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Iran victim of terror, inhuman sanctions: Rights official

“Some 17,000 innocent Iranian were killed by the MKO terrorist group whose members freely travel in European safe havens,” tweeted Kazem Gharibabadi, the deputy Judiciary chief for international affairs and the secretary of Iran’s Human Rights Council.

“Five Iranian nuclear scientists were assassinated; the great hero of fighting terrorism (Major General Qassem Soleimani) was assassinated by the US regime; Iran is under the United States’ inhumane sanctions,” he added.

“Still, those who have turned a blind eye to these merciless practices are introduced as supporters of human rights and, instead, Iran is accused of violating human rights!” he said.

Traditional pumpkin festival held in north iran

As many as 22 types of dishes made with pumpkin were cooked in the event, which also featured other programs such as traditional music as well as local games and entertainment.

The festival is known as “Keii-Pela” in the local vernacular. “Keii” means “pumpkin,” and “Pela” means “pilaf” or “cooked rice.”

Pumpkin is a popular ingredient of Mazandaran’s local cuisine, though it is used less frequently nowadays.

 

Russia warns many groups operate in Afghanistan

Secretary of Russia’s Security Council, Nikolay Patrushev, told Russian media the participants in the meeting in the first place had discussed the security situation in Afghanistan and also its regional and global effects.

“The worst threat coming from Afghanistan is terrorism. According to different estimates, there are more than 20 terrorist organizations in Afghanistan. Their total strength exceeds 23,000 militants,” Patrushev said.

He stressed that the main sources of funding of terrorist activities remained the same – drug trafficking and the levying of a so-called tax on organized crime rings that manufacture and traffic narcotic drugs.

“Afghanistan remains one of the world’s largest producers of opiates in the world, its share of the global market reaching 90%,” Patrushev added.

He noted more than 18 million people are starving in Afghanistan and the country is on the brink of a humanitarian crisis.

“Afghanistan is on the brink of a humanitarian crisis. Drought has continued for several years, food prices are growing, and already over 18 million people are starving,” Patrushev said.

“Meanwhile, instead of recognizing their responsibility for the collapse of the Afghan economy and the social sector, the US and its allies continue to contribute to the further degradation of the situation through the economic isolation of Afghanistan,” the security chief continued.

He also stressed that the surging numbers of refugees from Afghanistan were a threat to regional stability.

“We see serious risks of the penetration of terrorist and extremist elements, as well as drug dealers disguised as refugees or Afghans who cooperated with the West, to the territory of the neighboring countries to Central Asia and then to Russia,” he added.

IRGC warns Israel military action will spell its end

Iran Develops Its Space Program While Keeping Low Profile: IRGC

“Among all the countries that currently exist in the world, the only state or regime, which we see, speaks about its survival and existence and holds forums on this topic is the Zionist regime [of Israel],” Brigadier General Amir Ali Hajizadeh said.

“Therefore, a regime that talks about its existence is condemned to annihilation and such a regime cannot talk about another country and the threats they issue are mostly meant for domestic consumption.”

“The officials of the Zionist Israeli regime know that they can be the initiator [of military conflict], but we will determine the end; the end to such a scenario is the annihilation of the Zionist regime. If they give us any pretext, they will not see the afterward and surely their annihilation – in historical terms – will be hastened.”

He made the remark in response to comments by the Israeli army chief who said earlier this week that it “is accelerating operational planning and preparedness to deal with Iran” to target the country’s nuclear sites.

Hajizadeh also touched on Iran’s drone capabilities saying the enemies got nothing out of their years of arms embargo on Iran.

“The drones of the Islamic Republic [of Iran] have become a thorn in the eyes of the enemies and they say we should impose restrictions on them,” he said.

“Today, thanks to God, we are in good shape in defense, military and security terms and under the auspices of this security we should enter other fields and solve [existing] problems one after the other.”

Russia: US ‘irresponsible policy’ root-cause of tension in ME

The recent incident in the Gulf of Oman between Iran and the United States requires a thorough examination, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said at a briefing on Wednesday.

“The recent incident in the Gulf of Oman certainly needs to be thoroughly checked,” she added.

As the diplomat noted, Russia is against any escalation of the situation in the Middle East region.

“We call on all parties involved to find ways to resolve the emerging contradictions and not to aggravate them,” Zakharova continued.

She stated that “this requires mutually respectful, equal and constructive dialogue based on international law and the UN Charter. This is what our country’s renewed concept of collective security in the Persian Gulf is all about. Tehran, which is one of the key players in the region, consistently supports the Russian concept”.

