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FIFA rejects rumors of banning Iran from 2020 World Cup

FIFA rejects rumors of banning Iran from 2020 World Cup

In a meeting with Mirshad Majedi, the acting president of Iran’s Football Federation, Infantino made it clear that the Iranian team would not be banned from World Cup games, the IRIB reported.

The rumors were apparently circulated by some Italian media outlets, whose national team could get a chance to make its way to the World Cup in case of Iran’s exclusion.

The claims followed an incident on the sidelines of the Iran-Lebanon World Cup qualifier in the northeastern city of Mashhad on Tuesday.

A group of women, who had reportedly bought tickets to the game, were stopped outside the stadium. They were pepper-sprayed by the security guards as they protested and tried to enter by force.

The incident gave rise to protests not just among people but also the country’s sports officials and politicians.

FIFA also asked for an explanation for what happened.

The controversy prompted Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi to intervene. He ordered to interior minister to launch an investigation and prepare a comprehensive report on the incident.

‘Road accidents claim 17,000 lives in Iran annually’

Iran Roads

Jafar Tashakkori Hashemi, chairman of the Civil Engineering and Transportation Commission of Tehran City Council said in an Instagram post that at least 552 people died in road accidents from March 20 to 29, amid a rise in trips during New Year holidays, in what he described as “no-return travels that decide a bitter fate for passengers and their families.”

Authorities have warned that the number is expected to rise toward the end of the two-week holidays when many hit the roads back to their hometowns.

The official said although “human errors” are blamed for 80 percent of the accidents, modern technology has come to the aid of car manufacturers to enable the vehicles to prevent fatalities in the case of such errors.

“Unfortunately, due to a lack of competition in car manufacturing and the production of low-quality vehicles in addition to unsafe roads in our country, over 17,000 people lose their lives, with the number being 20 to 30 time bigger in cases of disabilities and injuries, which mainly includes active people aging between 15 to 45.”

The figures, he said, places Iran on the list of high-risk states in terms of road traffic accidents.

Iranian singer detained, grilled by US immigration officers

Alireza Ghorbani

Alireza Ardekani, CEO of the Culture NGO in Los Angeles said Alireza Ghorbani boarded the plane but the US immigration officers removed him from the flight.

The Iranian signer was then questioned for four hours and his visa was cancelled.

CEO of the Culture NGO said Ghorbani’s visa was cancelled because he completed his military service in the IRGC in Iran three decades ago.

The US has blacklisted the IRGC as a terrorist organization.

Ghorbani obtained his visa from the US Consulate General in Toronto.

The concert was to be held at the Segerstrom Center for the Arts in Costa Mesa. Some other famous Iranian singers were to perform at the event.

Ghorbani is a dual citizen of Iran and Canada.

Iranian delegation visiting Russia for expansion of trade ties

Iran and Russia Flags

Ahmad Khani Nozari, Iran’s Deputy Minister of Cooperatives, Labor and Social Welfare, said given that prices of oil seeds and livestock inputs are going up worldwide, Iran can meet its needs for these products by purchasing them from Russia.

Khani Nozari noted that Russia’s big market provides a good opportunity for Iranian producers to play a more active role.

He added that the visit by the Iranian delegation is aimed at expanding economic cooperation and in line with strategic agreements that were reached during President Ebrahim Raisi’s recent visit to Moscow.

According to the Iranian official, the trip means negotiation for facilitating trade and expansion of exports of Iranian-made goods to Russia at a time when the country is under heavy sanctions by the European Union and the US.

Iran’s FM wraps up multinational meetings in China, back home

Amir Abdolahian Wang Lavrov

Before returning home on Friday, Amir-Abdollahian attended the third meeting of foreign ministers of Afghanistan’s neighboring countries in Tunxi, China.

During the gathering, the top diplomat called on Afghanistan’s neighbors to join forces and help speed up the reconstruction of the South Asian state, ravaged by two decades of US-led war.

“It is necessary that Afghanistan’s neighbors and friendly countries come up with relevant mechanisms to strengthen cooperation in the reconstruction and development of Afghanistan,” he told the meeting on Thursday.

Amir Abdollahian blamed the problems gripping Afghanistan on “the long-term occupation and misguided policies of the occupiers, mainly the United States.”

On the sidelines, Iran’s chief diplomat met with his opposite numbers from China, Russia, Turkmenistan, Pakistan, Qatar, and Indonesia. He also sat down for talks with Uzbekistan’s deputy prime minister and the Taliban’s caretaker foreign minister.

Besides the Afghanistan crisis, Amir Abdollahian and the senior officials exchanged views on other topics, including the expansion of bilateral ties and major regional developments.

In separate meetings with Wang Yi, the host country’s foreign minister, and Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, the three states stressed their determination to fight the US sanctions imposed on independent states.

UN chief: 95% of Afghans do not have enough food

Poverty in Afghanistan

A total of 41 donor countries pledged more than $2.44 billion toward the United Nations’ $4.4 billion appeal for humanitarian aid in Afghanistan, the world body said on Thursday, as international concerns grew over the Taliban denying girls a secondary education.

Guterres opened the high-level conference urging donors to provide unconditional funding, saying that 9 million Afghans faced famine and that families were selling children and organs to survive.

The humanitarian situation has “deteriorated alarmingly” since the Taliban takeover in August and the economy has all but collapsed, he added.

“Some 95 percent of people do not have enough to eat. Nine million people are at risk of famine. UNICEF estimates that a million severely malnourished children are on the verge of death, without immediate action,” he stated.

Guterres called for the reopening of schools for all students in Afghanistan without discrimination.

