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Terror group ringleader indicted for terrorist operations in Iran

The indictment issued by the Tehran Revolution and Public Prosecutor’s Office was served on Habibollah Farajollah nicknamed Habib Asivad, who led a terrorist group known as the Arab Struggle Movement for the Liberation of Ahwaz. 

During the session where he was served with the indictment, Asivad introduced himself as an employee of Sweden’s Labor Office with Swedish nationality. 

The group was behind several bombing and terrorist operations in southern Iranian Khuzestan province as well as acts of vandalism aimed at countering the Islamic Republic of Iran’s Establishment. 

The charges contained in the indictment include bombing operations at several government institutions and oil pipelines in southern Iran. 

Asivad began his terror activities under the aegis of spy services, namely those of the Israeli regime and Saudi Arabia, in 2005. 

The terror group conducted as many as 10 terrorist operations in 2005 alone, which killed a large number of Iranians.

MP: No new provision or change to JCPOA

Mojtaba Zonnuri, a member of Parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Committee says the country’s negotiators are commissioned to focus on the implementation of the 2015 Iran nuclear deal known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) during the talks in Vienna slated for November 29, 2021.

“In fact, we will not negotiate on the JCPOA or on making changes to it, and we will not accept any new provisions being added to the JCPOA,” Zonnuri added.

“We are holding talks on the implementation of the JCPOA,” he reiterated.

“Negotiations on the JCPOA have been held before and it cannot be renegotiated,” the lawmaker said.

“So, the Islamic Republic of Iran is ready to implement the JCPOA, and our negotiators are attending the talks on November 29 to accomplish this very mission,” the legislator explained.

He then criticized the remaining signatories to the JCPOA for failing to live up to their commitments.

“We haven’t seen any goodwill gestures from them, so far,” he noted.

“They owe us. We have paid the costs of the JCPOA, but haven’t reaped its benefits. We are seeking to obtain our benefits under the deal,” he said.

“We are not going to kill time and make the issue drag on,” he added.

Iran airline hit by cyber attack

Mahan said the attack caused disruption to no domestic and foreign flight by the company. 

It added that the ticket booking system of the airline is also accessible and working properly. 

Mahan also noted that it has been targeted by similar attacks repeatedly but the infiltration attempts have been neutralized thanks to timely action by the airline’s cyber security team.

UAE embassy in Kabul reopened

A spokesman of the Taliban Ahmadullah Wasiq said the reopening of the UAE’s embassy is a step forward for positive changes and added that it will further strengthen bilateral relations. 

“Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan and UAE already had good relations and this step will further energize the ties.” Wasiq added. 

Earlier, Afghanistan’s acting foreign minister Amir Khan Motaqi had said that Germany will soon reopen its embassy in Kabul. 

Motaqi added that Italy and Turkey will be other countries that will reopen their respective embassies. 

It is worth mentioning that, Pakistan, Iran, Turkmenistan, and Kazakhstan have already opened their embassies in Kabul. 

Though the Taliban have not been recognized yet, the international community is making efforts to engage with them in order to address the deepening humanitarian situation in Afghanistan. 

 

“Israel nabs over 1,100 Palestinian kids in 2021”

Marking World Children’s Day, the Ministry of Education and the Palestinian Prisoner Society (PPS) said in two separate statements that Israel killed 15 Palestinian students and detained 1,149 minors from the start of this year until the end of October and that two-thirds of the detained children have been physically tortured. 

The PPS announced that currently, 160 Palestinian minors are held in three Israeli prisons. 

The Ministry of Education stated while Israeli forces killed 15 students since the start of the year, they also detained 78 students during raids at their homes and schools, and that the Israeli occupation forces carried out 100 raids against schools, firing teargas and rubber and live bullets at the students, causing dozens of injuries. 

The Israeli occupation authorities practice various forms of torture against detained children during and after their arrest, in a systematic and widespread manner, which is a grave violation of international law, especially the Convention against Torture and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, the PPS announced in its statement. 

It added that from the moment of their arrest, children undergo harsh interrogation. They are arrested at night at their homes, beaten in front of their families, handcuffed and blindfolded, kept without food or drink for long hours, subjected to interrogation without the presence of their families, undergo psychological and physical torture, forced to make confessions and sign papers without knowing their content, threatened and intimidated, subjected to interrogation by intelligence officers, and detained in interrogation centers for periods of up to two months. 

The Prisoner Society stated Israel delay granting families the necessary permits to visit their sons in prisons while many families are deprived of visitation rights. 

The occupation authorities also put children in detention centers that lack the minimum standards of humanity, deprive many of them of their right to education and medical treatment, deny them the right to get clothing, personal items, and books, and penalize them at various times and for various reasons. 

The PPS pointed out that minors from the West Bank are tried at military courts that lack basic guarantees for a fair trial, and without any consideration for the fact that their privacy as children should be protected, while the courts try a child as an adult after reaching the age of 16 years, not 18, as defined by the Convention on the Rights of the Child or by Israeli law itself for the Israeli child. The courts also calculate the age of the Palestinian child at the time of the ruling and not at the time of his arrest. 

