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Head of Iran’s Joint Chiefs of Staff visits Russia

Bagheri was greeted by General Sergei Istrakov, Deputy Chief of Staff of the Russian Armed Forces.

General Bagheri and members of the high-ranking Iranian military delegation inspected the ceremonial guard of the Russian Ministry of Defense upon arrival at Vnukovo Airport, after the anthem of the Islamic Republic of Iran was played.

General Sergei Istrakov, a group of high-ranking Russian generals, Kazem Jalali, Ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Iran to Moscow, and a group of directors of Iranian institutions based in Russia were also attending the ceremony.

General Bagheri will hold talks with Russian officials during his stay in the country.

Bagheri earlier visited Pakistan where he met Pakistani military officials and Prime Minister Imran Khan and they discussed important regional and international issues including the Afghanistan situation and war on terrorism.

Swiss Parliament speaker visits Isfahan, Yazd

Isfahan

In Isfahan, the Speaker of the Swiss National Assembly met with Bishop Kashichian, the Armenian religious leader of Isfahan and southern Iran.

Aebi also visited various sections of the Vank Church and then the Khajavi Bridge, two historical sites of Isfahan. He also visited other historical monuments of Isfahan such as the Imam Square and Mosque, Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque, Aali Qapo Palace and a cloth engraving workshop.

Abei then met with Isfahan’s Governor Seyed Reza Mortazavi at the city’s Abbasi Hotel.

The Speaker of the Swiss National Assembly and the Swiss Ambassador traveled to Yazd with their families. During their two-day visit to Yazd, they met with the Governor of Yazd and discussed cultural and economic assets of Switzerland and Iran, especially regarding ways of helping with the economic development of Yazd, which is a world famous ancient city.

Abei visited Yazd’s fire temple and the historical parts of the city like the Yazd Grand Mosque. Of course, in one part of their trip, the group also visited the city of Meybod and the Zilu (A kind of Iranian carpet) projects as global handicrafts.
They also went to Ardakan.

Iranian schools to reopen on October 23

Alireza Kamarei also said schools with more than 300 students will be reopened from November 6.This reopening will include all public and private schools at all levels of education, but special schools will be reopened according to a separate procedure.

He added that in line with the decision of Iran’s National Covid Taskforce, vaccination is not a condition for the presence of teachers and students in the classrooms, but we hope that students who have not been vaccinated or have received only one dose will get the second dose by the end of November.

Currently, 85% of teachers and 68% of students have been inoculated”, Kamarei said. He described the personal and environmental health of students and school staff and the creation of proper ventilation in classrooms as the main conditions for reopening schools.

Kamarei said the distance between students in the classrooms will be at least one and a half meters and social distancing in the break time must be observed.

Turkey says in talks with US on purchase of F-16s

Erdogan said on Sunday that the United States had proposed the sale of F-16 fighter jets to Turkey in return for its investment in the F-35 programme.

Reuters reported earlier this month that Turkey made a request to the United States to buy 40 Lockheed Martin-made F-16 jets and nearly 80 modernization kits for its existing warplanes.

Speaking to reporters before departing for a trip to West Africa, Erdogan stated Turkey wants a return for its investment in the F-35 programme and that talks on the issue are ongoing.

“There is the payment of $1.4 billion we have made for the F-35s and the U.S. had such a proposal in return for these payments,” Erdogan added.

“And regarding this, we said let’s take whatever steps are needed to be taken to meet the defence needs of our country,” he said, adding that the new F-16 jets would help develop its fleet.

Ankara had ordered more than 100 F-35 jets, made by Lockheed Martin Corp (LMT.N), but the U.S. removed Turkey from the programme in 2019 after it acquired Russian S-400 missile defence systems.

The decades-old partnership between the NATO allies has gone through unprecedented tumult in the past five years over disagreements on Syria policy, Ankara’s closer ties with Moscow, its naval ambitions in the eastern Mediterranean, U.S. charges against a state-owned Turkish bank and erosion of rights and freedoms in Turkey.

