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Iran says ready for talks with countries over crashed Ukrainian plane

Iran's Foreign Ministry

The Iranian Foreign Ministry issued a statement on Friday to mark the second anniversary of the tragedy, which saw the Ukraine plane, en route to Kiev while carrying mostly Iranians, crash minutes after takeoff near Tehran, killing all of the 176 passengers and crew on board.

“In the wake of the accident, relevant institutions in the Islamic Republic of Iran announced the main reason behind the incident and [subsequently] fulfilled their duties precisely, transparently and rapidly in accordance with domestic law and international commitments,” the statement said.

The passenger jet was mistakenly shot down by Iranian air defenses amid heightened military tensions between Tehran and Washington, which erupted in the aftermath of the assassination by the US of Iran’s top anti-terror commander Lieutenant General Qassem Soleimani.

Firstly, the statement said, Iran prepared a technical report of the accident within the framework of the 1944 Convention Relating to the Regulation of Aerial Navigation in cooperation with officials of the countries involved and those of the International Civil Aviation Organization.

The statement said Iran also set compensation for the families of all victims, without any discrimination.

Iran’s Judiciary has also started a hearing process since late last year to do justice to the victims and their bereaved families, it added.

“Despite the unlawful measures of certain countries, which are seeking to exploit the painful tragedy and the bereaved families’ sufferings for their own political goals, the Islamic Republic of Iran stands ready for negotiations with any involved country in a bilateral format according to an agreed agenda and based on goodwill, respect for other countries’ sovereignty and governments’ international commitments,” it added.

Report: IAEA cameras installed at Iran’s Tessa facility

FILE PHOTO: The logo of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) is seen at their headquarters during a board of governors meeting, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Vienna, Austria, June 7, 2021. REUTERS/Leonhard Foeger

Meanwhile, IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi said Wednesday, December 15, 2021, that the cameras would be installed in a few days and after that date Grossi noted that the move was of importance for verification purposes under the Iran nuclear deal and that efforts would continue to deal with other remaining safeguards issues. After Grossi made those comments, the spokesman for the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, Behrouz Kamalvandi, said regarding an agreement with the IAEA the memory cards of the cameras will be put in a packet and sealed after they are full and the agency will have no access to their contents.

Kamalvandi said this move was aimed at making sure that the anti-Iran sanctions will be removed and at safeguarding the interests of the Iranian people.

Iran’s daily COVID-19 death toll hits new record low

The Health Ministry said Friday that 1,178 people had been diagnosed with the infectious disease in the past 24 hours, bringing the total caseload to 6,204,224.

With 19 more deaths recorded, the total number of those killed reached 131,821, it added.

No deaths were reported in 22 provinces, while four provinces recorded only a single one, according to the ministry.

It is the first time in 22 months that Iran registers a daily death toll below 20 individuals.

The downward trend is seen as a result of a stepped-up vaccination campaign in Iran in recent months.

So far, the ministry said, 121,982,424 doses of vaccines have been administered in the country of around 84 million. Out of that figure, 9,505,625 people have received the third dose.

Despite the decline in numbers, officials have been warning people not to take lightly the health protocols against the COVID-19 infection as Omicron, a new variant of the coronavirus, is spreading rapidly through many world countries.

Top Iranian clubs Persepolis and Esteghlal kicked out of competition

The decision was made pursuant to Articles 14.4 and 14.5 of the AFC Club Licensing Regulations which were read together with Article 4.1.4 of the Procedural Rules Governing the Entry Control Body.

The ECB determined that the three clubs had not satisfied all the mandatory criteria as required under Articles 3.1 and 3.2(a) of the AFC Club Licensing Regulations.

This automatically resulted in the clubs’ becoming ineligible to participate in the AFC Champions League 2022.

Additionally, the ECB also rejected the extraordinary application submitted by Gol Gohar Sirjan FC.

Now the only Iranian football clubs that are qualified to take part in the Asian Champions League are Sepahan Esfahan FC and Foolad Khuzestan FC.

Kazakh president authorizes fire ‘without warning’

“I have given an order to the law enforcement and military to shoot to kill without warning,” Tokayev stated on Friday.

The president has rejected the idea of resolving the ongoing crisis through negotiations.