Britain, the European Union and the United States pledged funds, but along with Turkey and others voiced concerns about growing restrictions imposed by the hard-line rulers.

“This humanitarian aid, like all aid from the United States, will go directly to NGOs and the United Nations. The Taliban will not control our humanitarian funding,” said US ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield, pledging $204 million.

Ahead of the drive, Britain pledged 286 million pounds ($374 million) for Afghanistan, where six of every 10 Afghans need aid, much of it food.

British minister of state Lord Ahmad noted, “While today our focus has rightly been on critical humanitarian issues, many interventions today have also raised the increasing restrictions tragically placed on Afghan people but in particular on women and girls, on the media and indeed on civil society.”

UN aid chief Martin Griffiths, speaking from Doha, Qatar, after talks with the Taliban in Kabul this week, stated, “I had the firm impression that the door for dialogue with the de facto authorities remains open, they want to find a constructive way to work with us.

“They don’t necessarily know how to work with the international community, including the complex question of girls’ education. I hope we can resolve this problem in the future,” he added.

At Indira Gandhi Children’s Hospital in Kabul he had seen tiny malnourished children and newborns sharing ventilators. The level of human suffering left him speechless, Griffiths warned.

The United Nations says funds under the appeal — three times the amount requested in 2021 — go directly to aid agencies and none are channeled through the de facto authorities.

Fire contained in Iran’s petrochemical complex, two injured

petrochemical factory in the southern Iranian port city of Mahshahr

The fire broke out when a tanker was being filled with hydrocarbons at the factory.

The head of Mahshahr’s Special Economic Zone Organization said two people were injured in the incident and one of them was admitted to a hospital for treatment.

The tanker was carrying materials that are similar to gasoline and are used in solvents and paint production industries.

The exact cause of the fire is unknown.

Minister: Iran’s oil production capacity reached pre-sanctions level

Iran Oil

In an interview with the Iran’s national TV on Thursday, Owji said the growth was achieved due to the “effective measures” taken to develop the country’s oil fields and overhaul the equipment installed there.

“In the field of natural gas, good measures were adopted by the Iranian National Gas Company (NIGC) and the National Oil Company (NIOC), which brought the daily gas production levels from the South Pars to 705 million cubic meters, the highest level, in the past winter.”

Asked to elaborate on the causes of the rise in the production capacity, he said, “We achieved high figures in sales of oil and natural gas condensates thanks to [the country’s] strong will, identification of new customers and markets, strong marketing, use of different methods in striking oil deals, employment of professional and committed human resources.”

The Ministry of Petroleum, he said, plans to further increase exports of crude, gas condensates, and other by-products in the year ahead.

Raisi: European governments provided no aid for Afghan refugees in Iran

Iran President Ebrahim Raisi

President Raisi said the European countries only made promises but did not keep their word.

The president noted that Iran is now hosting more than 4 million Afghan refugees.

He added that the Islamic Republic of Iran has a sense of responsibility toward the Afghan people, unlike the European governments that pursue the issue of Afghanistan for political purposes.

“What matters today inside Afghanistan is the formation of an inclusive government which represents all Afghan ethnic groups”, Raisi said.

Millions of Afghans have migrated to Iran since the 1980’s when the war began there following the Soviet invasion of the country. The Taliban takeover of Afghanistan in August 2021 also forced huge numbers of them to flee to Iran.

Tehran has time and again called on the EU and the UN to provide the refugees with relief aid. They have yet to provide the Afghans with aid.

US says small number of outstanding issues in nuclear talks

Nuclear Negotiations in Vienna

State Department spokesperson Ned Price told reporters the United States has “tactical differences” with Israel on Iran, but no strategic disagreement.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken traveled to Israel last weekend.

A senior State Department official and an Israeli official told Axios Blinken has asked Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and other Israeli officials for their alternative to a nuclear deal with Iran.

The Israeli and US officials announced the Iran issue was at the center of the meeting between Blinken and Bennett on Sunday, but regardless of the disagreement, the discussion wasn’t tense.

Negotiations have been held in Vienna since last April to restore the JCPOA, an agreement on Iran’s nuclear program that was nixed by former US president Donald Trump.

However, Washington has imposed several sanctions against Iran since the talks began, in what has been perceived in Tehran as s demonstration of bad faith.

Tehran says Washington’s indecisiveness is to blame for the protraction of the talks, as a number of key issues remain unresolved, ranging from the removal of all post-JCPOA sanctions to the provision of guarantees by the American side that it will not leave the deal again.

Elsewhere in his remarks, Price stated from 2012 to 2018, “there were no significant attacks, there were no attacks against US service members, diplomatic facilities in Iraq.”

“That changed in 2018. And between 2019 and 2020, the number of attacks from Iran-backed groups went up 400 percent,” he continued.

“This was in the aftermath of the decision to abandon the JCPOA. It was in the aftermath of the decision to apply the FTO designation to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps. It was in the aftermath of the killing of [Iran’s leading anti-terror Commander Lieutenant General Qassem] Soleimani, the IRGC chief,” he noted.

Soleimani was assassinated in a US drone strike on Baghdad International Airport in Iraq on January 3, 2020.

On January 8, Ain al-Assad, which houses US troops in al-Anbar province, found itself under fire from volleys of ballistic missiles launched from Iran, which considered as the largest ballistic missile attack against Americans in history.

The Pentagon has confirmed 110 service members have been diagnosed with traumatic brain injury following the Iran strike.

Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Sayyed Ali Khamenei has called the military operation “only a slap across the face” of the United States, stating that “military moves like this are not enough. The Americans’ corruption-stirring presence should come to an end”.