Ankara’s purchase of the S-400s has also triggered U.S. sanctions. In December 2020, Washington blacklisted Turkey’s Defence Industry Directorate, its chief, Ismail Demir, and three other employees.

Since then the U.S. has repeatedly warned Turkey against buying further Russian weaponry. But Erdogan has indicated Ankara still intends to buy a second batch of S-400s from Russia, a move that could deepen the rift with Washington.

The request for the jets will likely have a difficult time getting approval from the U.S. Congress, where sentiment towards Turkey has soured deeply over recent years.

There is bipartisan support in U.S. Congress to push the Biden administration to put further pressure on Ankara, primarily over its purchase of Russian weapons and its human rights track record.

Ankara has announced it hopes for better ties under U.S. President Joe Biden.

Sudanese call for dissolution of transitional government

Sudan is grappling with the biggest political crisis in its two-year transition to civilian rule, following a massive demonstration on Saturday that brought thousands of pro-military protesters to central Khartoum, demanding the government to be dissolved.

The military and civilian groups have been sharing power in the east African country in an uneasy alliance since the toppling of long-standing President Omar al-Bashir, who was ousted by the army in April 2019 following weeks of mass protests.

Saturday’s protest was organised by a splinter faction of the Forces for Freedom and Change (FFC), a civilian alliance which spearheaded the anti-Bashir protests and became a key plank of the transition.

Outside the presidential palace, the protesters chanted: “We will stay put where we are… we want the dissolution of this government.”

Saturday’s protest comes after Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok on Friday unveiled a road map to end what he described as the country’s “worst and most dangerous” political crisis in its two-year transition.

Groups advocating for civilian rule have called for protests on Thursday 21 October.

Support for the transitional government has waned in recent months in the face of its tough economic reforms, which have included the slashing of fuel subsidies and a managed float of the Sudanese pound.

Inflation has skyrocketed, reaching 422 percent in July, before easing slightly in August and September.

Hamdok, a former UN economist, has been facing calls to dissolve his government following the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) approval of a $2.5bn loan and debt relief agreement that would see Sudan’s external debt reduced by some $50bn.

However the harsh reforms have hit the pockets of many Sudanese who are now struggling with poverty, shortages of medicines and power cuts.

On Saturday evening, demonstrators set up tents outside the presidential palace and chanted “one army, one people” and “the army will bring us bread”.

Abdelnaby Abdelelah, a protester from the eastern state of Kassala, told AFP that the government has overlooked other states beyond Khartoum.

“We want a government that knows about the things going on in the east,” he said.

“We are marching in a peaceful protest and we want a military government,” added Enaam Mohamed, a housewife.

The current government has failed to bring the people “justice and equality”, stated 50-year-old Abboud Ahmed, who wants the military to be in charge.

The IMF-mandated reforms so far have caused food and transportation costs to surge, forcing Sudanese people to make sacrifices.

Since September, demonstrators in eastern Sudan have blocked trade through the key hub of Port Sudan.

On 21 September, the government said it thwarted a coup attempt and placed the blame on sympathisers of the Bashir regime, which was dominated by Islamists and the military.

Since a coup attempt in September, Sudan’s military and civilian power-sharing partners have been locked in a war of words, with military leaders demanding the reform of the cabinet and ruling coalition. Civilian politicians accused the military of aiming for a power grab.

“The coup attempt opened the door for discord, and for all the hidden disputes and accusations from all sides, and in this way we are throwing the future of our country and people and revolution to the wind,” Hamdok noted in a speech on Friday.

Hamdok described the current conflict as not between the military and civilians but between those who believe in a transition towards democracy and civilian leadership and those who do not.

“I am not neutral or a mediator in this conflict. My clear and firm position is complete alignment to the civilian democratic transition,” he added.

Nevertheless he said he had spoken to both sides, and presented them with a road map that called for the end of escalation and one-sided decision-making and a return to a functioning government.

He emphasised the importance of the formation of a transitional legislature, reform of the military, and the expansion of the base for political participation.

