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Iranian movie “Khonyar’s Children” wins prize at Moscow film festival

The movie directed by Arman Gholipour won the Special Diploma of the jury at the event where 86 movies from 48 countries competed. 

Three movies from Iran were among the films screened at the festival. 

In addition to award-winning “Khonyar’s Children,” two other Iranian films, namely “The Look” directed by Farnoush Samadi and “Aparat” by Hassan Najmabadi also took part in the festival. 

The VGIK International Student Festival is one of the oldest student film showcases. 

The first Festival was held in 1961. The main film competition consisted of 29 films, the Grand-Prix being granted to Andrei Mikhalkov-Konchalovsky for his diploma work “The Boy and the Dove”. 

But it was only at the 9th Festival in 1972 where international prizes were awarded for the first time. 

The first awardees were B.Boghinovsky from Bulgaria for his film “The 17th parallel” and the Karpenko-Kary National Institute of Performing Arts for the presented film program.

Iran lifts nighttime driving ban as Covid recedes

Raisi issued the order on Saturday effective immediately. 

Meanwhile, Iran’s traffic police chief has told the IRIB that the driving ban has been lifted across the country on president’s order and drivers will not get a ticket for driving at night.

After ordering the driving ban to be removed, the Iranian president said the main concern and first priority of his administration is to protect people’s lives and that government efforts will continue until the situation returns to normal across the country. 

Raisi also said it is important that authorities monitor comings and goings via borders. 

He underlined the need to keep up smart surveillance and its role in containing Covid. 

The nighttime driving ban had been put in place along with some other restrictions with the aim of containing the Covid pandemic in Iran. 

The country has been witnessing a downward trend in Covid deaths and infections over the past few months that has been attributed to a fast vaccination campaign.  Now over 101 million doses of vaccine have been administered in Iran.

Iran condemns attack on its consulate in Hamburg

Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh demanded the German government fulfill its obligation to take action seriously and responsibly to provide security for the diplomatic missions of Iran in Germany in line with the Vienna Convention.

Khatibazde said the German government is expected to take effective and sustainable measures to prevent the repetition of such acts of aggression while launching an investigation into the details of the incident and punishing the perpetrators of the attack.

Unknown attackers carried out an arson attack on the Iranian consulate in Germany’s Hamburg, according to the newspapers Bild and the Hamburger Abendblatt.

On Friday evening, the perpetrators hurled an incendiary device against a steel door that leads to the premises of the consulate in the Winterhude district, the police announced.
Property damage occurred at the entrance to the consulate, but no one was injured.

“70% of Lebanese cannot afford medicine”

The hike in prices prompted angry activists to protest in front of the ministry of health on Thursday.

Lebanese authorities had decided to lift the subsidy for chronic diseases medicines partially.

The move came in light of a high exchange rate of the dollar on the black market coupled with the depletion of hard currency reserves at the Central Bank of Lebanon, which used to provide dollars to import these medicines.

“The subsidy was set according to certain conditions, but due to the collapse of the Lebanese pound, prices rose frighteningly,” Araji said after a meeting with Prime Minister Najib Mikati.

“70% of the Lebanese are unable to buy medications, which is why we asked for a meeting with Mikati and told him that this issue was not acceptable, and we discussed a number of solutions,” revealed Araji.

“We proposed increasing the funds allocated to medications in dollars, and this will be discussed in a meeting between Mikati, the Health Minister, and the Central Bank Governor,” he added.

“We proposed that pharmaceutical companies be paid in Lebanese pounds according to Sayrafa platform, thus saving 20 % of the medication price, and starting today, generic drugs must be purchased,” Araji continued.

Following the decline in the Central Bank’s reserves of hard currency, the subsidy for medicines was gradually lifted, and the partial assistance was recently lifted for medication for chronic diseases.

“We continued to support medicines for chronic diseases and cancerous diseases for a period of two months, but they were lost from the market,” explained Mikati on his part.

‘Either people stored them in homes, or they were smuggled,” he added.

“Therefore, we will remain committed to the issue so that each patient takes their right by limiting the provision of the required medicine or its equivalent according to a doctor’s opinion,” said Mikati.

“Saudi airbase, Aramco under Yemen drone attacks”

A spokesman for the Yemeni Armed Forces has detailed the “Eighth Deterrence Operation” which was launched in retaliation for a years-long brutal war by the Saudi-led coalition against impoverished nation.

According to al-Masirah, Brigadier General Yahya Saree said King Khalid Air Base in Riyadh was targeted by four Samad-3 UAVs during the operation, adding an important military target was hit at Abha International Airport with Samad-3 drones.

The spokesman for the Yemeni Armed Forces stated various military targets in the Abha, Jizan and Najran provinces were targeted with five Qasif K2 drones, as well as military targets at King Abdullah Airport in Jeddah.