It announced the Israeli occupation courts issue unfair sentences against minors following the amendments introduced to some laws related to Palestinian minors in which the courts can issue high sentences for acts of protest by minors and monitor their social media posts and try them on what they publish as a “security” offense. 

Iran MP calls for regional taskforce to help Afghan refugees

“The international community should fulfill its duty toward Afghan refugees. Creation of a regional taskforce to help [Afghan refugees] is necessary,” Jalil Rahimi Jahanabadi said. 

Jahanabadi added that Afghanistan is threatened by a food and fuel crisis stressing that this has led to an unprecedented wave of migration toward countries neighboring Afghanistan. 

“Iran is one of the main destinations of Afghan refugees and due to the US pressure and sanctions we have no more capability to admit refugees. We have done what it takes over the past decades [to help refugees] and, even now, we have put every possible effort into creating basic facilities. If the international community and the UN do not help us organize and manage migrants, we will have no other possibility of taking in new migrants,” he said. 

Jahanabadi also touched on his recent meeting with the UN special envoy on Afghanistan’s affairs. He said Iran’s concerns were conveyed to the envoy. 

“We stressed that international organizations should take up their role on the issue of migrants and that international assistance is a key issue,” he said. 

Jahanabadi also warned of a “catastrophe” as Afghan refugees flood Iranian borders, amid the crisis in their home country. 

Turkish jets launch missile strike in northern Iraq

The bombing came on Saturday, targeting “the vicinity of the Huror village in Amadiyah district”, Iraq’s Shafaq News website reported. 

The district is located north of the city of Duhok, which is the capital of a province of the same name in the Kurdish-populated region. 

The report cited eyewitnesses as saying the operation saw the aircraft releasing as many as “14 air-to-ground missiles” near the village. 

“The Turkish bombardment has caused grave damages to the farms and nearby forests,” the witnesses added. 

Turkey specifies the target of the operations as the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK). The militant group has been engaged in a 1984-present conflict against Ankara, which it has been waging with the aim of carving out a separatist state in southeastern Turkey. 

A shaky ceasefire between the PKK and the Turkish government collapsed in July 2015. Attacks on Turkish security forces have soared ever since. 

At least 40,000 people have been killed during the three-decade-long conflict. 

The Saturday operation came less than a week after a number of rockets targeted a military base in Iraq’s northern province of Nineveh, where Turkish military forces are engaged in operations against PKK’s positions.

Iranian movie ‘The Badger’ wins award at Italy festival

“The Badger”, directed by Mollaei and produced by Sina Saeedian, was screened in the 17th Terni Film Festival of Italy alongside seven films from Switzerland, the US, Italy, Mexico, Afghanistan, and Ukraine, and finally the jury of this cinematic event presented its best director award to Mollaei for the film “The Badger”. 

In this movie, Soodeh’s 11-year-old son is kidnapped before her second wedding and she is forced to ask her ex-husband for the ransom money. 

It features several well-known Iranian actors and actresses, including Vishka Asayesh, Hasan Majouni, Mehraveh Sharifi-nia, and Behnoush Bakhtiari. 

First group of migrant swans travel to Iran

The director of the Department of Environment in Mahmoudabad says 550 swans have arrived at the pond since the first group of the migrant birds flew to the wetlands a week ago. 

Ali Mohammad Do’agoo says the swans migrated to the area 10 days earlier than they normally do. But he said a smaller population of the birds has traveled to Sorkhroud this year. 

The area has hosted up to 12,000 swans a year over the past several years. The migrant birds normally leave the area back to colder habitats by March. 

Do’agoo further explained that whooper, mute and tundra swans travel to Sorkhroud every year, with whoopers comprising the larger portion of the migrant birds. 

He said conservation officers are protecting the area 24/7 and are helping people, who seek to feed the swans. 

“US military mission in Iraq to be completed in 2021”

“The United States will uphold the commitments it made during the July 2021 US-Iraq Strategic Dialogue, including that there will be no US forces with a combat role by the end of the year,” the Pentagon spokesperson John Kirby said on Saturday.

This statement was made after US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin met on November 20 with Minister Jumah Inad Sadun al-Jaburi, Iraq’s Minister of Defense, in Manama, Bahrain, during the annual Manama Dialogue.

Austin further confirmed to the Iraqi defense minister that American forces will remain in Iraq at the invitation of the Iraqi government to support the country’s security forces, the statement added.

The sides also discussed the next stage of the US military mission in Iraq, which will focus on “advising, assisting, and sharing intelligence with the Iraqi Security Forces in support of the campaign to defeat Daesh”, the statement read.

The Pentagon chief again condemned the recent attack on the residence of Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al Kadhimi and expressed hope that the formation of the new government in Iraq will proceed peacefully.

The meeting took place on the sidelines of the Manama Dialogue international conference on regional security held annually in Bahrain.