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Iran’s top nuclear negotiator confers with Chinese, Russian counterparts

According to the IRNA correspondent, the three top negotiators met amid promising news about the course of the nuclear talks which is underway with the objective of removal of sanctions against Iran.

Earlier, Bagheri told IRNA that differences among participating countries in the talks known as G4+1, were narrowing.

The positions of the two sides are different from each other and their distance is different on different issues, he stated.

The latest round of talks of Joint Commission of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) between Iran and China, Germany, France Britain and Russia started December 8 in Vienna, Australia.

Iran’s focus in the talks is the removal of sanctions against the country.

“Govt. budget pushes economy to brink, raises pressure on people”

The government’s official paper, the Iran Newspaper, issued the warning in an article on the budget bill the government presented to the parliament on Sunday. 

The paper said recession is in the cards unless new tax bases that limit tax evasion are found.

“The reduction in the salary and payment raise of the government employees, and adjusting it below the inflation rate, not only increases the pressure on government employees’ livelihoods, but also has a secondary impact on the private sector’s turnover unless this reduction is targeted at higher salaries,” the paper said.

The article called for short-term compensatory policies and focus on infrastructure for production as key means to take the economy out of recession and improve people’s livelihood.

Iran’s economy is under huge pressure due to the US sanctions with official figures putting the inflation rate at around 40%.

‘Saudi Arabia executed 886 inmates since 2015, including minors, women’

Since 2015, Saudi Arabia has executed 886 prisoners, including 12 minors and 20 women, in an increasing rate, the Arabic-language Mirat al-Jazeera news website reported on Sunday, citing figures provided by the second conference on victims of Saudi government’s rights violations.

In the virtual conference, which was held by the European Saudi Organization for Human Rights (ESOHR), it was revealed that 41 of the executed were foreign nationals who had been behind bars in Saudi Arabia.

The conference, which was held online on December 10, on the occasion of World Human Rights Day, was attended by a number of activists and opponents of the Saudi regime in an attempt to shed light on the extent of the repression practiced by Riyadh against dissidents, including arrests and executions, which threatens the lives of human rights defenders in the Arab kingdom.

In 2019 alone, Saudi Arabia set a record number of executions after Saudi authorities executed 184 people, despite the general decrease of executions around the world.

According to rights activists, Riyadh’s growing use of the death penalty, mostly as a political weapon against dissidents, is alarming.

In the latest executions carried out by Saudi authorities against Shia detainees in Qatif and al-Ahsa in the kingdom’s Eastern Province, Muslin bin Mohammad al-Mohsen was executed after he was accused of allegedly participating in a cell aimed at destabilizing the internal security of Saudi Arabia.  

The Shia-majority Eastern Province has been the scene of peaceful demonstrations since February 2011. Protesters have been demanding reforms, freedom of expression, the release of political prisoners, and an end to economic and religious discrimination against the oil-rich region.

The protests have been met with a heavy-handed crackdown by the regime. Security forces have increased security measures across the province.

Earlier this year, Saudi authorities also executed Mustafa al-Darwish for alleged crimes he committed when he was seventeen years old. The ministry of interior claimed that the young citizen attempted to destabilize the internal security of the country through spreading sedition.

The regime’s virtual and non-virtual media distort the facts through deceptive means, and the ministry of interior does not talk about how people are sentenced and such lies, stated human rights activist Taha al-Hajji.

In April 2019, Saudi officials announced the mass execution of 37 men, 33 of whom were citizens who had been executed on cruel trials on charges such as alleged espionage, terrorist acts, and inciting insecurity.

It was the largest mass execution in Saudi Arabia since January 2016, when Saudi authorities executed 44 people on terrorism charges.

Ever since Mohammed bin Salman became Saudi Arabia’s de facto leader in 2017, the kingdom has ramped up arrests of activists, bloggers, intellectuals, and others perceived as political opponents, showing almost zero tolerance toward dissent.

Muslim scholars have been executed, women’s rights campaigners put behind bars and tortured, and freedom of expression, association, and belief continue to be denied.

Saudi Arabia executed more than 2,000 people between 1985 and 2016. Rights groups have cited rampant cases of torture and unfair trials.

Iran negotiator optimistic about reaching a deal in foreseeable future

Iran's deputy negotiator Ali Bagheri speaks during a news conference in Almaty April 5, 2013. REUTERS/Shamil Zhumatov

Ali Bagheri Kani touched on the latest situation of the Vienna talks, saying two main issues should be separated. One thing, he added, is the existence of differences between the parties on issues being negotiated, and another issue is about one-on-one differences between Iran and each of the parties to the talks.

Bagheri Kani said over the past few days, the parties to the talks have been reaching a clear conclusion on the scope of the issues that must be on the agenda of negotiations.

The Iranian deputy foreign minister continued, “I think this is a very good progress, and if we can reach a conclusion on negotiable issues, it will be an important step because at first the parties were divided over the matter.”

Bagheri Kani referred to outside attempt to derail the negotiations through propaganda. He said it’s highly unlikely such attempts will be fruitful for Iran’s adversaries.

The Iranian deputy foreign minister also spoke of the US’s return to the JCPOA. He said the key condition for Washington to return to the deal is the removal of anti-Iran sanctions.

Bagheri expressed optimism about the outcome of the Vienna talks. He however said Iran will never forget the hostile moves against the country by the other sides.

Bagheri Kani added that despite this dark record, Iran is optimistic that it can reach a deal with them in the foreseeable future given the Islamic republic’s robust logic and stance.

