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With 43 new fatalities, Iran Covid-19 deaths near record lows

The number of daily deaths remains near record lows largely thanks to an intensified national vaccination campaign over the past months.

The latest figures also show that over 2,400 new infection cases have been identified over the past 24 hours which is also near record lows.

The Health Ministry said on Tuesday that over 530,000 vaccine doses have been administered over the past day taking the total number of jabs to over 114,280,000 with well over 50 million people fully vaccinated.

The Health ministry also said that over 4,360,000 people have received their booster shots.

On Sunday, Iran confirmed its first case of the Omicron COVID-19 variant with health officials urging people to get their booster shots to improve immunity against the new highly contagious strain.

The Health Ministry announced this week that over 18-year-olds, who had their second dose three to four months ago, can get their booster jab.

Yalda celebrated at Tehran brick kilns

Yalda celebrated at Tehran brick kilns

 

 

 

 

Volunteer groups have visited brick kilns in the southern suburbs of the capital Tehran to celebrate with children on the occasion of the last day of the autumn, known as Yalda Night.

The volunteers have been visiting the kilns in Khahvarshahr suburb over the past two years in a bid to help educate children working at the kilns. Along with education, the volunteers are offering medical treatment, construction and skill-training services in the area.

However, their latest visit focused solely on making sure children working at the kilns have a jolly Yalda.

 

Iraqi delegation discusses Soleimani assassination with Iran prosecutor general

The Iranian prosecutor general said during the meeting “there is not the slightest doubt that the former Iraqi president and his agents were involved in this assassination and this is not something that requires so much time to gather documents and evidence.”

“This is not an ordinary incident and it was not even a matter of premeditated murder that we want to prove with evidence, but it is a terrorist crime that was designed with well-calculated preparations and its command room was in the U.S. and its agents in the region and its perpetrators in Iraq,” Montazeri stated.

He added that Iran and Iraq need to work more closely on the case and that both sides need to move forward carefully and quickly.

The head of the Iraqi Judicial Oversight Organization also said legal measures are being taken regarding the case and that Iraq wants the perpetrators and accomplices to be identified and brought to justice

The meeting comes as Iran is preparing to mark the second anniversary of the high-profile U.S. assassination on January 3.

General Soleimani and Iraqi commander Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, who played a key role in the fight against the Daesh terrorist group in Iraq and elsewhere in the region, were killed in a U.S. drone strike which was directly ordered by former U.S. president Donald Trump.

Yemen aid flights suspended following airport bombing

The air raids came after the coalition urged civilians and United Nations agencies to evacuate immediately.

The coalition said in a statement it had lifted the protection off specific sites in the airport and carried out attacks on “legitimate military targets” there.

“The operation comes in response to threats and the use of the airport’s facilities to launch cross-border attacks,” it added.

A spokesperson for the UN’s World Food Programme stated a UN team was on the ground at the airport to verify the extent of any damage.

Houthi-run Saba media, quoting the head of the Houthi administration’s aviation authority, said the airport had been put out of operation.

An airport official cited by the AFP news agency noted UN aid flights had been halted.

“The airport is no longer able to receive aircraft operated by the United Nations or international humanitarian organisations,” the official told AFP.

The raids hit six sites, coalition spokesman Brigadier General Turki al-Malki stated, including places used for launching attacks by drones, training drone personnel, housing trainers and trainees, and storing drones.

“Destroying these targets will not have any effect on the operational capacity of the airport, and will not affect managing the airspace, the air traffic, and ground handling operations,” he added.

Saudi Arabia and its allies launched a war against the Arab world’s most impoverished nation in March 2015. The war has been seeking to restore power in Yemen to Riyadh’s favorite officials.

The death toll of the war, now in its seventh year, will reach an estimated 377,000 by the end of 2021, according to a recent report from the UN’s Development Programme.

The fighting has seen some 80 percent of the population, or 24 million people, relying on aid and assistance, including 14.3 million who are in acute need.

