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Ansarullah: Saudis, allies not serious about peace in Yemen

Yemen War Saudi Air Stike

According to Yemen’s al-Masirah TV, Mohammad Abdul Salam said in a tweet that the continued shutdown of the airport due to the Saudi-led coalition’s opposition to the resumption of flights under a truce between the two sides is a gross violation of the ceasefire.

An aviation official of Yemen earlier had said Saudi Arabia and its allies do not give permission to planes to land in the Sana’a Airport.

Meanwhile, on Sunday Yemen Air apologized to its passengers because of the delay of the first flight that was supposed to depart the airport. It also expressed hope that problems will be solved in the near future.

As per the truce between Yemen’s national salvation government and the Saudi-led coalition that was signed under the supervision of the UN, Yemenis are allowed to have two flights from the Sana’a Airport and also 18 ships of fuel must dock in al-Hudaydah Port each week.

The Saudis and their allies invaded Yemen in March 2015 with the aim of reinstating fugitive former president Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi who had been toppled amid a popular uprising.

Seven years later, they agreed to a truce after they failed to achieve their goals in Yemen and suffered heavy blows from the Yemeni forces.

IRGC Navy cmdr.: Our forces at best level of readiness

IRGC Navy

Brigadier General Alireza Tangsiri said over the past two years, the IRGC’s naval forces have been delivered a broad range of weaponry and equipment in 8 phases including light and ocean rover vessels and drones as well as electronic warfare hardware, torpedoes and missiles.

He added that all this has boosted Iran deterrence.

Tangsiri said Iran now has an effective presence under the water and is equipped with smart weapons and systems that can be used in this way.

He underlined that all the weaponry and equipment of the IRGC’s Navy are domestically built and that Iranian scientists have used artificial intelligence in the arms and hardware.

Tangsiri also said Iran has managed to neuter the US arms embargo on the nation.

He then drew a parallel between the Islamic Republic in this regard and the former US-backed regime of Iran, saying before the 1979 Islamic Revolution, the US and other Western countries made decisions for Iran without permission from the Pahlavi regime but that is not the case today.

According to the IRGC’s Navy commander, today world bullies do not dare to engage in warfare near Iran’s territory and that any aggression against the country will be met with a ten-fold response.

Iran becomes Asia’s freestyle wrestling champion with 6 golds

Iran freestyle wrestling

Iranian wrestlers Rahman Amouzadeh in the 65 kg category, Younes Emami in 74 kg, Ali Savadkouhi in 79, Amir Hossein Firouzpour in 92 kg, Mohammad Hossein Mohammadian in 97 kg and Yadollah Mohebi in 125 kg snatched gold medals in the Asian championship.

Dariush Hazratgholizadeh in the 61 kg category won a silver medal while Mohammad Mehdi Yeganeh Jafari in 70 kg and Mohsen Mostafavi each secured a bronze medal.

At the end of the competitions, Iran became Asia’s champion with 201 points while India and Kazakstan came second and third respectively with 152 and 151 points.

Earlier, the Iranian Greco-Roman wrestling team ranked second in the Asian competitions.

The 2022 Asian Wrestling Championships were the 35th edition of the Asian Wrestling Championships of combined events, and ran from Friday, April 19, to Sunday, April 24 in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.

Iraq says will host sixth round of Iran-Saudi talks

Iraq’s foreign minister Fuad Hossein

Fuad Hossein on Sunday hailed as “positive” the fifth round of negotiations between Iran and Saudi Arabia recently hosted by the Baghdad government, the Iraqi National News Agency cited him as saying.

Baghdad plans to host a sixth round of talks between Tehran and Riyadh, the top diplomat said without providing any specific date.

The Iraqi foreign minister had said earlier that his country would spare no effort to set the stage for détente between Tehran and Riyadh.

Saudi Arabia severed its ties with Iran following an attack by Iranian protesters against the kingdom’s embassy in Iran in 2016. The protesters were angry at Saudi Arabia over its execution of top Shia cleric Sheikh Nimr Baghir al-Nimr.

The two Middle East powers remain deeply divided on a number of regional issues, especially Riyadh’s bloody war on Yemen as well as the kingdom’s overtures to the occupying Israeli regime.

Saudi Arabia accuses Iran of providing military support to Yemen’s Houthi Ansarullah movement, which brought about the collapse of a Riyadh-friendly government in Sana’a in 2014.

Riyadh is also an opponent of Iran’s civilian nuclear program.

IRGC seizes foreign tanker carrying smuggled fuel in Persian Gulf

IRGC Boat Persian Gulf

Colonel Gholam-Hossein Hosseini, head of the PR department of the IRGC unit in Bushehr in southern Iran, said on Sunday that the eight crew members of the seized vessel had been detained and handed over to local authorities for legal proceedings.

The ship, he added, was intercepted thanks to “effective intelligence and operational monitoring” in the northern part of the Persian Gulf and escorted to the port city of Bushehr.

Five other smaller vessels that sought to refuel the tanker were also inspected, with their documents seized for further investigation.

It was not immediately clear where the tanker came from. The nationalities of those arrested were not specified either.

“IRGC forces do their utmost to seriously and decisively confront organized smuggling off all the Persian Gulf coasts,” Hosseini added.

“Persian Gulf coasts and nearby areas will not be a safe place for profiteers and smugglers at all.”

