Tuesday, December 23, 2025
Home Blog Page 231

Military spokesman: Israel surrendered on ninth day of war

Speaking at a ceremony marking the 40th day since the martyrdom of those killed in the 12-day war, Brigadier General Abolfazl Shekarchi said Iran’s armed forces showed their full strength, sacrificing their lives in defense of the homeland and standing firmly against aggression.

He added that the Zionist regime brought all of its capabilities to the battlefield with the backing of Western powers—particularly the United States—but these capabilities were no match for the heroic assault of the Islamic fighters.

Shekarchi continued: From the north to the south of the occupied territories, the Zionist entity was under heavy fire and powerful strikes from the Islamic resistance.

He emphasized that in the past 70 years, the Israeli army had never been forced to take shelter in such a manner.

He further noted that today, the enemy’s greatest conspiracy against Iran is the attempt to create division and polarization within Iranian society.

The spokesman concluded that the wise leadership and firm resolve of the Supreme Leader, the unity and cohesion of the Iranian people, and the bravery of Iranian fighters were the key factors behind the Islamic Republic’s victory in the 12-day war.

Iran raps Israeli bill to impose sovereignty over West Bank, Jordan Valley

Esmael Baghaei

In a statement, the ministry said this action —concurrent with the ongoing genocide in Gaza and the continued gross violations of human rights in the West Bank by Israel—lays bare more than ever the regime’s malicious objective of the total eradication of Palestine as a land, a nation, and an independent identity.

The Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs recalled the legal, moral, and political responsibility of all states and international organizations to uphold the Palestinian people’s right to self-determination and to support their liberation from occupation and apartheid.

The Ministry emphasized that the negligence of the international community and relevant international bodies—particularly the United Nations Security Council—in fulfilling their obligations to halt genocide and war crimes in Gaza and the West Bank only emboldens the regime to escalate its crimes and expand its lawlessness and aggression.

It pointed out that all governments—especially regional and Islamic countries—are duty-bound to take immediate and effective action to compel Israel and its backers, particularly the United States, to halt the killings, aggression, and expansionist ambitions of the Zionist regime.

Brown bear spotted in Firoozkooh highlands, northern Iran

Brown Bear Cub in Iran

According to the Director General of the Department of Environment for Tehran Province, the presence of this solitary brown bear reflects the vitality and ecological health of Firoozkooh’s natural habitats.

Environmental experts emphasize that sightings of such species indicate balanced food chains and thriving ecosystems, suggesting that conservation efforts in the region are bearing fruit.

Iranian officials appointed to lead Asian Taekwondo Academy

In decrees issued by Sang Jin Kim, the newly elected President of the Asian Taekwondo Union, Hadi Saei was named President of the Academy, while Asghar Rahimi was appointed Executive Director.

Hadi Saei, the President of the Taekwondo Federation of Iran, is one of Iran’s most decorated athletes, a two-time Olympic gold medalist and former world champion in taekwondo.
He also previously served as the head coach of Iran’s national team and held a seat on Tehran’s City Council.

Asghar Rahimi, former head coach of Iran’s national taekwondo team, as well as the teams of Kuwait and Pas Tehran,  is currently a member of the Technical Committee of the Taekwondo Federation of Iran.

President Kim had originally intended to distribute the academy’s leadership between officials from different countries. However, in recognition of Iran’s detailed four-year development blueprint for the sport in Asia, both posts were entrusted to the Iranian team.

The Iranian delegation is now tasked with finalizing the academy’s strategic agenda, which will be submitted for approval at the upcoming session of the Executive Board.

More Gazans die of starvation as famine worsens: Health Ministry

Gaza War

The update came a day after the ministry reported 10 similar deaths, underscoring the deepening humanitarian catastrophe in the besieged enclave.

In a statement, the ministry said hospitals recorded two new fatalities related to hunger and malnutrition, bringing the total death toll since October 2023 to 113.

Since March 2, Israel has stalled on implementing a ceasefire and prisoner exchange deal with Hamas and has kept Gaza’s border crossings shut, leaving humanitarian aid trucks stranded along the frontier.

Israel has killed more than 59,200 Palestinians, most of them women and children, in the Gaza Strip since October 2023. The military campaign has devastated the enclave, collapsed the health system, and led to severe food shortages.

Last November, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

Israel also faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice for its war on the enclave.

