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Zangezur Corridor US project targeting Iran, Russia: Iranian leader’s aide

Ali Akbar Velayati

In remarks at a ceremony in Tehran to commemorate Sheikh Safi al-Din Ardabili, Velayati addressed geopolitical concerns surrounding the Republic of Azerbaijan and the proposed Zangezur Corridor.

He stated that enemies of Iran—particularly global Zionism and the United States—have long been disturbed by Iran’s historic unity and deep cultural ties in the region.

“These actors seek to weaken the foundations of Iranian identity as a means to harm the country’s national security,” he stated.

Velayati said plans like the Zangezur Corridor serve as a cover for larger geopolitical projects.

He warned that the primary aim is to weaken the resistance axis, sever Iran’s connection to the Caucasus, and impose a land blockade on both Iran and Russia in the region’s south.

Velayati stressed that Iran’s national security remains a red line.

The full text of Velayati’s statement is as follows:

In the Name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful,

Greetings and salutations to the brave and cultured people of Azerbaijan, especially the proud province of Ardabil. I offer special thanks to Ayatollah Seyed Hassan Ameli, the Leader’s representative and the esteemed Friday Prayer Leader of Ardabil, whose dedication and efforts enabled the holding of this grand ceremony honoring the lofty status of Sheikh Safi al-Din Ardabili.

I also express gratitude to all those who have played a significant role in honoring this prominent scholarly, and national figure.

Dear guests, respected scholars and intellectuals,
Throughout history—and especially in the contemporary era against the recent aggressions of the Zionist regime and the United States—the great nation of Iran has displayed an exceptional unity, vigilance, and solidarity. This unity, rooted in Iran’s rich Iranian-Islamic culture, has always been a source of inspiration for freedom-seeking nations worldwide.

Iranian culture holds two distinctive features: first, internal cohesion among diverse ethnic groups; and second, a historical continuity that, like the weave of a Persian carpet, has fortified our ancient civilization.

Iranian identity has always been based on monotheism. From ancient times until today, Iranians have followed monotheistic faiths. As historians like Shahrestani and Masoudi have written, even ancient Iranian kings considered themselves descendants of Prophet Abraham (AS).

With the advent of Islam, the Iranian people—who had previously followed Zoroastrianism, a monotheistic religion—embraced this divine faith wholeheartedly. Interestingly, according to most historians, Zoroaster himself originated from the Azerbaijan region.

Iranians have historically led the fight against oppression—from Abu Muslim Khorasani’s uprising against the Umayyads, to Khajeh Nasir al-Din Tusi’s efforts during the Mongol era, and the Shiite movements before the Safavid period.

However, the turning point of this historical path was the establishment of the Safavid state, which, under Shah Ismail Safavi and inspired by the teachings of Sheikh Safi al-Din Ardabili, united Iran after centuries of division.

Sheikh Safi al-Din Ardabili, a mystic and devout jurist descending from Imam Musa al-Kazim (AS), not only founded a genuine spiritual and intellectual movement, but also united Iran by linking mysticism, Shiism, and Iranian identity.

He laid the foundations of institutions and structures whose signs are still alive in our culture today.

Today, just as in the past, Azerbaijan remains a source of faith, a stronghold of Shiism, and a pioneer in Iranian-Islamic identity.

This region has always been at the forefront of defending territorial integrity, independence, and the values of the Islamic Revolution—and this historic role must be preserved.

Iran’s enemies, especially global Zionism and the US, have been disturbed by this historical unity and strategic cultural depth.

They have consistently attempted to undermine the foundations of this identity to harm our national security.

In this context, plans such as the “Zangezur Corridor” are pursued as covers for broader geopolitical projects.

The main goal is to weaken the Resistance Axis, sever Iran’s link with the Caucasus, and impose a land blockade on Iran and Russia in the region’s south.

This project is not only part of America’s strategy to shift pressure from Ukraine to the Caucasus, but is also supported by NATO and certain pan-Turkist movements.

Yet, Iran has clearly and decisively opposed these actions from the outset, even deploying forces to the borders and conducting deterrent exercises to show that national security is our red line.

The policy of “active prevention” rather than “passive reaction” is the intelligent strategy adopted by the Islamic Republic.

