried next to Morteza Avini, another filmmaker who, like Talebzadeh, documented the atrocities committed against Iranians during the eight-year Iraqi war of the1980s and who was killed in a mine blast in a former war front some years after the end of the war.

Talebzadeh served as the chairman of the International New Horizon Conference, which aims to expose the criminal policies of the US and Israel, and was placed under sanctions by the US in 2019 for those activities.

Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei offered condolences over the Talebzadeh’s death on Saturday, calling him a “highly-motivated, hard-working, revolutionary researcher and artist.”

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi also offered condolences over Talebzadeh’s death. So did President of the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB) Peyman Jebelli.

All Iranians present at this year’s Cannes Film Festival

The Official Poster of the 75th Festival de Cannes

The first presence of an Iranian movie in the 2022 Cannes was finalized on April 14, when the festival’s artistic Director Thierry Fermo and its President Pierre Lescure announced Saeed Roustaee’s “Leila’s Brothers” will be running in the festival’s competition section, where 18 movies are present.

Leila’s Brothers is Roustaee’s third feature film after Life and a Day (2016) and Just 6.5 (2019).

Not much is out about the plotline of the Iranian director’s new feature film, but it has Taraneh Alidousti, Navid Mohammadzadeh, Saeed Pour Samimi, Farhad Aslani, Peyman Maadi and Mohammad Ali Mohammadi on its cast. The French company “Wild Banch” is in charge of the international distribution of the movie.

Iranian-Danish director, Ali Abbasi, who won Cannes’ Un Certain Regard award for his “Border” in 2018 is also back at the festival this year and his “Holy Spider” will be present in the competition section.

Abbasi’s film features Iranian actress Zahra Amir Ebrahimi on its cast and is filmed in Oman. It recounts the story of a serial killer in the northeastern Iranian city of Mashhad, who tries to clear the city of prostitutes.

But the most renowned Iranian in the 2022 edition of the festival is Asghar Farhadi, a twice Best Foreign Film Oscar winner, who will sit on the Cannes jury this year. Following his first Oscar win for “A Separation” in 2012, Farhadi has debuted all his movies in Cannes before winning its Grand Prix for “Hero” in 2021.

Imagine” by Iranian director Ali Behrad will also be one of the seven films screened in Cannes Critic’s Week. This is Behrad’s first work as director and Iran’s first presence in the Critics’ Week in 20 years.

US needs Iran deal, should agree to Iran’s demands to revive it: Iran paper

White House

In an article published on Sunday, the Kayhan daily referred to US Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on April 26, where he said the US believed returning to the Iran deal was the best path to take with Iran.

Blinken said, “We continue to believe that getting back into compliance with the agreement would be the best way to address the nuclear challenge posed by Iran and to make sure that an Iran that is already acting with incredible aggression doesn’t have a nuclear weapon.”

Kayhan said those remarks indicated the benefits of rejoining the deal for the US, and it now had to agree to the Iranian demands to do so. The comments show that in order to revive the agreement, “Washington will have to accept Iran’s conditions about the effective removal of the sanctions and the verifiability of that removal and to offer credible guarantees.”

Until recently, Iran and the US had been negotiating indirectly and via Iran’s co-signatories to the deal in order to revive the deal and potentially have the United States back in compliance.

Iran has put forth a number of demands, including that the US provide guarantees that it would not unilaterally withdraw again as it did in 2018 under former President Donald Trump.

The negotiations stopped recently in order for political decision making by the sides involved.

Removal of sanctions not sole solution to Iran’s economic woes: President Raisi

Ebrahim Raisi

Speaking in a meeting with political activists in Tehran on Sunday, Raisi said his administration had taken a range of measures to address Iran’s economic issues.

“Efforts to increase the sale of oil, to enhance commercial ties with neighboring countries, and to boost the country’s economic relations in general have been taken to neutralize the sanctions and make their removal easier,” the Iranian president said.

He said his administration had overlooked no approach to the resolving of Iran’s economic hardships and had taken whatever step it believed could help.

Iran has been under stringent sanctions by the United States, which have dented its economy. Some of the harshest of those sanctions were imposed after former US President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal in 2018. His successor, President Joe Biden, has expressed a desire to return to compliance.