Spox: Iran’s nuclear industry has deep roots, to recover from attacks

Iran Nuclear Program

Kamalvandi stated that such attacks cannot cripple a homegrown industry with strong foundations.

“Our nuclear industry is rooted in the country. Anything with deep roots cannot be damaged by pressure or aggression—it will flourish again,” he asserted.

He emphasized that despite the recent strikes on key facilities in Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan in the early hours of June 21, the Islamic Republic’s scientific and technical capacities remain intact, and the development of the peaceful nuclear program will continue without interruption.

Earlier, Kamalvandi had responded firmly to the attacks, affirming that Iran’s nuclear progress cannot be uprooted.

“Given our capabilities and infrastructure, the growth of this industry is inevitable,” he said.

The U.S. President had claimed the attacks were aimed at halting Iran’s enrichment capabilities and that all of iran’s nuclear installations were destroyed. However, Iranian officials maintain that the peaceful nature and indigenous strength of the program make it impervious to such military aggression.

Iran’s senior cleric urges Pope to speak out against Gaza crimes

Gaza War

Highlighting the severity of the situation, Ayatollah Nouri Hamedani described Gaza as a “besieged land that has become a global symbol of human suffering in the face of oppression.”

He condemned the complete blockade imposed by the Zionist regime, which has resulted in widespread hunger, thirst, and medical shortages, especially among children and civilians.

“The deliberate deprivation of an entire population from food, water, and medicine is not only immoral and inhumane,” he wrote, “but also constitutes a war crime under established principles of international law.”

Calling the continued denial of humanitarian aid a blatant violation of both divine and secular norms, Ayatollah Nouri Hamedani urged the Pope and all other religious leaders to raise their voices against the atrocities in Gaza.

He emphasized that it is the duty of all free people, religious institutions, and human rights organizations to defend the oppressed and demand accountability for these crimes.

He expressed hope that religious leaders would play an effective role in preventing further atrocities against the Palestinian people.

Taliban committing ‘rights violations’ against Afghan returnees: UN

Taliban

Large-scale deportation campaigns launched by Iran and Pakistan have forced millions of Afghans to return to Afghanistan, including more than 1.9 million people so far in 2025, the overwhelming majority from Iran.

“People returning to the country who were at particular risk of reprisals and other human rights violations by the de facto (Taliban) authorities were women and girls, individuals affiliated with the former government and its security forces, media workers and civil society,” the UN said in a statement accompanying the release of the report.

“These violations have included torture and ill-treatment, arbitrary arrest and detention, and threats to personal security.”

The UN’s refugee agency (UNHCR) recently estimated that up to three million people could return to Afghanistan in 2025, to a country facing a severe humanitarian crisis.

The report by the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan and the UN Human Rights Office was based on interviews with 49 returned Afghans.

It said violations have been committed against Afghans “based on their specific profile”, including women, media workers, and members of civil society, as well as individuals affiliated with the former foreign-backed government that fell in 2021.

The Taliban government has previously denied allegations of abuse, having declared an amnesty against those who worked for NATO forces and the former government during their two-decade conflict against the Taliban’s insurgency.

“Nobody should be sent back to a country where they face risk of persecution on account of their identity or personal history,” UN rights chief Volker Turk said in a statement earlier this month.

“In Afghanistan, this is even more pronounced for women and girls, who are subjected to a range of measures that amount to persecution on the basis of their gender alone,” he added.

Over the past four years, women have been increasingly isolated from public life by the Taliban authorities, which have banned them from universities, public parks, gyms and beauty salons, in what the UN has denounced as “gender apartheid”.

The Taliban government says that their interpretation of Islamic law “guarantees” everyone’s rights and that allegations of discrimination are “unfounded”.

Neighbouring Tajikistan has followed Islamabad and Tehran’s example by announcing its intention to expel Afghans.

Since July 8, at least 377 have been deported, the UNHCR told AFP.

According to the UN, the recent increase in number of returnees has created a ‘multi-layered human rights crisis’ and the organisation called last week for an “immediate halt” to forcible returns.

Passenger aircraft with 49 people on board crashes in Russia

The Antonov An-24 twin-engine turboprop went down around 1pm local time near the city of Tynda in the Far Eastern Amur Region. The plane was flying a multi-leg domestic route from Khabarovsk to Blagoveshchensk and then onward to Tynda – a remote city built during Soviet times as a hub for the Baikal–Amur Mainline (BAM), Russia’s second major east–west rail corridor.

