Tuesday, December 23, 2025
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Iran FM: Tehran to continue cooperation with IAEA

In a phone conversation with his Russian counterpart, Hossein Amir Abdollahian underlined the need for the IAEA’s director general to avoid adopting political stances.

Amir Abdollahian also praised Russia’s constructive and positive stance on the Iran nuclear issue.

He referred to an agreement between Iran and the nuclear deal’s coordinator regarding the time of the 4+1 group’s talks with Tehran. He stressed that fast progress in talks is contingent upon the European troika and the U-S adopting a realistic and constructive approach through avoiding demanding too much of Iran and making demands beyond the nuclear deal, also known as the JCPOA.

Amir Abdollahian said Iran takes into account the process and records of previous talks in Vienna, adding Tehran will insist on its demands forcefully.

The Iranian foreign minister reiterated that no one should even doubt Iran’s seriousness about the talks and the need for all sides to return to their obligations under the nuclear deal.

He also spoke of the latest US sanctions on Iran. Amir Abdollahian said although Iran is pessimistic about the US intentions, it will return to full compliance with the nuclear deal if Washington does the same and does not place increased demands on Iran.

The Russian foreign minister also stressed the importance of reviving the JCPOA. He said all sides, and first and foremost the US, must return to full compliance with the deal.

Sergei Lavrov noted that Moscow has always emphasized the need for the US to stop destructive measures against the JCPOA.

The foreign ministers of Iran and Russia also agreed that it is necessary to send humanitarian aid to Afghanistan given that the cold season is approaching. The two sides also underscored the importance of the formation of an inclusive government in Afghanistan.

The Iranian foreign minister also spoke of the latest developments in the Caucasus region. He said the Islamic Republic of Iran supports regional talks in the format of 3+3 or other formats upon which all sides agree in order to resolve the disputes in the region and to expand regional cooperation.

‘US-Saudi arms deal shows Biden not committed to peace’

Mohammed Ali al-Houthi has denounced the United States over approving a 650-million-dollar sale of air-to-air missiles to Saudi Arabia.

He stated that the major weapons deal with the Persian Gulf kingdom shows that the administration of President Joe Biden is not committed at all to Yemen peace, and in contrast supports the Saudi war on the impoverished Arab country.

He stressed in a post published on his Twitter page that the deal clearly shows Washington’s lack of seriousness and credibility to stop the ongoing devastating onslaught against Yemen, and will adversely prolong starvation and suffering of the Yemeni nation.

In a statement on Thursday, the Pentagon said the US State Department had approved the sale of air-to-air missiles to Riyadh.

It added that Massachusetts-based firm Raytheon would be the “principal contractor” for the sale of AIM-120C-7/C-8 Advanced Medium Range Air-to-Air Missiles (AMRAAM) and related equipment.

The sale comes months after Biden claimed he would end US support for Saudi Arabia’s “offensive operations” in Yemen, including “relevant arms sales.”

Saudi Arabia, backed by the US and regional allies, launched the war on Yemen in March 2015, with the goal of bringing the Abd Rabbuh Mansur 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.

‘US misleading public opinion about Yemen

In his tweet, Al-Ezzi described the statements as a “failed attempt to hide the reality of Washington’s position obstructing peace”.

He did not rule out that it was a result of deals concluded by the United States with the Saudi-UAE countries of aggression in exchange for Biden’s retreat from his electoral promises regarding Yemen.”

In a press statement on Wednesday, Lenderking, accused the Yemeni armed forces of “continuing to exacerbate the humanitarian crisis and obstruct peace because of the continued operations on Marib.”

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.

Israel planning to sell Iron Dome to Morocco

According to a report published by French-language Moroccan newspaper Le Desk, Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, which has developed the system, has expressed interest to supply the military hardware to Morocco.

The report asserted that Iron Dome missile system, designed to intercept and destroy short-range rockets and artillery shells, would ensure better protection of Morocco’s sensitive military sites.

Spanish daily newspaper La Razón reported on Thursday that Algeria had deployed missiles near its border with Morocco, after the killing of three Algerians in an airstrike earlier in the week that Algeria says Morocco carried out against the border area between Mauritania and the disputed territory of Western Sahara.