“The tense situation [in the Gulf of Oman] is largely the result of Washington’s irresponsible policy, which constantly escalates the situation around Iran and the region as a whole with its provocative actions,” the diplomat stressed.

Last Wednesday, Tehran announced naval forces of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) have thwarted an attempt by the United States Navy to confiscate a tanker carrying Iranian crude in the Sea of Oman.

The United States stopped the Iranian vessel and transferred its oil cargo to another tanker and was trying to take the vessel away when the IRGC Navy intervened.

The IRGC forces used a helicopter to board the tanker and led it towards Iranian territorial waters.

The naval forces of the United States used several helicopters and a frigate to chase the Iranian tanker but the IRGC blocked their way.

The American naval forces tried once again to block the path of the Iranian ship with several more vessels but failed.

Tehran has also released footage showing IRGC navy force blocking US attempts to confiscate Iranian oil in the Sea of Oman.

American officials have claimed Iranian forces had actually seized a Vietnamese-flagged oil tanker, MV Southys, and US naval forces were just monitoring the situation.

But, a Spokesman for the IRGC has rejected remarks by American defense officials claiming US forces involved in the recent tanker incident in the Sea of Oman were present at the scene only to monitor the situation.

The spokesperson has stated American forces had a mission to protect the ship.

Brigadier General Ramazan Sharif stated last Thursday that US forces had a mission to protect MV Sothys, a Vietnamese-flagged ship which was boarded by IRGC forces after it became known the tanker was stealing a large Iranian oil cargo.

“They had come to provide support to the bandits of the Iranian oil and to escort them,” Sharif noted.

On Wednesday, the news site of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps reported Iran has released oil tanker Sothys on a court order after unloading its crude oil at the southern port of Bandar Abbas.

1,000s of Afghan refugees crossing into Iran daily

Head of Norway Refugee Council has urged the international community to help thousands of Afghan refugees entering Iran with food and shelter.

Jan Egeland, Secretary-general of the Norwegian Refugee Council, after visiting Iran’s Kerman province near the border with Afghanistan, asked the international community to help Afghan refugees with food and shelter.

Egeland told The Associated Press that after the Taliban grabbed power in Afghanistan, thousands of Afghan refugees fled the Taliban and crossed the border into Iran daily.

“Many of the refugees called their relatives, telling them they are on their way to Iran and many want to go on to Europe, so Europe should be less occupied with a few thousand refugees sitting on the Polish-Belorussian border. More people came today to Iran than are now on that border,” Egeland stated.

The Norwegian Refugee Council estimates that since the Taliban took control of Afghanistan in August, 300,000 people have left Iran.

“Millions and millions are in need for food and shelter,” Egeland warned.

According to Egeland, in winter in Afghanistan, when the condition would be “horrific” because of bad economic conditions in the country, “hundreds of thousands of additional refugees will leave Afghanistan for Iran”.

Refugees from Afghanistan have been coming to Iran since 1979 when Soviet troops occupied the country.

It’s estimated that there are 800,000 registered Afghan refugees in Iran and 3 million more undocumented.

Iran has been supporting the new arrivals, Egeland told The AP, but more aid needs to be sent to help during the cold months.

“How can you expect Iran to shoulder this responsibility on their own?” Egeland noted, adding, “What Europe should do is invest in hope, possibility, opportunity inside Afghanistan and in the neighboring countries if they want to avoid people wandering towards Europe.”

Iran urges all countries to get involved in war on drugs

Ahmad Vahidi added his ministry faces numerous challenges in the domain of maintaining order and security, namely narco-trafficking, mass migration, organized crime, the smuggling of goods and terrorist activities.

He said thousands of Iranian forces have given their lives in the fight against drugs, adding Iran has the lion’s share when it comes to the seizure of narcotics.

“90% of all the opium, 72% of all the morphine and 20% of all the heroin confiscated across the world last year were seized in Iran,” said the minister in a joint meeting of Tehran-based foreign ambassadors as well as heads of offices of international organizations in Iran.

He said drug production in Afghanistan grew multifold during the 20 years when US troops were present in the country.

“Such a huge volume of narcotics was produced and exported right in front of the Americans’ eyes.” he said.

“Indubitably, had Iran not countered drug-trafficking, the [seized] narcotics would have been destined for Europe and other countries,” he added.
Elsewhere in his remarks, the interior minister said Iran hosts the second largest number of migrants in the world.

“Currently, there are 3.5 million Afghan migrants in our country, and the subsidies provided for Iranian people are offered to these migrants as well,” he noted.

“The assistance that the UN High Commissioner for Refugees offers Iran for hosting migrants is very minimal,” the minister said.

He then called on countries to exchange information in the domains of fighting the smuggling of goods and drugs as well as migration.