According to preliminary data, the aircraft was carrying 43 passengers, including five children, along with six crew members. The wreckage was found on a wooded mountainside approximately 15km from Tynda’s airport, with parts of the fuselage still burning when rescuers arrived.

“There are no signs of survivors,” a source in the regional rescue service told Moscow daily Kommersant.

The An-24 reportedly vanished from radar during its second approach to land, having aborted the initial attempt for reasons that remain unclear. Weather conditions at the time have not yet been publicly confirmed.

Russia’s Investigative Committee has opened a criminal case under Article 263 of the Criminal Code – violation of air transport safety rules resulting in death.

Angara Airlines, based in Irkutsk, primarily operates Soviet-era turboprop aircraft on regional routes across Siberia and the Russian Far East. The An-24 model involved in Thursday’s crash first entered service in the 1960s and remains in use on some of the country’s most isolated air routes.

Amur Region, home to roughly 750,000 people, borders China and spans a vast expanse of forests, mountains, and rivers. Tynda itself is a logistical outpost of fewer than 30,000 residents, built in the 1970s to support the BAM railway. The city lies over 2,000km from Khabarovsk, a major regional capital and the starting point of the doomed flight.

There was no immediate statement from Angara Airlines. A team of investigators and aviation safety experts has been dispatched to the crash site.

Footage from the scene shared on Telegram showed smoke rising from snow-dusted forested slopes, with emergency crews working amid wreckage strewn across the hillside.

Bombing Iran nuclear facilities ‘wrong’, will bear ‘unpredictable’ consequences: Ex-US envoy

US Attack Iran

“So, I do think a military option was the wrong one for all kinds of reasons. It doesn’t fully take care of the problem. It leads to all kinds of uncertainties and unpredictable outcomes that I think we’re going to live with, not just in the coming days, weeks, but also months and years. So I think that it was the wrong option to take,” Robert Malley said in an interview with the American cable news channel NBC on Wednesday.

He also noted that the people who thought that the Israeli-US strikes were going to lead to an uprising in Iran were wrong, as the raids by foreign regimes did not just target Iranian nuclear facilities, but also hospitals, and killed civilians.

He further cited a number of his Iranian-American friends as saying that they were becoming more nationalist amid the unprovoked assault.

On June 13, Israel launched a surprise and unprovoked act of aggression against Iran, assassinating dozens of senior military commanders and nuclear scientists in targeted strikes and setting off a 12-day war that killed at least 1,062 people in the country.

More than a week later, the United States also entered the war by bombing three Iranian nuclear sites in a grave violation of the United Nations Charter, international law, and the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

In response, the Iranian Armed Forces targeted strategic sites across the occupied territories as well as the al-Udeid air base in Qatar, the largest American military base in West Asia.

On June 24, Iran, through its successful retaliatory operations against both the Israeli regime and the US, managed to impose a halt to the illegal aggression.

In the interview, Malley stated that Israel initially failed to block the 2015 nuclear deal, officially known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, despite all its efforts in the US, but it had more success when President Trump was in office.

Israel did not like the prospect of an Iran that would have more international economic transactions with Europe, and with the US perhaps, so “they did what they could to undo it,” he added.

He said that many people in the US believed Trump’s withdrawal from the JCPOA and ensuing maximum pressure campaign would prompt Iran to give up its nuclear program and surrender, but “It didn’t happen.”

“I think where we have it often wrong is we think that the threat of sanctions and the imposition of sanctions is enough to get a country to surrender,” he pointed out.

“That was what, certainly, President Trump thought, and also some others, some Democrats have thought over the years, just maximum coercion, sanctions, threat of military intervention, Iran is going to give up what they have … they’re not going to give up their one asset just because of coercion. They’re going to want something in exchange.”

Meanwhile, the former US envoy emphasized that developing ballistic missiles has always been among Iran’s priorities, with or without sanctions.

He also added that during the imposed war on Iran in the 1980s, Iraq was being supported by the United States, the Persian Gulf countries, Europeans, and Russia, while the Islamic Republic “really was almost on its own.”

He further stated that besides Israel, the US military presence in Iraq and Afghanistan also posed a threat to the Islamic Republic.

Iran has on several occasions warned that, in addition to Israel’s clandestine nuclear activities and the regime’s acts of aggression against it, the foreign military presence in the region is a cause of concern and instability.

Iranian officials say regional countries are well capable of keeping the region secure and safe on their own without any foreign interference or intervention.