“It’s nonsense. What kind of talks can one have with criminals and murderers?” he asked.

Kazakhstan is facing “armed and well-trained militants, both local and foreign,” Tokayev said.

Describing them as “bandits and terrorists,” he asserted that they should be “eliminated.”

The situation has mostly stabilized in Almaty, Aktobe, and elsewhere across the country, he added, but the security forces are continuing their “anti-terrorist operation,” as not all of the perpetrators have laid down their weapons.

The state of emergency will now be gradually lifted, according to the president. The internet, which had been switched off a few days ago, will be restored in some parts of the country, he promised, adding that its reinstatement would nonetheless not allow anyone to “freely post fabrications, slander, insults, and inflammatory appeals.”

Those who attacked the country acted in accordance with a well-designed plan, Tokayev said, targeting key military, administrative, and social facilities in almost all of the regions.

“Only in Almaty, there were 20,000 bandits,” he continued.

They were backed by propaganda experts who spread fake news online and manipulated the mood of the people, the president insisted.

He also thanked fellow member states of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) – Armenia, Belarus, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, and Tajikistan – for answering his call and deploying peacekeepers to help restore order in Kazakhstan. The CSTO mission would remain in the country “for a limited period of time” to support the local security forces, the president clarified.

Kazakh law enforcers eliminated 26 participants of the recent mass protests and detained over 3,000 more, Khabar-24 TV channel reported on Friday citing the country’s Interior Ministry.

“In all, over 3,000 criminals were detained, 26 more killed and 18 armed terrorists were wounded,” the television channel reported adding that 18 law enforcers were killed and up to 750 policemen were wounded during mass disorders.

France says progress made in nuclear talks

“I remain convinced we can reach a deal. But time is running out,” Le Drian told BFM TV and RMC Radio.

On Wednesday, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock after a meeting with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned there is not much time to revive the 2015 nuclear deal.

Iran and the five remaining signatories to the JCPOA — Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China — resumed talks in Vienna on Monday after the parties took a three-day break for the New Year.

US State Department spokesman Ned Price has also stated those nuclear deal talks with Iran in Vienna had shown modest progress, and that Washington hopes to build on the progress that had been made.

In an exclusive interview with Al Jazeera broadcast on Thursday, Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian said Tehran is hearing good words from the US in Vienna but words must be backed up with serious actions.

He also stated the 8th round of talks in the Austrian capital to revive the Iran nuclear deal and the lifting of anti-Iran sanctions is on the right track.

He added if Western countries have the will, a good deal is within reach.

The Iranian foreign minister also spoke of guarantees that Iran must receive regarding its oil exports. He noted one tangible guarantee is that Iran must be able to sell crude and have access to revenues from the oil sales.

“We demand that the sanctions imposed by Trump be lifted, in particular the bans that are contrary to the nuclear deal, JCPOA… we want new guarantees that no new sanctions will be imposed or re-imposed after they have been removed,” he continued.

Amir Abdollahian’s remarks came after earlier on Thursday, Iran’s chief negotiator in Vienna talks noted the negotiations with the remaining signatories to the Iran deal are “positive and forward-moving.”

Ali Bagheri Kani added that efforts were underway to achieve results from the talks.

The eighth round of the Vienna talks began on December 27 with a focus on the removal of all US sanctions. The US is not allowed to directly attend the talks due to its pullout in 2018 from the landmark deal with Iran.

During the previous round of the talks, the first under Iran’s new President Ebrahim Raeisi, Iran submitted two draft proposals to the other parties concerning the removal of sanctions and Tehran’s nuclear commitments.  

Russia: P4+1 discuss one thorniest issue with US

Mikhail Ulyanov also says the signatories to the JCPOA which are also known as the P4+1 group of countries held targeted negotiations with the US diplomats over one of the thorniest issues on the agenda of the Vienna discussions. He did not specify what the issue was.

The meeting happened after Ulyanov discussed the trend of the talks with South Korea’s deputy foreign minister and European diplomats in the Austrian capital. Meanwhile, US State Department Spokesman Ned Price has said “Iran’s accelerating nuclear steps will increasingly diminish the non-proliferation benefits of the JCPOA if a rapid understanding on mutual return to compliance is not reached.

