Wednesday, December 24, 2025
Home Blog Page 2070

Iran Covid: 224 new deaths; infections decreasing

The deaths push to 136,166 the number of people killed by the disease since early 2020.

Meanwhile, the Health Ministry recorded 7,039 new cases of the Coronavirus that included 1.621 hospitalizations.

The new infections showed a huge decrease compared to Friday’s daily caseload when the figure was 11,972.

The number of triple-vaxxed people is reaching the 23 million mark while the total number of Covid vaccine doses administered in the country stands at over 141 million.

Hundreds of cities and towns across Iran are marked red now, the highest level of risk from Covid. There is only one blue city.

Many of the new cases of Covid in Iran are Omicron, the latest strain of the virus that is highly contagious.

Covid has killed millions of people worldwide. The deadliest single day for Iran during that pandemic was August 24, 2021 when 709 died of the virus.

Iran to attend Iraq’s intl. investment exhibit in late March, 2022

The event to be held from May 28-31, 2022, is taking place with a green light form the Iranian Trade Promotion Organization and through the good offices of Iran’s Economic and Technical Assistance and Investment Organization.

“Given the country’s economic programs with regards to the expansion of trade ties with neighboring countries, Iraq has a special place as one of Iran’s main trade partners,” said Alireza Sadrzadeh, the manager of the expo.

He said Tehran-Baghdad trade crossed the 7.5-billion-dollar mark last in the one year ending March 2021.

“In the wake of the conflict in Iraq, the trend of reconstruction in the country [began and] has been underway for some time now. So, there is no doubt that there is huge potential for the promotion of trade relations between the two countries, providing an ideal opportunity for the presence of Iranian tradesmen, businessmen and producers in this market,” he noted.

“As Iraq’s largest financial and economic event, the International Investment Exhibition is held every year bringing together a host of people seeking and keen on investment in this country,” he added.

In the exhibition, he said, investment projects from Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Iran, and Saudi Arabia will be introduced to investors.

Iran: Arrangements made to fly Iranian nationals in Ukraine back home

“Fortunately, with the Iranian embassy in Ukraine following up on the issue, and thanks to efforts by our colleagues at the foreign ministry and sincere cooperation by honorable ambassadors to Warsa, Budapest and Bucharest as well the support by the respected foreign minister, it has become possible to take Iranian nationals out of Ukraine,” said Manouchehr Moradi in a tweet.

“I hope our dear fellow countrymen will return to their homeland safe,” he added.

He had earlier said, “There are around 4200 Iranians in Ukraine, of whom 1100 are in eastern Ukraine.”

Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian, on Friday talked to his Polish, Hungarian and Slovak counterparts, urging them to let Iranians residing in Ukraine, enter their soils visa free, so that they could travel to Iran.

Iran vetting body okays project to transfer sea water to Sistan-Baluchestan

That was announced by the council’s spokesman Hadi Tahan Nazif, who added a proposal on amending the law on Fighting the Smuggling of Goods and Foreign Currency was also approved by the councilors.

“The bill to reform the Law on Fighting the Smuggling of Goods and Foreign Currency was also reviewed and approved by the Guardian Council. This bill is meant to take giant and effective steps in combating the smuggling of commodities and foreign exchange,” he explained.

The spokesman further noted that a plan was also reviewed at the council on facilitating the work of businesses.

Elsewhere in his remarks, he touched upon a controversial bill known as the Plan to Protect Cyberspace Users.

“Sometimes there are many ups and downs on the way of approving a law, and there is a huge difference between the initial text and the final plan, and many great changes may be made to the text,” he said.

He said there should be more common ground on the plan, adding legislators for and against it should express their viewpoints in a “calm atmosphere.”

The spokesman said the council will pinpoint any “religious or legal” faults with the plan, “but we cannot express any opinions about the text until we see it.”

Iran’s coronavirus red zones down to 184 from 337

Iran’s Health Ministry says 187 cities are orange (high risk), 76 are yellow (medium risk) and one has turned blue (very low risk).

The ministry once again called on Iranians to get their booster shots as soon as possible and fully observe health protocols.

Iran seems to be slowly moving past the peak of its sixth wave of Covid-19 outbreak which was triggered by a highly transmissible variant of the virus known as Omicron.

On Friday, the Iranian Health Ministry announced 214 more fatalities from the coronavirus and nearly 12,000 new infection cases detected over the past 24 hours.

Tehran to run exclusive flights to take Iranians back home from Ukraine

“Based on the latest figures by the consular section of the embassy, there are around 4200 Iranians in Ukraine, of whom 1100 are in eastern Ukraine,” said Manouchehr Moradi told Tasnim News Agency.

“Since the onset of the current crisis in Ukraine, the embassy of the Islamic Republic of Iran has been not only closely watching developments, but also offering consular services round the clock. The embassy has been in close contact with Iranians and informed them of the latest developments,” he said.

He added Iran’s embassy has also designated a phone number which takes calls 24/7 online, responding to fellow countrymen’s demands and concerns.

“Moreover, I, as the Islamic Republic of Iran’s ambassador to Ukraine, and following the phone calls made with Iranians, especially university students in Kiev, visited University Students’ Dormitory No. 13 as one of the places housing Iranian students, and, addressed their demands and problems in a friendly atmosphere,” he explained.

He said around 1200 Iranian students are studying at different universities in Ukraine.
He added the necessary consultations and follow-up work have been done with Iranian officials with regards to transferring Iranian nationals from Ukraine.