He noted that an Aramco refinery was also targeted with four Samad-2 UAVs.

Saree also pointed out that during the operation by the Yemeni Army, as many as 14 drones including different modes of UAVs such as Samad-3, Samad-2 and Qasef-K2 were used.

He underlined that the Yemeni forces have attacked targets in Saudi Arabia within the framework of legitimate defense against the aggression by the Riyadh-led military coalition.

Saree also underscored that while the Saudi military targets civilians in Yemen in its aggression, the Yemeni forces solely target military ones.

Saudi Arabia, backed by the US and regional allies, launched the war on Yemen in March 2015, with the goal of bringing the Mansour Hadi government back to power and crushing Ansarullah.

The war has left hundreds of thousands of Yemenis dead, and displaced millions more. It has also destroyed Yemen’s infrastructure and spread famine and infectious diseases.

Yemeni Armed Forces and the Popular Committees have grown steadily in strength against the Saudi-led invaders, and left Riyadh and its allies bogged down in the country.

Some flights cancelled in Tehran due to air pollution

Air Polution Returns to Tehran as Winter Looms 1

Meanwhile, some flights at Tehran’s Mehrabad Airport have been canceled due to a thick layer of smog over the city that hugely reduced visibility.

The Meteorological Organization has however said downpours will begin in parts of Iran on Monday and that will improve the quality of the air.

Iranian officials have said up to 40,000 people die every year due to air pollution. In polluted cities like Tehran, Esfahan and Karaj citizens, especially the elderly, have been warned not the engage in heavy physical activities outdoors.

Air pollution has in many cases shut down large cities including Tehran during winter cold weather.

 Saudi military bases hit by Yemeni drone strikes

 

Al-Mayadeen television, citing local media outlets, reported Yemeni drones struck military sites in Najran, Jizan and ‘Asir regions on Saturday morning.

The report came after Yemeni Armed Forces spokesman Brigadier General Yahya Saree stated Saudi Arabia had significantly intensified its aggression and carried out more than 65 aerial raids across Yemen in the past 24 hours.

“This escalation will have serious consequences for the forces of aggression. They must bear the consequences,” he tweeted Friday.

On Saturday, Yemen’s official Saba news agency reported Saudi military forces and their mercenaries had violated a ceasefire in Hudaydah for 182 times in the past 24 hours.

A source in Yemen’s Liaison and Coordination Officers Operations Room noted the violations included reconnaissance flights over various regions, including al-Faza, al-Jabaliya and al-Tuhaita districts, in addition to 28 counts of artillery shelling and 45 shooting incidents.

Saudi Arabia, backed by the US and regional allies, launched the war on Yemen in March 2015, with the goal of bringing the government of Yemen’s former president Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi back to power and crushing the Ansarullah movement.

The war has left hundreds of thousands of Yemenis dead, and displaced millions more. It has also destroyed Yemen’s infrastructure and spread famine and infectious diseases there.

Despite heavily-armed Saudi Arabia’s continuous bombardment of the impoverished country, Yemeni armed forces and the Popular Committees have grown steadily in strength against the Saudi-led invaders and left Riyadh and its allies bogged down in the country.

 

Covid kills 118 in Iran while vaccination continues

The deaths push to 128,852 the number of people killed by the Coronavirus since the start of the pandemic that has killed millions worldwide. 

The Health Ministry also said there were 3,539 new cases including 618 hospitalizations. 

Since the start of the pandemic, 6,073,098 people have contracted Covid in Iran. The majority of them, that is, 5,771,363 people recovered from the disease. 

Meanwhile, Iran is pressing ahead with its nationwide vaccination campaign with the number of total doses administered so far reaching 101,492,535.

The high rate of vaccination has been credited for the overall downward trend in deaths and hospitalizations in Iran compared with the time when Iran was in the grip of the fifth wave of Covid-19. 

Now President Ebrahim Raisi has ordered authorities to lift the nighttime driving ban given the fast vaccination campaign across the country. 

Raisi however said his administration’s main concern is to protect the lives of citizens and will continue down this path until things return to normal nationwide.

Red Cross: lack of cash main problem in Afghanistan

Afghanistan is facing a looming humanitarian crisis as aid organizations struggle with ways to pay doctors, nurses and others on the ground because there is currently no way to transfer salaries to bank accounts there, the ICRC president said.

Maurer’s comments echo those of the U.N.’s special representative for Afghanistan, who warned this week that the country is “on the brink of a humanitarian catastrophe” and that its collapsing economy is heightening the risk of extremism. The country’s economy is estimated to have contracted by 40% since the Taliban took control in August.