He said the deal remains in the national interest of the US. Price added that Iran needs to exercise restraint in its nuclear program and pursue negotiations in Vienna seriously and that “our goal is to address that proliferation threat through diplomacy and to test the proposition as to whether a mutual return to compliance with the JCPOA remains a possibility.”

Price also said if no deal is reached in Vienna soon, Washington will take a different course of action.

This comes as Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian told Al Jazeera news channels that Tehran is hearing good words from the US in Vienna which must be backed up with actions.

Amir Abdollahian added that the Vienna negotiations are on the right track.
In response to the US and European troika’s claim that time is running out for a deal, Iran has said it will accept no deadline for an agreement.

The Vienna talks are aimed at reviving the JCPOA which plunged into disarray after the US unilaterally left it under former president Donald Trump in 2018.

Ex-US diplomat: ‘Ridiculous’ to think Washington will leave ME

“In 2021 I saw many people claim that the United States will abandon the Middle East. This is ridiculous,” Robert Ford said in an article published by the Saudi-owned newspaper Asharq al-Awsat.

“First, the Americans are keeping their bases in the [Persian] Gulf region in countries like Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. They are expanding the Muwaffaq Salti Air Base in Jordan. At the same time, the American navy continues to operate in the [Persian] Gulf and near the Arabian Peninsula,” Ford explained.

Former envoy added the last three American presidents have looked at the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and are cautious about starting a new land war in western Asia, arguing that being cautious about launching a new war is not the same as defending or withdrawing.

Second, he continued, neither of the former and current US presidents, Donald Trump and Joe Biden, withdrew all the American forces out of Syria or Iraq.

“In fact, the number of soldiers hasn’t changed for about two years and will not change much during the next few years. The Americans have promised not to undertake unilateral combat missions in Iraq and that is new,” the retired American diplomat pointed out.

Last month, Baghdad announced the end of Washington-led forces’ “combat mission” in Iraq, but about 2,500 American soldiers and 1,000 coalition troops will remain deployed in Iraq on the pretext of offering training, advice, and assistance to Iraqi forces.

Iraqi resistance groups have maintained that the US is merely relabeling its military forces to Iraq. They have ramped up their calls for the expulsion of all American troops from the Arab country regardless of their labels.

Ford claimed that the American forces’ new mission in Iraq is “to improve the capability of Iraqi counter-terrorism forces”.

However, the pressure to expel American forces began to build up after the US assassinated Iran and Iraq’s top counter-terrorism commanders, Lieutenant General Qassem Soleimani and Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, in Baghdad in January 2020.

In recent days, concurrent with the second anniversary of the US’s “terrorist attack”, military bases that hold American troops in Iraq and Syria have been under repeated attacks.

Describing the remnants of the Daesh terrorists as a “persistent problem”, Ford also claimed that fighting the terrorist group is the reason behind the American military’s presence in Syria, where the American forces maintain an illegal presence and support anti-government militants, including the so-called Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).

“It is reasonable to ask if American soldiers can fix the ISIS problem definitively, but in any case, the American forces are not leaving Syria and Iraq in the near future,” he stated.

Elsewhere in his article, the former American envoy maintained that developments in Asia, in Europe, and with Iran will affect the future American military position in the Middle East.

“Will China and Russia have more influence in the region? Of course,” he said, adding, “Regardless of its many political problems, America is no longer the single superpower. But any foreign leader who expects the American political class will abandon the Middle East doesn’t understand American domestic politics or Biden’s policy that seeks to share responsibility for stability in the region with America’s partners.”

IRGC commander promises revenge for assassination of General Soleimani

Esmayeel Qaaani

General Esmail Ghaani was speaking at an event in the city of Mashhad commemorating the migrant martyrs who fought terrorists in Syria.

Ghaani added that if there are rational people in the US who would deal with those who assassinated General Soleimani, that will be less costly for America than when the sons of the resistance front take things into their own hands.

He added that the revenge against the US has just started, adding, “We Shias know how to take revenge, just as what our old generations did to the Umayyad clan and uprooted them. We have such a culture”.

Ghaani said the US mistakenly thinks that they hit General Soleimani and it’s over but the blood of that martyr inspires the sons of the resistance front.