The heroic people of Azerbaijan—those who stood against Ottoman and Tsarist Russian invaders, under commanders like Abbas Mirza and the support of grand Shiite scholars such as the late Seyed Mohammad Mojtahed, and who, during the episode of Democratic Party of Azerbaijan cult, under the leadership of scholars and senior clerics, foiled the colonial conspiracy and did not allow Iran’s territory to be divided—remain firm.

Today, too, the enemy seeks to penetrate Iran’s geopolitical depth under the cover of seemingly economic, but in truth, separatist, projects.

However, the Iranian nation, inspired by the teachings of its great figures—especially Sheikh Safi al-Din Ardabili—stands and will continue to stand against these conspiracies.

Just as that divine mystic confronted division in his time, today the Iranian nation will foil the enemy’s sinister plans through unity, vigilance, and faith.

May the memory of Sheikh Safi al-Din endure.

May his path be widely followed.

Iran’s health minister urges immediate global intervention to stop Gaza humanitarian catastrophe

Gaza War

In the letter, Zafarghandi expressed deep sorrow over the escalating humanitarian disaster, stressing that the scale and targeting of destruction against civilians, especially women and children, have surpassed all thresholds of crisis.

He warned that Gaza’s public health system has collapsed and accused Israeli regime forces of committing collective punishment, ethnic cleansing, and genocide.

He highlighted severe malnutrition, dehydration, and famine among children, noting that over 32% of children under two now suffer from acute malnutrition. “This represents the fastest-developing famine in recorded history,” he wrote.

Zafarghandi described horrifying scenes where mothers endure stillbirths and miscarriages in bombed hospitals lacking anesthesia, electricity, or water.

Many women, suffering from anemia and malnutrition, are unable to breastfeed, forced to witness their infants’ slow deaths.

The minister condemned Israel’s aggression and called for the deployment of field hospitals, nutritional crisis teams, UN humanitarian flights, and binding Islamic cooperation resolutions.

“Every hour of delay costs innocent lives,” he wrote, urging immediate global moral and medical response.

OPEC says Iran’s oil export revenues up 14% to nearly $47bn in 2024

Iran Oil

The data by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries cited in a Saturday report by the Iranian Oil Ministry showed that Iran had exported more than $46.776 billion worth of crude oil in 2024, up by 13.62% from the year before.

The data showed that Iran had experienced the largest increase in oil export revenues last year compared to 11 other members of OPEC.

The rise came despite a fall in overall OPEC oil export revenue in 2024 as the bloc saw its earnings drop from $678 billion in 2023 to $652 billion last year, according to the same figures.

Saudi Arabia, the leading OPEC producer and the world’s largest oil exporter, reported a $24 billion fall in its oil exports as shipments reached $223 billion, the figures showed.

The data showed that Iran’s oil export revenues had nearly doubled in the three years to 2024

Iran has steadily increased its oil exports in recent years despite being subject to an unprecedented regime of US sanctions, which impose heavy penalties on buyers of Iranian oil.

Oil exports from the country have increased from historic lows of below 0.3 million barrels per day (bpd) reported in 2019 to records of more than 1.8 million bpd in recent months.

That comes as the US government has announced multiple rounds of sanctions on Iran’s oil exports and its foreign partners in recent months, with the stated aim of cutting the shipments to below 0.1 million bpd.

Hamas didn’t steal UN aid in Gaza: Israeli officers

Gaza Humanitarian Aid

The unnamed officers, along with two other Israeli officials involved in aid monitoring, admitted the UN’s aid distribution system, long disparaged by Israel, was in fact “largely effective in providing food to Gaza’s desperate and hungry population.”

“For nearly two years, Israel has accused Hamas of stealing aid,” NYT daily reported, noting these unproven claims were used to justify policies that pushed Gaza’s population towards starvation by blocking humanitarian supplies.

“There was no evidence that Hamas regularly stole from the United Nations, which provided the largest chunk of the aid,” one official told the newspaper.

Georgios Petropoulos, the UN humanitarian coordinator who liaised with Israeli authorities during the war, condemned the smear campaign.

“For months, we and other organisations were dragged through the mud by accusations that Hamas steals from us,” he stated.

The Times’ reporting marks a significant reversal from its earlier coverage, which largely echoed Israeli talking points that painted Hamas as hijacking aid. The paper has long faced accusations of systemic pro-Israel bias, with nearly two dozen top editors and reporters linked to pro-Israel advocacy groups.