“On November 1… three Algerian nationals were subjected to a cowardly assassination in a barbaric bombing of their trucks while they were traveling between the Mauritanian capital, Nouakchott, and Ouargla,” the Algerian president’s office said in a statement on Wednesday.

“Several factors indicate that the Moroccan occupation forces in Western Sahara carried out this cowardly assassination with sophisticated weaponry,” it added, warning that the act “will not go unpunished.”

Morocco’s government has made no comment yet.

For decades, the relationship between Morocco and Algeria has been characterized by tension. The border between the two countries has been closed since 1994. Eighty percent of Western Sahara is controlled by Morocco, which regards the territory as its own. Algeria supports the Polisario Front, which seeks independence for the disputed region.

After an incident near the border crossing between Western Sahara and Mauritania last year, the Polisario declared a three-decade ceasefire against Morocco “null and void.”

Israel and Morocco agreed on December 10, 2020 to normalize relations in a deal brokered with the help of Donald Trump’s administration, making the North African country the fourth Arab state last year to strike a normalization deal with the regime. The others were the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Sudan.

Trump sealed the agreement in a phone call with Morocco’s King Mohammed VI. As part of the agreement, the US president agreed to recognize Morocco’s sovereignty over the Western Sahara region, which has been at the center of a dispute with neighboring Algeria.

The Algerian Foreign Ministry later rejected Trump’s stance, noting the US decision “has no legal effect because it contradicts UN resolutions, especially UN Security Council resolutions on Western Sahara.”

The Algeria-backed and pro-independence Polisario Front has also rejected “in the strongest terms” Trump’s stance on the disputed Western Sahara Desert region, stating that the outgoing US president attempted to give to Morocco “that which does not belong to it.”

The agreement with Israel also drew condemnation from the Palestinians.

Iran, Pakistan to boost mutual trade to $5bn

Reza Fatemh Amim added Iran can invest in the domains of dairy products and household appliances in Pakistan.

He made the comments on the margins of the ninth meeting of Iran-Pakistan Joint Trade Committee in Tehran on Sturday.

He said Iran and Pakistan are two major and important countries in the region, but the level of their economic ties is unfortunately not desirable.

“In today’s meeting, it was agreed that trade between the two countries rise five-fold in the next two years and reach $5 billion, and that problems and obstacles in the free trade agreement between the two countries be removed in the coming three months,” he said.

“Iran and Pakistan’s economies are complementary, and we can not only exchange commodities, but also make joint investments,” the minister added.

Based on the talks held, he said, private companies of both countries will soon establish their economic ties.

“Two centers will also be set up tasked with removing economic and trade hurdles between the two countries,” the minister explained.

Iranian shooter wins gold medal at president’s cup championship

Foroughi and Bhaker were drawn together in the mixed 10m air pistol division.

They beat France’s Mathilde Lamolle and Tokyo 2020 silver medalist Artem Chernousov of Russia 16-8 in the gold medal match.

Foroughi and Bhaker had the third-best qualification score and second-best semi-final points haul before topping the chart in the final.

Afghan toddler given to US soldier still missing

Days after the Taliban seized Kabul, Mirza Ali Ahmadi and his wife Suraya along with their five children were among a chaotic crowd outside the gates of the Kabul International Airport and were trying to a find a way inside and flee the country by an American aircraft.

Fearing that the newborn, named Sohail, would get crushed in the melee, the parents handed him to an American soldier, who had bent over the fence asking them if they needed help. They hoped that they would soon reunite with their son once they got inside.

More than a half hour later, when they finally reached the other side of the airport fence Sohail was nowhere to be found.

His father, 35, who worked as a security guard at the US Embassy in Kabul for 10 years, began desperately asking every official he encountered about his baby’s whereabouts, but no traces of the American soldier and their beloved son were to be found.

In an interview through a translator, Mr. Ahmadi said that a military commander helped him find his son in the chaotic airport, but all to no avail, adding, “He walked with me all around the airport to search everywhere”. But Sohail had vanished into thin air. 