Referring to an ongoing blockade of the country’s main port in the East of the country by protesting tribesmen, Hamdok described their grievances as legitimate while asking that they re-open the flow of trade. He also said an international donors’ conference to benefit the region was being organised.

The mainstream faction of the FFC said, “The current crisis is not related to dissolution of the government or not”, adding, “It is engineered by some parties to overthrow the revolutionary forces… paving the way for the return of remnants of the previous regime.”

As tensions have risen, a number of international envoys have rushed to visit the country in order to ease the strains between the military and civilian leadership.

Earlier this month, a United Nations source disclosed that Volker Perthes, special representative of the UN Secretary General for Sudan, has been in Khartoum to undertake a series of meetings with civil and military officials in the transitional government.

However some Sudanese analysts have played down international involvement, saying the only way to protect the transition and democracy was through the people of Sudan who had made the revolution.

Iran announces pilot activity of national cryptocurrency

Ali Salehabadi said a joint committee between the government and the Central Bank will amend the law of the Central Bank for this purpose.

Salehabadi earlier attended a meeting with the Iranian Parliament’s Economic Commission and gave a report to lawmakers on the currency market as well as the economic sector and the banking system of Iran.

The governor of the Central Bank cited the members of the Economic Commission as saying national and foreign cryptocurrencies are now commonplace around the world, and that they demanded a joint working group be formed to determine everyone’s duties regarding cryptocurrencies. Salehabadi noted that the chairman of the Economic Commission emphasized that joint committees should be formed on issues raised by Parliament and the government to solve problems.

To this end, Salehabadi said, there is a need to update the law of the Central Bank.

Injured Iranian eagle flying free after rehabilitation

He said the rare bird of prey was freed in the mountains of the province after recovering from the injury. The official noted that the Golden eagle is the environmental symbol of Alborz but the species is in danger of extinction.

The director-general of Alborz Environment Department added that it is highly important to preserve the environment of animals and rare birds and that necessary measures must be put in place to protect this valuable indigenous bird.

He added that one of the threats the Gold Eagles are facing is the theft of eaglets from their coops and their sale.

Venezuela govt. halts negotiations with opposition

On Saturday, Venezuela’s National Assembly President Jorge Rodriguez announced the withdrawal of the Bolivarian government delegation from the negotiating tables with the opposition sector in Mexico as an act of protest against the extradition of diplomat and member of the delegation Alex Saab to the U.S.

Rodriguez condemned the attitude assumed by Cape Verde’s authorities, who disregarded several rulings from regional and international organizations demanding Saab’s release.

He recalled that the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Tribunal, the United Nations (UN), and the United Nations Human Rights Committee (OHCHR) demanded the suspension of Saab’s extradition and made a call on violations to the diplomat’s human rights.

The head of the Venezuelan delegation to the dialogues with the opposition regretted the diplomat has been subjected to torture, including refusals to allow family visits and proper medical attention.

“This refusal to halt the process is evidence of Cape Verde and the United States’ collusion in the continuing campaign of persecution against the Bolivarian nation,” Rodriguez said.

“This harmful action against the International Law constitutes a new act of aggression against Venezuela given that Saab is a full member of the dialogue and negotiation process taking place in Mexico,” he added.

Highlighting that Saab’s abduction represents an aggression against the Vienna diplomatic Conventions, Saab’s Special Envoy status, and the representatives to the political talks, Rodriguez informed that the Venezuelan government would not attend the round of negotiations scheduled for Sunday.

The chairman of the Venezuelan parliament held Colombia’s President Ivan Duque, U.S President Joe Biden, and the far-right Venezuelan opposition representatives responsible for any setbacks in the talks due to the diplomatic incident. He warned that these people only want the failure of Venezuelan subnational elections in November.

“Alex Saab’s life is in danger in the hands of a judicial system instrumentalized to attack Venezuela. We demand his immediate release,” Rodriguez stressed to reaffirmed the Bolivarian government’s commitment to continue Saab’s defense in all international human rights instances.

