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Iran reports over one million undocumented foreign nationals expelled this year

Afghan Refugee in Iran

According to the Ministry of Interior, Iran hosts approximately 6.1 million foreign nationals, of whom more than four million lack legal residency permits.

While many of those expelled returned voluntarily, with over 70 percent self-reporting, the government has stressed it can no longer accommodate large numbers of undocumented migrants.

Interior Minister Eskandar Momeni said the departure of many foreigners has led to a six percent drop in bread purchase transactions nationwide.

He called for the creation of a National Migration Organization to manage migration flows and ensure coordinated enforcement.

Authorities say measures include identifying undocumented migrants, preventing entry with forged documents, and detaining those suspected of links to hostile groups.

Officials emphasized that migrants should be treated with dignity during repatriation.

Cooperation with Afghanistan’s government and international organizations is seen as essential for long-term solutions to the economic, security, and social challenges posed by the remaining undocumented population.

Zelensky not invited to Putin-Trump summit in Alaska: WaPo

Zelensky

On Friday, Trump announced he would meet Putin on August 15 in Alaska. In the hours after the announcement, several outlets reported that Zelensky might take part in some form, with a senior White House official telling CBS News the planning was “still fluid” and that Zelensky could be involved.

However, the Washington Post has reported that no invitation has been extended to Zelensky so far. Reuters has also said, citing sources, that the White House is still considering inviting him, but is currently focused on organizing a bilateral meeting, at Russia’s request.

CNN sources, however, said that the Trump administration hasn’t ruled out Zelensky being in Alaska during the summit. One White House official also told CNN that “anything involving Zelensky” would likely take place after the Trump-Putin meeting.

Putin has said he will not rule out a meeting with Zelensky, but the Kremlin has stressed that the conditions for such talks have not been met.

Trump has suggested that upcoming negotiations could involve “some swapping of territories to the betterment of both.” However, on Saturday, Zelensky rejected any land-swap proposals, citing limitations imposed by Ukraine’s constitution.

The Washington Post has noted that, given the strained relationship between Trump and Zelensky after their tense Oval Office meeting earlier this year, Zelensky’s refusal to consider territorial concessions could risk potential blowback from Trump, who has previously described him as difficult to negotiate with.

Russian officials have repeatedly said that any peace deal must address the root causes of the conflict and reflect the realities on the ground, including the status of Crimea as well as the Donetsk, Lugansk, Zaporozhye and Kherson regions, which joined Russia after referendums in 2022.

Iran says talks with three European countries not halted, no agreement yet on time or place

Esmael baghaei

Speaking at a press briefing, Baqaei responded to questions about the status of the talks, saying, “It cannot be said that negotiations have stopped. We are still discussing the timing and location.”

Baqaei also commented on the visit of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Deputy Director General, stating that discussions are scheduled for Monday, including meetings with Iran’s Foreign Ministry officials.

However, he cautioned that it is too early to predict any outcomes, describing the situation as complex.

He criticized the IAEA for failing to condemn US-Israeli attacks on Iran’s nuclear facilities in June, expressing dissatisfaction over the lack of clear procedures for addressing such incidents.

Baqaei added that talks will take place with consideration of the aggression by Israel and the US, as well as Iranian parliamentary resolutions.

President Pezeshkian calls for action against Israeli crimes in Gaza

Speaking during the ceremony for the presentation of credentials for new ambassadors from Ethiopia, Estonia, Djibouti, Laos, Cambodia, Burundi, Latvia, Myanmar, and Nepal, the president highlighted the alarming continuation and escalation of violence perpetrated by the Israeli regime against the oppressed and defenseless population of Gaza.

Pezeshkian called upon all nations, particularly Islamic countries, to collaborate more effectively in order to halt these atrocities, lift the siege on Gaza, and provide unlimited and extensive humanitarian aid to those affected.

He stressed that the plight of the innocent people of Gaza demands a unified global response.

Pezeshkian condemned the inhumane actions of blocking access to food, water, and medicine under the guise of self-defense, describing it as a disaster. He noted the greater tragedy that these crimes occur before those who profess to uphold human rights, democracy, and the freedom of humanity.

Elsewhere in his remarks, the president also expressed Iran’s commitment to fostering friendly relations and constructive cooperation with all countries.

He stated that Iran is ready to enhance its partnerships in political, economic, commercial, cultural, scientific, and technological fields, based on mutual respect and shared interests.

“Iranians believe that the inhabitants of the Earth, on a small planet, have a limited opportunity for life; therefore, we must collaborate, support each other, and synergize in the pursuit of developing peace, stability, tranquility, and prosperity for all,” he stressed.