This latest revelation reinforces what critics and humanitarian groups have insisted for months: there was no organised Hamas theft of international aid.

Earlier this week, Reuters revealed an internal US government review, carried out by a bureau of the US Agency for International Development (USAID), found no proof that Hamas systematically diverted US-funded humanitarian aid in Gaza.

The investigation covered 156 reports of theft or loss of US aid from October 2023 to May 2025 and concluded there were “no reports alleging Hamas” gained from the aid.

Instead, 44 of those cases were directly or indirectly blamed on Israeli forces, including 11 linked to air strikes and others tied to military-imposed delivery routes known to be vulnerable to looting.

The USAID findings further discredit the Israeli claims that helped justify the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a mechanism backed by both Israel and the US but rejected by the UN and international aid groups for violating neutrality principles.

The UN reports that more than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces while trying to collect aid, most of them near GHF distribution zones, which are heavily militarised.

Since 2 March, Israel’s siege has prevented UN and partner agencies from delivering humanitarian supplies to Gaza, pushing the population to the edge of famine. The Palestinian health ministry says at least 115 people, including 80 children, have died of starvation since then, 15 of them on Monday alone.

Israel’s assault on Gaza has killed more than 59,000 Palestinians and wounded over 142,000 others since October 2023.

Iranian parliament approves urgent review of bill targeting false news on social media

Iran's parliament

The proposal, submitted by the administration of President Massoud Pezeshkian, was passed with 205 votes in favor, 49 against, and 3 abstentions out of 260 lawmakers present.

Titled “Combating the Publication of False News Content in Cyberspace,” the 22-article bill introduces penalties for users who publish or distribute misleading or manipulated news online. These include imprisonment, financial fines, and access restrictions.

The bill assigns the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance to establish a nationwide reporting system for digital activity and coordinate with the judiciary by forwarding reports of violations. The government argues the move will protect public trust and national unity.

Defending the urgency of the legislation, government representative Kazem Delkhosh stated that while cyberspace has clear benefits, unregulated content can harm societal cohesion and state authority.

However, some lawmakers voiced concern. MP Farid Mousavi criticized the bill’s prioritization, arguing that in the aftermath of the recent war with Israel, national unity and transparency are more urgent than policing online content.

Israeli military claims it allowed limited aid airdrop into Gaza amid genocide

Gaza War

It comes amid growing regional and international pressure on Tel Aviv to allow aid into the enclave because of the worsening famine in Gaza and warnings of a mass death that is threatening more than 100,000 children.

The Israeli army said it would “resume the aerial airdrops of humanitarian aid, as part of ongoing efforts to allow and facilitate the entry of aid to Gaza,” in what appears to be an attempt to deflect from allegations that it is deliberately starving Palestinians in the enclave.

The army added that the airdrop “will include seven pallets of aid containing flour, sugar, and canned food to be provided by international organizations.”

Meanwhile, the UN refugee agency for Palestine, or UNRWA, announced that Gaza requires between 500 and 600 aid trucks daily, managed by the UN, to meet the minimum humanitarian needs.

Earlier Saturday, UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini described the idea of airdropping aid into Gaza as a “distraction” and a “smokescreen” to divert attention from the true scale of the humanitarian catastrophe.

The Israeli army claimed it launched a series of measures “to improve the humanitarian response” in Gaza.

It also announced its intention to “open humanitarian corridors” to facilitate UN and relief organizations’ convoys, claiming a readiness for “humanitarian pauses” in densely populated areas.

The army also affirmed that military operations in Gaza “have not ceased,” vowing to continue “fighting to return all hostages and defeat Hamas.”

Since May 27, Israel has launched a separate aid distribution initiative through the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), bypassing the UN and international humanitarian agencies. The move has been widely rejected by the global relief community. The GHF is supported by the US.

Meanwhile, Israeli soldiers continue to open fire on Palestinians gathered near distribution centers, killing hundreds of aid seekers.

Gaza’s hunger crisis has spiraled into a humanitarian catastrophe. Harrowing footage shows severely emaciated residents, some reduced to skin and bone, collapsing from exhaustion, dehydration and prolonged starvation.