Therefore, Iran has been negotiating with the other signatories to the 2015 deal to revive the agreement. Those negotiations are yet to produce a breakthrough, though.

Raisi also complained about the administration of his predecessor, former President Hassan Rouhani, who he said had bequeathed him a budget deficit of 480 trillion tomans (over 113 billion dollars).

“A solution should be figured out to disallow an outgoing administration from leaving debts in an unruly fashion,” he said.

Pointing to complaints about recent increases in certain prices, including water and electricity fees, the Iranian president said those should have been enforced under the law by the previous administration, “but, unfortunately, the previous administration left every legal obligation that could have caused dissatisfaction, undone.”

Russia says no big obstacles to finalize nuclear deal with Iran

Nuclear Negotiations in Vienna

“In diplomacy it frequently happens that the finish line is the most difficult section of the road. We see no insurmountable obstacles in the process of ‘fine-tuning’ the restoration package,” director of the Russian Foreign Ministry’s Department for Non-Proliferation and Arms Control Vladimir Yermakov stated in an interview with TASS on Saturday.

“The main thing is that all the involved parties should proceed from the good of the case, but not from the fleeting domestic political situation, which, as you know, is a variable. In this case, we certainly mean, first and foremost, our American counterparts. We hope that their statements and highest-level assurances about their willingness to return to the JCPOA (the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, known as the Iran nuclear deal ) will not remain pre-election slogans of a figure of speech,” the diplomat stressed.

Speaking about the resumption of the Vienna talks aimed at reviving the Iran nuclear deal, the diplomat pointed out that it is a sophisticated mechanism of cooperation at various levels, from a political to an expert one.

“The contacts have been ongoing in several formats with varying degrees of intensity for a year. The delegations and capitals involved in this multifaceted work retain their interest in the JCPOA,” he noted.

Yermakov emphasized that the Iran nuclear deal has no reasonable alternative.

“It is crucial that the current US administration will rectify the mistakes and violations made by its predecessors. Washington should strictly comply with Resolution 2231 of the UN Security Council. A carefully calibrated balance of interests, which the nuclear deal was built on, should be restored, whereas the root causes of the crises and setbacks in the implementation of the JCPOA should be eliminated. It is generally clear how to do it,” he added.

Iran ambassador rejects accusations of “water war” against Iraq

Water Iran Iraq

Iraj Masjedi says only seven percent of the waters in Iraq pass through Iranian territory while 93 percent comes from other countries such as Turkey, stressing that the Iraqis have singled out the seven percent that comes from Iran.

“The problem of water is a regional issue and is not limited to a single country. Both the levels of surface and subsurface waters have reduced,” he said.

“Iran has never moved to reduce [the level] of waters in Iraq. We call on Iraq to consult with all sides including Iran, Turkey and the entire region to know where the problem of water is, rather than turning to negative comments to media. They should come to common solutions not only on the issue of water but also on the issue of dust.”

Masjedi had earlier also responded to accusations of waging a “water war” against Iraq stressing that the water crisis has imposed itself on the region and that Iran is not to blame for reduced levels of water in Iraq.

Iran’s Leader condoles over death of media figure Nader Talebzadeh

Leader of Iran’s Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei

In a message on Saturday, Ayatollah Khamenei called Talebzadeh a “highly-motivated, hard-working, revolutionary researcher and artist” and condoled with his family, colleagues, and friends.

Talebzadeh was a documentary filmmaker, researcher, and journalist, who, among other things, directed, wrote and produced numerous award-winning documentary films about the atrocities committed against Iranians during the eight-year Iraqi war of the1980s.

He was an outspoken critic of American hegemony and the Israeli occupation of Palestine.
Talebzadeh also served as the chairman of the International New Horizon Conference, which aims to expose the criminal policies of the US and Israel. He was placed under sanctions by the US in 2019 for those activities.

He died of cardiac arrest at a hospital in Tehran on Friday evening. He was 69.

Earlier, Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi offered condolences over Talebzadeh’s death. So did Director of the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB) Peyman Jebelli.

Many other Iranian officials, politicians, and cultural figures also condoled over his passing.