The commander of Iran’s Quds force noted that the US will be dislodged from the West Asian region under God’s auspices.

Ghaani said if the Americans are wise, they will get out of Iraq or the resistance front in the country will destroy them and they will be forced to leave Iraq in a humiliating way worse than Afghanistan.

The Quds Force commander said the US has been hatching plots in the region for 20 years and their ultimate goal was to deal a blow to the Islamic establishment in Iran.
Ghaani also said the US claim that it has drawn down troops in Iraq is a lie.

Kazakhstan unrest: 18 police officers killed, 2k protesters arrested

At least 18 police officers and military servicemen have been killed in clashes in Kazakhstan, amid what the authorities are calling a “counter-terrorist” operation.

The updated figure was published by Kazakstan’s Interior Ministry late on Thursday. Nearly 750 law enforcement have received various injuries in the ongoing unrest, it claimed.

Only figures related to police and military casualties were made public, with no official information on killed or injured protesters, rioters, or what the Kazakh authorities are calling “terrorist gangs” available.

However, security officials had earlier described “dozens of attackers” having been eliminated in two separate attacks on the police HQ in the city of Almaty.

The republic’s Interior Ministry said on Thursday Kazakhstan’s law enforcement agencies detained during raids in Almaty nearly 2,000 participants of mass riots.

“Employees of the Almaty police department have launched a mop-up operation in the streets of Karasay-batyr and Masanchi. Measures are being taken to detain the violators. In total, some 2,000 people have been taken to police stations,” the statement added.

Known as “the southern capital” in Kazakhstan, the country’s largest metropolis has become a hotspot of protests, which then escalated into rioting, arson and looting of administrative buildings, businesses and shopping centers.

A UN official on Thursday alleged that a large number have been wounded during the unrest.

“Almost 1,000 people have reportedly been injured in the protests” the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) announced in a statement on Thursday, which urged all the parties in Kazakhstan to “refrain from violence and to seek a peaceful resolution of grievances”. The OHCHR did not elaborate on their sources for the number cited.

Almaty authorities responded with a massive police operation on Thursday, and heavy gunfire was heard in the central Republic Square, where hundreds of demonstrators had previously gathered and where groups of rioters on Wednesday broke into the city administration building, setting it on fire. Law enforcement said they managed to secure the area, with the operation ongoing in other parts of Almaty.

The interior ministry stated late on Thursday it continues to search for rioters, detaining lawbreakers across the country. Those who put up “armed resistance” to the police and the military, will be “eliminated,” it warned.

Kazakhstan has seen a wave of unrest, which began as mass protests triggered by a twofold hike in liquefied petroleum gas prices at the start of the new year. The protests, which began in the country’s south-west, promptly spilled over into other regions, growing increasingly political and violent.

President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev branded the unrest a “terrorist attack” against the country on Wednesday, blaming the violence on organized, foreign-trained groups allegedly acting among the protesters. He has also reached out to the Russia-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) for help, with the first peacekeepers already sent into the country. The CSTO is a security treaty between six former Soviet states, incorporating Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia and Tajikistan.

The approximate damage to business in Kazakhstan from unrest in the country is tentatively estimated at 40 bln tenge (more than $90 mln), Atameken National Chamber of Entrepreneurs announced on Thursday.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova has stated some US representatives do not understand what is happening in Kazakhstan and pass it off as the official position of Washington.

The diplomat commented on the statements of the White House press secretary Jen Psaki that the United States has questions about the legality of the request of the authorities of Kazakhstan to use the forces of the CSTO in the country.

“Everyone is accustomed to the fact that some representatives of Washington do not understand everything, passing it off a position of the United States,” Zakharova wrote in her Telegram channel.

The Russian Foreign Ministry has said that Moscow views the events in Kazakhstan as “an attempt, inspired from the outside, to violently, using trained and organized armed formations, to undermine the security and integrity of the state”.

Iran has also warned that some foreign actors are after misusing Kazakhstan’s tensions towards stoking unrest in the Central Asian country.

“It is clear that Kazakhstan’s developments are an internal issue, but some foreign parties are after manipulating the circumstances towards stoking the unrest and creating instability in the country,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh noted.