Gaza’s Health Ministry reported Saturday that five more Palestinians, including two children, have died from hunger and malnutrition in the last 24 hours, pushing the death toll since October 2023 to 127, including 85 children.

On Tuesday, the World Food Program warned that one in every three people in Gaza had gone without food for several days due to the Israeli blockade.

Rejecting international calls for a ceasefire, the Israeli army has pursued a brutal offensive on Gaza since Oct. 7, 2023, killing more than 59,700 Palestinians, most of them women and children. The relentless bombardment has destroyed the enclave and led to 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.

Two MKO terrorists hanged in Iran

Iran Prison

The two elements of the notorious group were sentenced to death by the Iranian Judiciary for attacking residential, training and service centers with handmade mortars.

Mahdi Hassani and Behrouz Ehsani, operating under the alias Fardin and Behzad, were two operational elements of the MKO terrorist group.

The two men used improvised launchers and handmade mortars to kill civilians in residential areas, administrative and service sites, training centers and charity organizations with the purpose of upsetting social security.

The two convicts were in contact with the MKO intermediaries and had leased a house in Tehran to carry out their sinister plots.

MKO members spent many years in Iraq, where they were hosted and armed by the former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein. They sided with Saddam during the 1980-88 imposed war against Iran and then helped him quell domestic uprisings in various parts of the Arab country.

The hated group is responsible for killing thousands of Iranian civilians and officials after the victory of the Islamic Revolution in 1979.

More than 17,000 Iranians, many of them civilians, have been killed at the hands of the MKO in different acts of terrorism including bombings in public places, and targeted killings.

Iran’s president reflects on Israeli bombing of National Security Council

Masoud Pezeshkian

“If we had been martyred in that bombing, it would have been a great honor for us,” Pezeshkian said during a visit to Iran’s Qom province, adding, “But the country would have been thrown into disarray by the wrong people.”

He emphasized that the session had gathered all top officials, including heads of government branches, senior military commanders, and several cabinet ministers.

The president recalled the moment of the attack, saying, “There was just one hole, and we saw air coming through it. We said, at least we won’t suffocate now.”

Pezeshkian stressed that while life can be fleeting, service to the people remains paramount.

Several top Iranian military commanders and scientists along with over a thousand civilians were killed in the Israeli invasion, widely supported by the US, which started on June 13 and culminated in a ceasefire on June 24.

Iranian Parliament speaker: Any IAEA moves must follow domestic law

IAEA

Speaking during Sunday’s open session of parliament, he referred to the law mandating conditional cooperation with the agency, underscoring that the legislation is “clear and unambiguous.”

Ghalibaf stated, “Any movement toward suspending cooperation with the IAEA must be pursued within the legal framework.”

His comments followed a parliamentary discussion on national energy management and the proposed formation of an energy optimization body.

Earlier in the session, Tehran MP Hamid Rasaei criticized news of an upcoming visit by the IAEA Deputy Director General, Rafael Grossi, to Tehran.

He argued that such actions contradict legislation that makes cooperation conditional on safeguarding national sovereignty and nuclear security.

Rasaei questioned the utility of passing laws if the executive branch fails to implement them.

Tensions between Iran and the IAEA have escalated under Grossi, particularly after his recent report included disputed allegations that paved the way for an anti-Iran resolution.

Iran has also criticized Grossi for failing to condemn US-Israeli aggression against its nuclear facilities while maintaining close ties with Israeli officials.

FM Araghchi rejects criticism, says Iran won the 12-day war with Israel

Abbas Araghchi

Responding to a question about direct communication with Iran’s Leader during the war, Araghchi dismissed doubts, stating, “Who says there is no direct contact?” He emphasized that full coordination was in place at the highest levels.

Araghchi also revealed he was in direct communication with US negotiator Steve Witkoff, saying, “I told him Israel is making excuses. Iran is not Lebanon.”

His remarks were featured in a preview of the upcoming documentary The Story of the War.

When asked about reports of an explosion near his residence, Araghchi nodded in confirmation. He asserted that Iran had been fully prepared for the conflict and not caught off guard.

Addressing criticism of the ceasefire, Araghchi said, “People should ask themselves, why the armed forces obeyed when the foreign minister announced a ceasefire?”

He argued that Iran emerged victorious, stating, “You say it was a draw. I say we won. We delivered the final blow.”