During this ceremony, Faisal Ali Ibrahim, Vaino Rinat, Taib Dubad Ruble, Bunmi Wanmani, Rath Mani, Didake Networka, Bakhtiar Hasan, Zaw Oo, and Paudel Ramesh Chandra, new accredited ambassadors of Ethiopia, Estonia, Djibouti, the Laos People’s Democratic Republic, the Kingdom of Cambodia, the Republic of Burundi, the Republic of Latvia, the Republic of the Union of Myanmar, and the Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal, respectively, conveyed warm greetings and best wishes from their leaders to President Pezeshkian and the people of Iran.

The ambassadors noted that they would make every effort to enhance the level of friendly relations and expand constructive cooperation between their countries and Iran.

Iran’s top security official Larijani to sign security agreement in Iraq, to head to Lebanon

Ali Larijani

Prior to departure to Iraq on Monday, the veteran politician told state IRIB TV he would meet senior officials and political leaders in Iraq to finalize the agreement, which he described as a key step in safeguarding the security of both nations.

He stressed that Iran’s regional policy is to protect its citizens while respecting the security of neighboring states, contrasting the self-centered security approach of some other countries.

He also expressed appreciation for Iraq’s cooperation during the annual Arbaeen pilgrimage.

The second leg of the trip will take him to Lebanon, which he called “a key and influential country in West Asia” with long-standing cultural and historical ties to Iran. Discussions in Beirut will address national unity in Lebanon, expanding trade relations, and the latest regional developments.

Referring to recent clashes between Lebanon and Israel, Larijani said sustained dialogue can contribute to regional stability. “Lebanon’s independence and unity have always been important to us,” he noted.

Australia says to recognise Palestinian state in September

Rally Palestine Gaza

Albanese, who made the announcement following a cabinet meeting, said recognition will be predicated on commitments Australia received from the Palestinian Authority, including that Hamas would have no involvement in any future state.

“A two-state solution is humanity’s best hope to break the cycle of violence in the Middle East and to bring an end to the conflict, suffering and starvation in Gaza,” Albanese stated at a news conference.

France and Canada last month said they planned to recognise a Palestinian state, while Britain has said it would follow suit unless Israel addresses the humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian territories and reaches a ceasefire.

UN warns of ‘calamity’ as PM pushes for Israel to seize Gaza City

Gaza War

UN Assistant Secretary-General for Europe, Central Asia and the Americas Miroslav Jenca on Sunday told an emergency weekend meeting that if implemented, the plan could result in the displacement of all civilians from Gaza City by October 7, 2025, affecting some 800,000 people, many of them already previously displaced.

This “will likely trigger another calamity in Gaza, reverberating across the region and causing further forced displacement, killings and destruction, compounding the unbearable suffering of the population,” Jenca said.

Palestinian UN Ambassador Riyad Mansour told the UNSC that Israel was aiming for “the destruction of the Palestinian people through forced transfer and massacres to facilitate its annexation of our land”.

“What will force Israel to change course is our ability to transform justified condemnation into just actions … History will judge us all,” he added.

Foreign powers, including some of Israel’s allies, have slammed Israel’s plan. The United Kingdom, a close ally of Israel which nonetheless pushed for an emergency meeting on the crisis, warned the Israeli plan risked prolonging the conflict.

“It will only deepen the suffering of Palestinian civilians in Gaza. This is not a path to resolution. It is a path to more bloodshed,” the British Deputy Ambassador to the UN James Kariuki said.

Another staunch Israel ally, Germany, announced it could not actively support Israel’s plan to expand military operations in Gaza and displace of Palestinians.

“Where are these people supposed to go?” Chancellor Friedrich Merz asked in an interview with public broadcaster ARD.

“We can’t do that, we won’t do that, and I will not do that,” he added.

France’s Deputy Permanent UN Representative Jay Dharmadhikari condemned “in the strongest possible terms” the plan, which he said would have “dramatic humanitarian consequences” for civilians already “living in horrifying conditions”.

“The images of children dying of hunger or civilians being targeted as they tried to find food are unbearable,” Dharmadhikari stated, urging Israel to comply with international humanitarian law.

The UK, Denmark, France, Greece and Slovenia issued a joint statement asking Israel “to urgently reverse this decision and not to implement” the plan, saying it violates international law.

In a separate statement, the foreign ministers of Spain, Iceland, Ireland, Luxembourg, Malta, Norway, Portugal and Slovenia warned that Israel seizing Gaza City would be “a major obstacle to implementing the two-state solution, the only path towards a comprehensive, just and lasting peace”.

Despite the international backlash and rumours of dissent from Israeli military top brass, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has remained defiant over the plan to seize Gaza’s largest urban centre, which was approved by Israel’s security cabinet on Friday.

“The timeline that we set for the action is fairly quickly,” Netanyahu told a news conference in Jerusalem on Sunday.

“I don’t want to talk about exact timetables, but we’re talking in terms of a fairly short timetable because we want to bring the war to an end.”

He said Israel had “no choice but to finish the job and complete the defeat of Hamas”, given the group’s refusal to lay down its arms. Hamas said it would not disarm unless an independent Palestinian state was established.