Iranian Majid Air Defense System Capable of Hitting Targets with High Precision

In an article, the Tasnim News Agency reported that Majid was unveiled in a military parade back in April, 2021. It was equipped with rather small missiles as well as an electro-optical system to detect targets. The system was mounted on a tactical vehicle. It was during that event where the general features of the Majid air defense system became known.

The system has a range of 8000 meters and can detect targets at a maximum altitude of 6000 meters. It can get ready to shoot in three seconds. The information shows that Majid is classified among short-range systems and can operate sooner than artillery and shoulder-fired systems.

As mentioned before, Majid is mounted on a tactical vehicle with off-road capabilities, and can be redeployed in a very short time. This can also be carried by transport aircraft.

Majid is fitted with thermal-optical cameras, meaning it can operate in any climatic conditions, especially at a time of electronic warfare.

The Majid air defense system has been developed to tackle targets at low altitude. It means the system should be able to spot the target and shoot quickly. It should also be able to strike the target with great precision.

Such features are important for all air defense systems, but are particularly significant for a system which serves as the last layer of defense in a strategic region.

Majid is likely to be equipped with explosives as images of an explosion are seen in footage showing the moment a target is destroyed by the system.

The missile fired by the system travels a considerable duration of its overall flight time at ultrasonic speed.

US wasted millions of doses of Covid vaccine

At least 15m doses were scrapped in the US between March and September, according to one analysis of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) data. A separate investigation found 1m doses were discarded in 10 states between December and July.

States continue tossing unused shots. Louisiana has thrown out 224,000 unused doses of the Covid vaccines – a rate that has almost tripled since the end of July, even as a deadly fourth wave of the virus gripped the state. Some of the lost doses came from opening and not finishing vials, but more than 20,000 shots simply expired.

Thousands of doses are reportedly wasted each day in Wisconsin. In Alabama, more than 65,000 doses have been tossed; in Tennessee, it’s almost 200,000.

The wasted doses represent a small fraction of the number of shots administered in these states – in Louisiana, for instance, 4.4m doses have been given out successfully.

But the news comes as millions of people around the world wait for their first doses. Only 1% of the populations of low-income countries had received first shots as of July, compared with more than half of those living in a handful of high-income countries.

Many of the discarded doses came from pharmacies. In May, two pharmacy chains had wasted more doses than US states, territories and federal agencies combined, for almost three-quarters of tossed doses. Now, at least 7.6m discarded doses come from four major pharmacies: Walgreens, CVS, Walmart and Rite Aid.

There are multiple reasons why doses have been wasted: sometimes a vial is cracked or doesn’t contain as many doses as promised; sometimes needles malfunction; freezers break down or the power goes out. Frequently, people don’t show up for appointments, and the dose set aside for them in a vial isn’t used.

But as vaccinations across the country have stalled after peaking in mid-April, a growing issue is simply that the vaccines are expiring amid vaccine hesitancy in the US that is more widespread than first imagined.

Before June, a little over 2m doses had gone to waste, NBC News reported. But over the summer, those figures surged – alongside the virus itself – sixfold as doses expired and vaccinations flagged.

The Biden administration has pushed to use the US vaccine stockpile for boosters, sometimes clashing with scientific agencies on who needs the added protection of an additional shot.

Officials are also working with vaccine manufacturers to reduce the number of doses in each vial.

In the face of global inequities, it’s not as simple as states donating unused vaccines. The doses already distributed to states can’t be repurposed internationally because of bureaucratic and safety concerns around storing the vaccines correctly.

Joe Biden has vowed to vaccinate 70% of the world in the next year, and has committed to donate several million doses for use abroad. But in the meantime, many countries are struggling to provide shots to the most vulnerable and those working on the frontlines of the pandemic, while Americans refuse the immunizations.

Manufacturers should also scale up production to address global shortages, the administration has said. Moderna, for instance, needs to “step up as a company” when it comes to global production of vaccines, David Kessler, the Biden administration’s chief science officer of the Covid-19 response, said on Wednesday.