Remains of 16th-century ship found off Caspian Sea

“A ship measuring 48 meters in length has been found 300 meters off the coast of Astaneh-ye Ashrafiyeh city [in northern Gilan province],” announced the provincial cultural heritage department.

“After the information on the ship was compared to that of other vessels discovered off the Caspian Sea coast, one can say it dates back to the late Safavid era,” the department added.

The Caspian Sea is the world’s largest inland body of water, lying between Europe and Asia.

Russia, Iran Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and the Republic of Azerbaijan are littoral  states of the Caspian Sea.

Diplomats: IAEG board unlikely to issue resolution against Iran

Less than three weeks before indirect negotiations are set to resume between the US and Iran about a possible return to the 2015 nuclear deal, Iran is holding talks with other signatories to the agreement to try to set the stage for the new round of talks.

The talks on Nov. 29 in Vienna will be the seventh round of negotiations since President Joe Biden assumed office and the first round since Ebrahim Raisi was inaugurated as president of Iran.

It comes after more than three months of suspension and amid skepticism in Washington and European capitals about Iran’s willingness to return to full compliance with the nuclear deal.

Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator Ali Bagheri is traveling to Paris, Berlin and London this week for preparatory talks ahead of the Vienna negotiations.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian has been working the phones in recent days talking to his Russian, Chinese, British, German and French counterparts.

In a call with his French counterpart, the Iranian foreign minister criticized the Biden administration’s decision to impose sanctions on Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps drone units and called the move unconstructive. But he stated Iran is going to come to the talks seeking “a good deal”.

The French Foreign Minister said in the call that the talks should resume from the point they stopped after the last round of negotiations in June. At the time, the parties had already reached a draft agreement.

In a phone call with his Chinese counterpart, Abdollahian noted Iran hopes the US and its European allies will come to Vienna with a realistic approach “so that an agreement could be reached quickly”.

When he spoke to his Russian counterpart, the Iranian foreign minister announced Iran is “skeptical of the US intentions” but added if the Biden administration fully implements its commitments and doesn’t make more demands, Iran will return to full compliance with the deal.

The Iranian Foreign Ministry laid out several conditions ahead of the next round of talks.

The US must accept responsibility for withdrawing from the nuclear deal during the Donald Trump administration.

The US must lift all sanctions imposed by the Trump administration.

The US must give a guarantee that the next administration won’t withdraw from the agreement in the future.

State Department spokesperson Ned Price said on Tuesday the Biden administration “continues to seek constructive engagement in Vienna, including when the talks resume later this month”.

The board of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which is responsible for verifying whether a country’s nuclear program is in compliance with international treaties, will convene in Vienna on Nov. 25, several days before the talks are set to resume.

The US, France, Germany and the UK have been discussing for several weeks the possibility of using this event to pass a censure resolution against Iran over the limitations it puts on UN inspectors.

The UK has been actively pressing the US, France and Germany to move ahead with the censure. But European diplomats briefed on the issue stated after Iran’s announcement of resuming the nuclear negotiations, it is unlikely that such a move will take place.

Iran is prepared to reach a good agreement in nuclear negotiations, Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian stated on Wednesday.

He wrote on Twitter that chief nuclear negotiator “engaged in successful talks in Europe”.

Pentagon: Dozens of US family members in Afghanistan

The Pentagon said Wednesday that “dozens” of family members of American troops remain in Afghanistan nearly three months after President Joe Biden’s administration withdrew forces from the country.

Asked during a news conference about the “number of immediate family members of US service members in Afghanistan”, Pentagon spokesperson John Kirby told reporters he did not “have a whole number on that”.

“We believe it’s certainly most likely in the dozens, but one of the reasons we put the memo out last week was to encourage service members to come forward,” Kirby stated.

He was referring to a defense memo sent out last week that called on service members and civilians to provide information about immediate family members who remain in Afghanistan.

“We’re working this as hard as we can,” Kirby continued, adding that the Pentagon takes “the obligation seriously to our people and to their families”.

“That’s why we put the advisory out to the services last week, to give them a place, a portal where they can go to put information on there that we can then share with our State Department colleagues to get them out,” he added.

Kirby said that “we’re going to stay at this”.

Earlier this week, Kirby announced the memo was sent out to the services to let members know that “immediate family members that are in Afghanistan are eligible for facilitated departure”.

Kirby also reaffirmed Wednesday that the mission to get Americans out of Afghanistan “is not over”, and that defense officials are “going to continue to work inside the interagency to do that”.

Asked whether there was concern for the well-being of family members of troops who remain in Afghanistan, Kirby noted, “Of course there is.”