China: Ukraine developments won’t affect Vienna talks

Wang Qun told reporters in Vienna on Friday that negotiators remain focused on the talks to revive the 2015 Iran Nuclear Deal also known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, (JCPOA).

“We are in the final stage of negotiations and political decisions must be made to reach an agreement”, Wang Qun added.

Meanwhile, in a phone conversation with his Russian counterpart on Friday, Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian reiterated that the Islamic Republic will not back down from its red lines in the negotiations.

Amir Abdollahian and Sergei Lavrov discussed and reviewed the latest developments related to the Vienna talks.

“We have always supported Iran’s position in Vienna and we have good cooperation with our Iranian friends in Vienna and we will continue this cooperation,” Lavrov said during the phone conversation.

The eighth round of the talks between Iran and the P4+1 namely Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany began on December 27.

Most of the delegations acknowledge that the talks have reached a critical stage. The diplomacy seems to be approaching a make or break moment.

Iran’s lead negotiator Ali Bagheri Kani, who is in the capital Tehran for consultations, said recently that being near the finish line does not guarantee crossing that.

Ali Bagheri Kani says to finish the job, there are certain decisions that the Western parties to the negotiations need to take.

Since the beginning of the talks in Vienna last year, Iran has insisted that America must remove all sanctions imposed on Tehran after its unilateral pullout from the deal in May 2018 in a verifiable manner. It has also demanded that Washington provide guarantees that it will not leave the JCPOA again.

Iran must back Ukraine’s sovereignty despite close Russia ties: Analyst

Jalal Khoshchehreh told the Rouydad24 news portal on Friday that the recent move by Russian President Vladimir Putin “to recognize the self-ruled Donbass region in eastern Ukraine was a violation of another territory’s sovereignty, especially when he decided to dispatch military forces to defend the ethnic Russian minorities” there.”

He said Putin’s angry speech on Monday, in which he announced the recognition, “was a historical event which could be an alarm bell for global security and for ties among regional neighbors.”

In Ukraine, he added, “Putin made two dangerous moves. First, he recognized separatism, and second, he violated [a country’s] sovereignty under the pretext that ‘we stepped in to defend peace.’”

“Wouldn’t it become a trend in which calls for secession, wherever they rise from, give other countries the right to send military forces inside a sovereign territory to defend them (separatists)?” he asked.

Such a trend, Khoshchehreh said, will pose a threat to the world countries, particularly Iran and other Middle Eastern states, which are home to a variety of ethnic groups.

Moscow’s move “will encourage extremist nationalist factions,” the analyst said. “This should be a warning sign for our country and we should not welcome the Russian government’s behavior and expansionist views.”

He said Iran, despite its friendly ties with Moscow, “should back Ukraine’s territorial integrity and view whatever happens inside the Ukrainian borders within the framework of the sovereignty of Ukraine’s government and people.”

Such a support will serve Iran’s long-term and short-term security goals, Khoshchehreh said.

The commentator said what Russia is doing in Ukraine “is totally different from what it did in Syria,” where Moscow deployed military forces at the request of the Damascus government to boost the Arab country’s fight against terrorism and occupation.

FM: Iranians can leave Ukraine for Slovakia visa free

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian on Friday continued his telephone consultations with some foreign ministers of Ukraine’s neighboring countries.

He held talks with Slovak Foreign Minister Ivan Korčok about the situation of Iranians living in Ukraine, bilateral relations and international issues of mutual concern.

Referring to the good relations between the two countries and their favorable cooperation in various fields, Amir Abdollahian said, “We are ready to expand ties between the two countries in all fields.”

Regarding the escalation of the crisis in Ukraine, Amir Abdollahian said, “We hope that this crisis will be resolved politically and peacefully.”

The top diplomat added that a group of Iranian citizens residing in Ukraine have applied to leave this country and we call on the Slovak government to cooperate and provide assistance to Iranian citizens so that they leave Ukraine for Slovakia visa free.

Amir Abdollahian noted that Iran plans to transfer its citizens to the Islamic Republic by air after entering neighboring countries of Ukraine, including Slovakia.

Slovakia’s foreign minister for his part expressed pleasure with the development of cooperation between the two countries at various levels and fields, announcing the holding of the joint economic commission of the two countries in the near future, which was welcomed by Amir Abdollahian.

Ivan Korčok further welcomed the proposal of the Iranian foreign minister, saying Slovakia is ready to cooperate and assist Iranian citizens to leave Ukraine through the Slovak border visa free.

He stressed that Iranian nationals can enter Slovakia via Ukraine’s border and then travel to Iran.

Tehran’s envoy visits Iranian students holed up in shelter in Kiev

IRNA reported Friday that Manouchehr Moradi visited the Iranian students at the shelter, after footage went viral of an Iranian student who said his fellows were holed up at the site.

“The Iranian government has urged Iranian students to leave Ukrainian soil, but it is not possible to exit [Ukraine] given the closure of borders,” said the student in the video.

The Iranian envoy assured the Iranian students that the homeland was doing its utmost to facilitate the exit of Iranians caught up in crisis-torn Ukraine.

The Iranian Embassy in Warsaw has also set up a committee tasked with supporting fellow Iranians in Ukraine since the onset of the Russian military operation in the Eastern European country.

In a statement, it said any Iranian who reaches the border will be transferred to Warsaw and then to Iran.

Earlier, Head of the Civil Aviation Organization of Iran (CAO) Mohammad Mohammadi Bakhsh said CAO was ready to send a passenger plane to Poland to bring the Iranian citizens home, if a permit is issued to allow the flight.

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian also held talks with his Hungarian counterpart, who pledged efforts to help with the transfer.