A civilian official told Mr. Ahmadi that his son might have been flown out of Afghanistan by himself, since they “don’t have resources to keep the baby here.”

Mr. Ahmadi, his wife, 32, and their other children,17, 9, 6 and 3 years old, were ultimately put on a flight to Qatar and then to Germany and eventually landed in the United States. The family are now at Fort Bliss in Texas with other Afghan refugees waiting to be resettled somewhere in the country.

He has desperately tried hard to find traces of Sohail, seeking help from every person he comes across, including aid workers and US officials.

“Everyone promises they will do their best, but they are just promises,” he stated.

An Afghan refugee support group created a “Missing Baby” sign with Sohail’s photo on it and is circulating it among their networks hoping that someone will recognize him.

“All I am doing is thinking about my child. Everyone that is calling me, my mother, my father, my sister, they all comfort me and say, ‘Don’t worry, God is kind, your son will be found’,” said Suraya, who also spoke through a translator, adding that she cries most of the time and that her other children are distraught.

The Taliban, who previously ruled Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001, took power in Afghanistan again as the US was in the middle of a chaotic troop withdrawal from the country. The group announced the formation of a caretaker government in early September.

The US completed the chaotic withdrawal of its forces from Afghanistan by the end of August, in what observers saw as a botched exit after a futile military adventure lasting 20 years.

The US-led NATO alliance invaded the South Asian country in 2001 under the pretext of ‘war on terror’, to decimate the Taliban and Al-Qaeda. None of the goals were achieved despite massive investment.

Body organs of Iran soccer fan donated

Majid Ehsani died due to a cardiac arrest and stress after her favorite team lost 1-0 in the match against Aluminum in the country’s Premier League competitions.

Ehsani was born in 1991.

Iran’s Hamedan city: Picturesque, colorful in fall season

How mesmerizing are the moments when fallen leaves leave themselves to the tender mercies of rain drops only to redouble the beauty of it all.

An all along, garden alleys in the beautiful city of Hamedan in western Iran are littered with yellow, orange and red leaves.

Pakistan opposition demands PM’s resignation

Shahbaz Sharif, leader of the country’s main opposition Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz), said that the Imran Khan government has “exceeded all limits of incompetency, inefficiency, and corruption”.

“The government is about to increase inflation by raising the petroleum levy on the orders of IMF, which is cruel. The government has also given in to the IMF’s conditions for increasing electricity tariffs. The nation is asking: these are the good days [the PTI government] has brought?” Sharif stated on Friday, responding to the increase in petrol and diesel prices by more than PKR 8 ($0.047).

Questioning the logic behind the inflationary measures, the PML-N President has cited recent decisions of the India, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka governments, which lowered the fuel prices.

“Government officers are being changed because of incompetence, but Imran Khan is [still] sitting on his seat after the biggest incompetence and corruption,” Shahbaz added, highlighting the 130 percent jump in cooking oil prices since 2018.

Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) vice-president Sherry Rehman noted that for the first time in Pakistan’s history, prices of all the petroleum products are more than 110 Pakistani rupees (PKR) per litre ($0.65 per litre).

The PPP has been also highlighting sugar prices that overtook the price of one litre of petrol recently.

Imran Khan’s government has been talking to the IMF to be granted $6 billion under an Extended Fund Facility for two years to provide much-needed support for the ailing economy.

The IMF has withheld the release of a $1 billion tranche, demanding the State Bank of Pakistan – the central bank – enjoy full autonomy first as it is alleged to be overly influenced by politicians and bureaucrats.

The Imran Khan government has received financial support from China, the UAE, and Saudi Arabia amid the growing debt to the annual national income of the country.

A World Bank report suggests that the country’s debt-to-Gross Domestic Product (GDP) ratio exceeded 80 percent in the first quarter of this year.

On Wednesday, Imran Khan’s government announced a $705 million relief package to mitigate against rising food and fuel prices. The IMF, the largest contributor of which is the US, withheld a $1 billion tranche to debt-ridden Pakistan, demanding more autonomy to the country’s central bank.