The Geneva-based ICRC, which has operated in Afghanistan for over 30 years, is temporarily carrying in bags of cash to the impoverished nation and converting dollars into the local currency, the afghani, in order to pay some of its staffers. The ICRC has been able to do this with regulatory approval by the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control. The ICRC also has an agreement with the Taliban-run Health Ministry that allows donor-funded payments to pass through the ICRC and bypass the Taliban, who have yet to be officially recognized by any nation.

“The main problem in Afghanistan is not hunger. The main problem is the lack of cash to pay salaries to deliver social services which have existed before,” Maurer told The Associated Press.

“Let’s not forget that most of these medical doctors, nurses, operators of water systems and electricity systems are still the same people. It is the leadership which has changed, but not these people,” he added.

Afghanistan’s aid-reliant economy was thrown into deep turmoil following the Taliban takeover of the capital, Kabul, in August and the collapse of the U.S.-backed Afghan government just weeks before the U.S. withdrew its last troops.

The Taliban leadership, which recently banned all foreign currency transactions, has urged the U.S. Congress to ease sanctions and release Afghanistan’s overseas assets in order for the government to be able to pay teachers, doctors and other public sector employees. After the Taliban takeover, the U.S. froze nearly $9.5 billion in assets belonging to the Afghan Central Bank and stopped shipments of cash.

Since the Taliban’s ascension to power this past summer, it’s not been possible for international aid organizations to wire transfer payments to accounts in Afghanistan as currently international currency cannot be changed into local currency by a network of banks in the country.

Maurer said humanitarian organizations cannot “fix an implosion of a whole country.”

He added what’s needed is an agreement on a sufficient injection of liquidity — something he believes is possible without formally recognizing the Taliban. The ICRC’s budget until mid-2022 has increased from $95 million to roughly $163 million to address Afghanistan’s increasingly urgent needs.

Hunger is just one of many problems facing millions in the country. The World Food Program has warned that nearly 9 million people in Afghanistan are at risk of facing “famine-like conditions.” An additional 14.1 million are suffering acute food insecurity.

Maurer stated the country could slide into a hunger crisis if drought impacts food production and if the disruption of the economy continues, but he stressed the immediate crisis facing Afghanistan remains paying salaries to keep basic services functioning.

“People who don’t get enough food will get sick,” Maurer continued, noting, “If the health system is not able to deal with the fragility of health, then this is again a problem. So I’m concerned about the interconnectivity of the food, health,

er, sanitation, electricity and educational system.”

The Swiss-born former diplomat traveled to Kandahar and other areas of Afghanistan in early September, just days after the U.S. withdrawal. During that visit he met with one of the top Taliban leaders, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar.

The ICRC says Maurer’s visit and meeting with Baradar reflects the aid organization’s principle of neutrality and was aimed at sending a clear message that the group would continue providing services to those in need on the ground, regardless of who is in power. The international aid organization has been providing assistance in Afghanistan since 1987, working closely with the Afghan Red Crescent Society.

The ICRC has around 1,800 staffers across Afghanistan, nearly all of them locals. They’ve provided assistance to victims of war at ICRC-assisted hospitals, helped ensure food and medicine reaches people in need and have worked on reuniting families in the aftermath of the hurried U.S.-led evacuation of more than 120,000 people in August. Hundreds of thousands more fled to neighboring countries such as Pakistan and Iran, which already host large populations of Afghan refugees.

The ICRC, founded in 1863, also works on the protection of prisoners of war.

Maurer stated the Taliban have been receptive to its requests to visit detainees in Taliban-run prisons, an issue he raised in his meeting with Baradar.

“We didn’t have to knock (on) the doors 20 times to get access again (to prisons),” he added.

This is in part because the Taliban were themselves visited by the aid group when they were detainees, Maurer continued.

“I think this has allowed us to make a case that the type of work of which they could also take advantage (of) as detainees in the past, would be reasonable policy to develop also as they move in to the power,” Maurer announced.

Iran to vaccinate refugees residing in the country

The director general of Bureau for Aliens and Foreign Immigrants Affairs (BAFIA) of Iranian Ministry of Interior, Mehdi Mahmoudi, said 1.6 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines have been delivered to Iran under the Humanitarian Buffer within the COVAX Facility, according to a Saturday report from the information center of Ministry of Interior.

Due to importance of inoculation of refugees and foreign nationals against coronavirus, the Islamic Republic of Iran has held various meetings with international bodies, Mahmoudi added.

Humanitarian Buffer within the COVAX Facility is under the support of the United Nations.

To fight the pandemic, Iran has been implementing a broad project on vaccination in recent months.

Coronavirus has killed over 5,150,000 worldwide since its outbreak in December 2019.

The number of the dead in Iran has passed 128,000.