Over the past years, Iran has seized many foreign oil tankers in its territorial waters on charges varying from fuel smuggling to polluting the waters.

Iran Covid: 13 deaths, the lowest in over two years

COVID in Iran

The Iranian Health Ministry Sunday figures show the virus killed 13 people in the past 24 hours while the daily caseload stood at 528.

The infections included 136 hospitalizations. The number of cities marked red has also hit a record low in months. Red zones are areas where people face the highest level of risk from Covid.

According to official figures, there are currently only two red cities across Iran. Meanwhile, 75 cities are blue, which denotes the lowest level of danger from the Coronavirus.

Officials say the downward trend in the Covid fatalities and cases has provided people in Iran with the best opportunity to get their boosters, or third shots of vaccine.

They attribute the decline in deaths and infections mainly to the nationwide vaccination drive that has seen over 148 million doses of vaccine administered.

Officials say the booster shot minimizes the likelihood of a resurgence of the pandemic in Iran.

The public observance of the health protocols has also played a major role to reduce the Covid fatalities and infections.

Iran reopens main border crossing with Afghanistan after brief closure

Iran- Afghanistan border crossing

Morteza Mojarradi, head of the department of transit, roads and transportation in the northeastern province of Khorasan Razavi, said on Sunday that the Dogharoun crossing, located 18 kilometers off the border with Afghanistan, fully resumed normal activities at 01:30 p.m. local time.

Khorasan Ravazi’s Governor Yaghoub-Ali Nazari also paid a visit to the site, he added.
The crossing was shut on Saturday over what Iranian officials reported to be uncoordinated moves and irregularities on the part of the Taliban border authorities.

Reports said Iranian border guards had entered the Afghan territory to stop the construction of a road that authorities said had not been coordinated with the Iranian side.

Tehran also lodged a protest with Kabul, informing the Afghan government that any construction at the zero border point requires approval at a joint border committee.

Iranian officials, however, dismissed media reports about clashes between the two sides.

Leopard dies after going on rampage in urban area northern Iran

Iran Leopard

The leopard had gone on a rampage in the city of Qaemshahr in Mazandaran Province. Authorities say the rare animal died because of injuries it had sustained before police tried to catch it alive.

The Environment Protection Organization of Mazandaran Province said the leopard had come to the city in search of food from the surrounding forests.

Authorities in Iran are strongly urged against taking any action that could harm rare animals like this leopard.

Leopards are strongly protected in the country as they are said to be on the cusp of extinction.

Russia rejects ‘fake’ media claims of Iranian arms transfer

Russian Troops

“The information published by some media outlets on the dispatch of Iranian arms to Russia is fake and is inconsistent with the reality,” the diplomatic mission said in a statement on Sunday.

The British Daily, the Guardian, claimed in a report earlier this week that Russia was receiving munitions and military hardware sourced from Iraq for its war effort in Ukraine with the help of what it called “Iranian weapons smuggling networks.”

It also claimed that an Iranian-made Bavar 373 air defense system, similar to the Russian S-300, had also been donated to Moscow by the authorities in Tehran.

Moscow, the Guardian said, was “forced to lean on Iran” in the wake of the new Western sanctions triggered by its war in Ukraine.

Iran’s Embassy in the UK had also rejected the claims in a statement and described the report as “untrue and baseless story fabrication” in an attempt to bring up the name of Iran and link the Ukraine conflict to the developments in the Middle East.

Saudi Arabia refuses to issue permit for Yemen flight

Sana’a International Airport

Sana’a International Airport was due to receive the commercial aircraft on Sunday morning, rekindling hopes that the war-torn country could resume some normal operations.

The plane operated by national carrier Yemenia was due to take passengers in need of medical treatment from Sana’a to Jordan’s capital city of Amman as part of the UN-brokered ceasefire that went into effect earlier this year.

But hours before the flight, the airline said on its Facebook page that “it has not yet received operating permits” and expressed “deep regret to the travelers for not being allowed to operate” the long-awaited flight.

It added that it hopes “all problems will be overcome in the near future”, without specifying a date for the route to operate.

One of the passengers told the AFP news agency that he had received a call from the airline asking him not to go to the airport.

A manager at the company also stated that “the needed permission from the coalition didn’t arrive.”

There was no immediate reaction from the Saudi-led military coalition that controls Yemen’s airspace.

The United Nations had on Thursday welcomed the first commercial flight out of Sana’a.

“The UN thanks the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan for its support in bringing about this achievement …,” Stephane Dujarric, the chief spokesman for UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, said.

The world body counts on all parties involved to ensure a successful flight, Dujarric added.

The spokesman also expressed hope that parties to the accord will continue facilitating the flights as terms of the truce agreement.

“[The UN special envoy for Yemen] Hans Grundberg is working with the parties to ensure the successful implementation of the truce, including making progress towards opening roads in Ta’izz and other governorates to facilitate Yemenis’ freedom of movement within their country,” Dujarric noted.

Saudi Arabia launched the devastating war against Yemen in March 2015 in collaboration with a number of its allies and with arms and logistics support from the US and several Western states.

The objective was to bring back to power the Riyadh-friendly regime of Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi and crush the Ansarullah resistance movement, which has been running state affairs in the absence of an effective government in Yemen.

The war has stopped well short of all of its goals, despite killing hundreds of thousands of Yemenis and turning the entire country into the scene of the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.