Corona, inflation take center stage at media on Yalda Night

Armane-Melli Newspaper:

  1. Yalda will give rise to the sixth wave of the coronavirus

Corona, inflation take center stage at media on Yalda Night


 

Ebtekar Newspaper

  1. Yalda Night in competition with Christmas
  • Can Yalda be introduced as a suitable time for tourism?

Corona, inflation take center stage at media on Yalda Night


 

Etemad Newspaper

  1. Yalda: The night of joy and getting together

Corona, inflation take center stage at media on Yalda Night


 

Ettela’at Newspaper

  1. Convergence of compatriots and solidarity of relatives in the beautiful Iranian tradition of Yalda

Corona, inflation take center stage at media on Yalda Night


 

Iran Newspaper

  1. A city with the color of Yalda

Corona, inflation take center stage at media on Yalda Night


 

Jame Jam Newspaper

  1. The warmest night of the year
  • A special case for the second Yalda Night amid the coronavirus outbreak

Corona, inflation take center stage at media on Yalda Night


 

Javan Newspaper

  1. Resurgence of the coronavirus with Yalda gatherings

Corona, inflation take center stage at media on Yalda Night


 

Resalat Newspaper

  1. Hafez: The Yalda of Iranian poetry

Corona, inflation take center stage at media on Yalda Night


 

Qods Newspaper

  1. Yalda: The night of stories
  • An interview with writer and storyteller Shermin Naderi about the longest night of the year

Corona, inflation take center stage at media on Yalda Night


 

Samt Newspaper

  1. Yalda brings vibrancy to the markets

Corona, inflation take center stage at media on Yalda Night


 

Setareh Sobh Newspaper

  1. Yalda Night amid health protocols

Corona, inflation take center stage at media on Yalda Night


 

Shargh Newspaper

  1. Yalda Night overshadowed by inflation

Corona, inflation take center stage at media on Yalda Night


 

Sobhe Emruz Newspaper

  1. Yalda: The longest night of exorbitant prices

Corona, inflation take center stage at media on Yalda Night

Afghan protesters call on US to release frozen assets

Holding banners reading, “Let us eat” and “Give us our frozen money”, the protesters chanted slogans and marched down a central avenue, with the ruling Taliban providing security.

International funding to Afghanistan has been suspended and billions of dollars of the country’s assets abroad, mostly in the United States, were frozen after the Taliban took control of the country in mid-August.

The lack of funding has battered Afghanistan’s already troubled economy, leading to increasing poverty while aid groups warn of a looming humanitarian catastrophe.

State employees, from doctors to teachers and administrative civil servants, haven’t been paid in months. Banks, meanwhile, have restricted how much money account holders can withdraw.

No country has yet officially recognized the country’s new Taliban rulers due to the armed group’s previous track record. The Taliban’s previous regime 20 years ago banned women and girls from education and public life, mandated beards for men and attendance at prayers, banned sports and entertainment and carried out public executions.

But current Taliban government officials say their rule will be different, including eventually allowing education for all girls, and have called on the international community to release funds and help stave off a humanitarian disaster.

US democrats urge Biden to unfreeze Afghan reserves

In their letter to Biden, the 46 Democrats, led by progressive Reps. Pramila Jayapal (Wash.), Sara Jacobs (Calif.) and Jesús Garcia (Ill.), stressed that while they supported the decision to withdraw from Afghanistan, they also agreed with international calls for the US to avoid imposing economic measures that would contribute to Afghanistan’s collapsing economy.

“This means conscientiously but urgently modifying current US policy regarding the freeze of Afghanistan’s foreign reserves and ongoing sanctions,” they wrote.

They also asked Biden to provide “more explicit reassurances” to overseas organizations that operating in Afghanistan will not risk violating US sanctions against Taliban members.

International organizations such as the United Nations have warned that Afghanistan is facing widespread famine this winter, with 97 percent of people in Afghanistan projected to be living in poverty if interventions aren’t made.

Almost immediately after the Taliban took power in Afghanistan in August, entities around the world moved to cut off international resources. The World Bank suspended aid funds to Afghanistan, and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) moved to cut off the country’s access to the organization’s resources, citing a lack of international recognition for the Taliban.

The US also froze nearly $10 billion in Afghan government funds being held in American banks.

House progressives signaled their support for a plan proposed by current and former Afghan central bank officials to provide access to hard currency reserves. They also asked Biden to work with the IMF in order to provide access to emergency financing for Afghanistan.