Netanyahu added the military had been given the green light to “dismantle” what he described as two remaining Hamas strongholds: Gaza City in the north and al-Mawasi further to the south.

“This is the best way to end the war and the best way to end it speedily,” he continued, noting, “We will do so by first enabling the civilian population to safely leave the combat areas to designated safe zones.”

While the prime minister stressed that these “safe zones” would be given “ample food, water, and medical care”, guards at the controversial Israel- and United States-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), purportedly established to deliver aid to the starving Palestinian population, have routinely opened fire on the aid seekers, killing dozens at a time.

Asked about the growing criticism targeting his cabinet’s decision, Netanyahu said Israel was prepared to fight alone.

“We will win the war, with or without the support of others,” he added.

Hamas released a statement responding to Netanyahu’s claim that Israel did not intend to occupy Gaza but “liberate” it from the Palestinian group.

The group said the use of the term “liberation” was an attempt to distort the reality of occupation “that will not cover up the crime of extermination, killing, and systematic destruction for more than 22 months”.

Hamas added that it constituted a “desperate attempt to exonerate” Israel after it killed more than 61,400 Palestinians, including more than 18,000 children.

The United States, a veto-wielding permanent member of the UNSC, has so far shielded its staunch ally from any practical measures of UN censure. Netanyahu’s office announced the prime minister spoke with US President Donald Trump about its plan, without elaborating on the outcome of the conversation.

Speaking to Fox News, the US vice president said Washington neither endorsed nor rejected Israel’s decision to seize Gaza City and the entire Gaza Strip at large.

“Obviously, there are a lot of downsides and upsides”, JD Vance stressed.

Israel kills prominent Al Jazeera journalists in Gaza

The director of Gaza’s Al Shifa Medical Complex confirmed that Al Jazeera correspondents Anas al-Sharif and Mohammed Qreiqea died when Israel struck their tent, in what he said appears to have been a deliberate attack on media workers.

Cameramen and photojournalists Ibrahim Zaher, Mohammed Noufal and Mosaab Al Sharif were also killed.

Al Sharif, 28, was based outside the hospital’s main gate, reporting extensively from northern Gaza.

Shortly before his death, Al Sharif posted on X about Israel’s concentrated missile strikes on the eastern and southern parts of Gaza City. His final video captured the deafening booms of the attacks near to where he was.

Jodie Ginsberg, chief executive of the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), told Al Jazeera on Sunday that Al Sharif’s killing fits a longstanding Israeli pattern of targeting journalists.

“This is not just about Anas Al Sharif; it is part of a decades-long practice in which Israel kills journalists,” she added.

The killing of the five media workers comes days after Israel’s security cabinet approved a plan to occupy the Gaza Strip. The operation aims to seize Gaza City and forcibly clear its nearly one million Palestinian residents.

While Israel officially called this a “takeover,” Israeli media reported the term “occupy” was avoided to dodge legal responsibilities under international law.

In July, Israeli army spokesperson Avichai Adraee shared a video threatening father of two, Al Sharif, in a message widely condemned for openly targeting a journalist.

Since Israel’s war on Gaza began in October 2023, it has frequently targeted Palestinian journalists reporting on the ongoing genocide.

More than 200 journalists and media workers have been killed by Israeli military operations during the conflict, including several from Al Jazeera and their family members.

New Zealand considering recognition of Palestinian state: FM

Pro-Palestine Rally

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon’s cabinet would make a formal decision in September and present the government’s approach at the U.N. Leaders’ Week, he said.

Several countries including Australia, Britain and Canada have announced in recent weeks that they will recognise a Palestinian state at September’s U.N. General Assembly.

Peters stated that while some of New Zealand’s close partners had opted to recognise a Palestinian state, New Zealand had an independent foreign policy.

“We intend to weigh up the issue carefully and then act according to New Zealand’s principles, values and national interest,” Peters announced in a statement.

The government needed to weigh up whether sufficient progress was being made towards the Palestinian territories becoming a viable and legitimate state for New Zealand to grant recognition.

“New Zealand has been clear for some time that our recognition of a Palestinian state is a matter of when, not if,” Peters added.

Iran FM: IAEA talks to define cooperation framework; no inspections planned until deal

Abbas Araghchi

He said IAEA Deputy Director-General will visit Tehran on Sunday, but no site visits are planned until such a framework is reached, adding that any cooperation will be based on Iran’s parliamentary law.

Araghchi also noted that contacts with European counterparts are ongoing.
He stated that Europe has raised the issue of the “snapback” mechanism, but Iran’s position is that snapback has no validity and that Europe is not considered a participant in the JCPOA from Tehran’s perspective.

He added that while technical and legal discussions are taking place with European officials, no date has been set for the next round of negotiations.

Regarding the possibility of talks with the United States in Norway, Araghchi said nothing has been finalized and refrained from confirming any country as a host.