Iran-P4+1 talks continue in Vienna

Russia’s chief negotiator, Mikhail Ulyanov, tweeted the news, adding that this is the first time that a third working group meeting is held during the seventh round of the Vienna talks.
The new round of talks between Tehran and the P4+1 including Russia, China, Britain, France and Germanry resumed Thursday December 9 with a meeting of the Joint Commission of the JCPOA, Iran’s nuclear deal.
Immediately after the Joint Commission meeting, the delegations began working on texts with the aim of reducing differences.
In this round of talks the parties are working in different formats and levels on sanctions removal and nuclear issues.
Ali Bagheri Kani, Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator, said earlier on Sunday that as a result of interactions and meetings held over the past few days at the level of experts and senior negotiating officials, disagreements between the parties on the scope of negotiable issues are decreasing.

Iran envisages exporting 1.2m barrels of crude daily

The amount of oil exports in the budget bill is one of the most important figures. Therefore, every year, with the submission of the budget bill to the Iranian parliament, a key item is the volume of oil exports and revenues.
However, due to US sanctions against Iran’s oil exports, this number has been low in recent years and the same low volume has not been achieved in most cases.
This year, however, given the 13th government’s breakthroughs in oil sales, the volume intended for crude exports is of particular importance.
Next year’s budget bill envisions 1.2 million barrels of oil per day.
Iranian President Seyyed Ebrahim Raisi submitted the draft budget for the next Iranian fiscal year to Parliament on Sunday.
He briefed the lawmakers on the country’s economic conditions and asked them to review the budget bill with careful scrutiny to make it more effective in addressing problems.

Number of vaccine doses crosses 111 million mark in Iran

There were 3,356 new cases including 357 hospitalizations. The total caseload since the start of the pandemic is 6,154,813 people who have contracted Covid in Iran. The majority of them, that is, 5,969,591 people have recovered from the disease. 

The downward trend in deaths and hospitalizations in Iran has been attributed to the high rate of vaccination in the country. 

Meanwhile, the nationwide vaccination campaign is continuing in Iran with the number of total doses administered so far crossing the 111 million mark.  

Most cities across Iran are marked blue now, meaning they face the lowest level of risk from Covid. But authorities have warned against relaxing health protocols despite the fact that some Covid-related bans have been lifted.

Britain: Still time for a ‘last chance’ nuclear deal

“This is the last chance for Iran to come to the negotiating table with a serious resolution to this issue, which has to be agreeing the terms of the JCPOA,” British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said.

“This is their last chance and it is vital that they do so. We will not allow Iran to acquire a nuclear weapon,” she added.

The remarks came as envoys from Iran and the P4+1 group of countries — Britain, France, Russia, and China plus Germany — are engaged in the seventh round of talks in Vienna aimed at reviving the 2015 nuclear deal, official known as Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

Tehran says the revival of the landmark agreement would require the US to remove its anti-Iran sanctions three years after Washington walked out of the multilateral agreement and imposed more sanctions on Tehran to kill the deal.

On Saturday, Germany’s foreign minister warned time was running out to find a way to revive the nuclear deal between world powers and Iran, speaking after meetings with her counterparts from G7 countries.

“Time is running out,” German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock told reporters in Liverpool, England, where G7 foreign ministers are meeting.

“It has shown in the last days that we do not have any progress,” she stated.

Baerbock noted Iran had resumed the talks with a position that set the negotiations back six months.

Iran’s President Seyyed Ebrahim Raisi has stressed the two draft documents laying out Tehran’s proposals to the other parties to the Vienna talks show the Islamic Republic’s seriousness in the negotiations.

Raisi noted if the other sides are determined, we will reach a good deal with them.

Almost eleven months after Joe Biden was sworn in as president, the United States still refuses to remove the sanctions, despite Biden’s pledge to undo the Iran policy of his predecessor, Donald Trump, and end his “maximum pressure” campaign.

“Europeans excessive demands slowing down Vienna talks”

“Talks are moving forward, but slowly,” Iran’s Tasnim news agency cited the source as saying. “Excessive demands by the three European countries, or some of them, are slowing down the process of the negotiations.”

The report added that the European countries have tabled demands, which “even go beyond those of the American side”.

“The approach of some of the three European countries was unconstructive, even before Iran tabled its draft proposals, and this continues to the day,” the source was cited as saying.

“Insistence on the unconstructive positions by the European teams has caused disagreements among the members of the P4+1 group.”

Iran and the P4+1 countries – Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany- resumed the seventh round of the Vienna talks on Thursday, after European representatives returned to the negotiating table, following consultations with their capitals.

Iran’s lead negotiator has warned that Tehran will not accept anything less than the terms agreed upon under the 2015 nuclear deal, while rejecting reports that Iranian negotiators have backed down on the proposals they tabled during the talks two weeks ago

Iran keeper again best player of match in IHF women world champs

Khalili won the title despite the Iranian side suffering a 41 to 8 defeat against their powerful opponents from Angola.

Khalili had earlier also snatched the title in the face-off against Norway, the reigning European champions and one of the most decorated handball teams in history. 

That was in the preliminary round group, where Iran was drawn to face Norway, Romania and Kazakhstan in Group C.

Iran failed to get into the main round contests after three defeats and is now competing in the President’s Cup for the 25th to 32nd spots.

In the President’s Cup, Iran is drawn in the same group with Angola, Uzbekistan and Cameroon.     

Khalili’s teammate Elnaz Ghasemi also won the best player of the match title in the competition against Uzbekistan.

The competitions are part of the International Handball Federation’s Women’s World Championship 2021.