“We deplore the new Taliban government’s grave human rights abuses, crackdowns on civil society and repression of women and LGBTQ people,” they wrote.

“However, pragmatic US engagement with the de facto authorities is nevertheless key to averting unprecedented harm to tens of millions of women, children and innocent civilians,” they added.

They warned that continuing to enforce harsh sanctions on Afghanistan would risk “humanitarian devastation” and result in the Taliban refusing to engage with the US.

A spokesperson for the National Security Council told The Hill in a statement that the administration was looking for ways to support the needs of the Afghan people.

“The United States is a longstanding supporter to the Afghan people, including as the largest single provider of humanitarian assistance and continue to look at additional ways to support the needs of the Afghan people,” the spokesman said, adding, “We are engaged intensively and urgently on this issue, have rolled out a variety of policy measures to respond in support of the Afghan people and are in the process of rolling out additional measures.”

Addressing the matter of economic reserves, a senior administration official stated it was a “complicated issue” that the White House is “reviewing intensely.”

The official pointed out that the US has announced over $200 million in humanitarian assistance for the Afghan people since mid-August.

As the New York Times noted, there are multiple lawsuits seeking a portion of the frozen Afghan funds, such as one suit filed in the Northern District of Texas by State Department contractors seeking a $138 default judgment against numerous defendants including the Taliban.

The White House also called on Afghanistan’s neighbors and other countries close to the region like China and Russia to provide meaningful support.

This call comes just days after a bipartisan coalition of House lawmakers similarly asked Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen to provide aid funds to the Afghan people. They recommended that Biden release frozen Afghan funds to a UN agency in order to pay for teachers’ salaries and meals for children.

Lawmakers announced the Biden administration should also permit international financial institutions to “inject the necessary economic capital” into Afghanistan in order to prevent an economic downfall. Failure to prevent a worsening economic and food crisis could lead to further instability in the region, they warned.

“No one benefits from a failed state in Afghanistan,” they said, adding that the US has a responsibility to help Afghans survive this winter and “preserve what can be salvaged of the progress made during the last 20 years.”

IRGC navy chief: We eliminate enemy before getting close to Iran islands

Read Admiral Alireza Tangsiri says the forces involved in the drills showed that any enemy will be eliminated before even managing to approach the islands.
He was referring to the three Iranian Islands of Abu Musa, Greater and Lesser Tunbs in the Persian Gulf.
“Today, in these drills, the outcome of the war games and the plans, which were worked out in theory, was laid out on the field in practice and we obtained all our desired results,” Tangsiri said.
He added that the weapons and ammunition used during the exercises were highly precise and produced inside the country, “which is a source of pride”.
The admiral added that forces also practiced blocking enemy units’ advances by weapon systems installed on the southern islands, if any of the hostile forces managed to cross the defense line around them.
The five-day drills began Monday and cover three southern Iranian provinces as well as the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormoz.

Iran Supreme Court acquits former central bank governor

The defendants were in charge of implementing macro foreign exchange policies, given that, criminalizing their actions and attributing the crime of disrupting the country’s economic system to them would not be legally justified, the high court said on Tuesday.

According to the verdict, the Supreme Court has overturned the previous court ruling that these defendants are guilty, and now case will be referred to another court for reconsideration.

Back in October, Seif and two of his deputies including Ahmad Araghchi received jail terms because they had “provided illegal conditions for the mismanagement of about $160 million and 20 million euros” as the country grappled with the falling value of Iranian currency during the administration of former president Hassan Rouhani.

Iran drills: Precision-strike drones, ballistic missiles hit targets

The drills, codenamed Great Prophet (PBUH) 17, also saw the IRGC hit the enemy targets, including vessels, bases and facilities, with ballistic missiles.
In this phase of the exercises, surface-to-surface missiles were used to hit the targets.
The forces also destroyed marine targets of the mock enemy with surface-to-surface missiles from the shorelines.
That was part of a scenario to practice defense of the shores in the area of the drills, including against heliborne operations.
The exercises, which began on Monday, cover the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz and the three littoral Iranian provinces of Khouzestan, Bushehr and Hormozgan.