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Vaccination Not Enough to Contain 6th Covid Surge: Iranian Official

“Predictions suggest that a sixth wave of the disease may strike,” said Mohammadmehdi Gooya, the head of the Contagious Diseases Management Center of the Ministry of Health and Medical Treatment.

With the cold season closing in, he said, and students beginning to attend classes, there could be another coronavirus peak ahead.

Nevertheless, he explained, several factors, including inoculation, could set back the upcoming wave to some extent.

“But if we think that only vaccination can control this disease, we are mistaken,” he noted.

“Vaccination alone cannot control this disease; rather, observing health protocols, especially wearing masks, washing hands, not attending unnecessary gathers plus other factors can be effective,” said Gooya.

He also stressed the need for proper ventilation in crowded, indoor spaces.

Elsewhere in his remarks, he said citizens who have already received two doses of the Sinopharm coronavirus vaccine may be given a third jab depending on the results of the studies underway.

According to the news website, www.iribnews.ir, upwards of 47.7 million citizens have received the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine and over 22.8 million have got their second-dose jabs. That means at least 50 million Iranians need to receive the second-dose vaccination in order for the nation to reach a point of collective security.

Myanmar’s military chief not invited to ASEAN summit

The decision was made at the meeting of the ASEAN foreign ministers on Friday in which the ministers discussed Myanmar’s junta failure to live up to the commitments under a peace roadmap.  

A Southeast Asia summit this month will invite a non-political representative from Myanmar, Brunei said on Saturday, sidelining the leader of the military junta in an unprecedented move for the group.

The decision by foreign ministers from the ASEAN, at an emergency meeting on Friday night, marks a shift for the bloc, which has traditionally favoured a policy of engagement and non-interference.

The meeting was called to address the failure of Myanmar’s junta, which seized power in February, to adhere to a peace roadmap it had agreed to with ASEAN in April, aimed at tackling the fallout from the coup led by Min Aung Hlaing.

International pressure has been building on ASEAN to take a tougher position on Myanmar’s failure to take the agreed steps to end the violence, allow humanitarian access and start dialogue with its opponents.

More than 1,000 civilians have been killed by Myanmar security forces and thousands arrested, according to the United Nations, amid a crackdown on strikes and protests which has derailed the country’s tentative democracy and prompted international condemnation.

In a statement, ASEAN’s current chair Brunei announced a non-political figure from Myanmar would be invited to the Oct. 26-28 summit, after no consensus was reached for a political representative to attend.

“As there had been insufficient progress… as well as concerns over Myanmar’s commitment, in particular on establishing constructive dialogue among all concerned parties, some ASEAN Member States recommended that ASEAN give space to Myanmar to restore its internal affairs and return to normalcy,” Brunei added.

The statement did not mention Min Aung Hlaing or name the non-political figure to be invited in his stead.

Brunei stated some member states had received requests from Myanmar’s National Unity Government, formed by opponents of the junta, to attend the summit.

Foreign ministers in Friday’s meeting emphasised the importance of giving ASEAN’s envoy to Myanmar, Erywan Yusof, access to all parties concerned, Brunei said.

A long-planned visit by the envoy to Myanmar has been delayed in recent weeks, with Erywan insisting on meeting all parties, including deposed leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who has been detained on various charges since the coup.

Junta spokesman Zaw Min Tun noted this week  that Erywan would be welcome in the country but would not be allowed to meet Suu Kyi because she is charged with crimes.

US offers ‘condolence payments’ for families of Afghans killed in drone strike

The US military is offering “condolence payments” to a family in Afghanistan after a badly planned drone strike killed 10 civilians, including seven children, in the country’s capital in August, though did not provide any numbers.

Pentagon spokesman John Kirby revealed the offer on Friday, stating that Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin made a “commitment” to the Akhmadi family for compensation following the August 29 drone strike, “including offering ex gratia condolence payments” and State Department assistance in relocating family members to the United States.

The offer was raised during a virtual meeting between Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Colin Kahl and Dr. Steven Kwon, who employed one of the Akhmadis killed in the strike at his US-based aid organization, Nutrition & Education International, long active in Afghanistan.

“Kahl noted that the strike was a tragic mistake and that Mr. Zemari Akhmadi and others who were killed were innocent victims who bore no blame and were not affiliated with Daesh or threats to US forces,” Kirby added.

The Pentagon initially deemed the strike a success, claiming to have killed an Islamic State militant planning attacks on American troops in Kabul, with Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley even calling it “righteous”. However, thanks in large part to a New York Times investigation that raised serious questions about the military’s narrative about the drone strike, officials were soon forced to admit the operation failed to take a single terrorist off the battlefield and instead massacred an innocent family. 

The misidentified main target of the attack, Zemari Akhmadi, was employed as an aid worker with Nutrition & Education International for years, the Times investigation revealed. He was killed as he pulled into his driveway outside his home, with the Pentagon originally claiming he was seen loading explosives into the vehicle earlier in the day. The Times, however, obtained security footage showing Akhmadi loading jugs of water into his vehicle, suggesting the military may have mistaken them for bombs.

Among the youngest of the victims were Malika Akhmadi and Sumaya Yousoufi, both two years old, who were reportedly gathered with family at the Kabul home for a celebration. 

“They say Daesh lived in this house. In this house, were these children members of Islamic State?” Sumaya’s father, Jamshid Yousoufi, said in an interview with RT last month.

Malika’s dad, Emal, also recalled his last time seeing his daughter in another sit-down with RT. 

“On the morning of the bombing, she came and kissed me, and said: ‘Good morning, Father.’ It was our last meeting. I will never see her again,” he said, adding that no amount of money could possibly make up for his family’s loss. 

“No one can compensate us. If you give us all the money in the world, it will not be enough. It’s not possible. They can’t compensate for the murder of a child, and there is no remedy for this loss,” he stated.

While the Pentagon was more or less compelled to admit the August 29 operation was a failure – the last officially acknowledged strike in the longest war in American history – it follows countless similar incidents throughout the conflict. Though the Pentagon had long been opaque with its casualty reporting, last year it issued a first-of-its-kind report to Congress outlining other condolence payments made in 2019. During that year, 65 payments were made in Afghanistan, six in Iraq and none anywhere else.

The military did not disclose the amounts it would pay out to the Akhmadi family. However, previous condolence payments have been criticized as paltry in the past, with relatives of victims in one strike in Kunduz in 2015 receiving just $6,000. Civilians wounded in the same operation were paid $3,000.

“The money is obviously not enough compared to the life of my daughter,” noted Abdul Ghadir, who was compensated $6,000 after his 12-year-old girl was killed in the Kunduz strike.

“I had no other choice but to accept what they gave me,” he continued.

Persepolis officially protests unfair seat allocation, delays in S Arabia

The Iranian club lodged the protest after it arrived 15 minutes behind schedule at Prince Faisal bin Fahd Stadium for training on Friday morning.

Perspolis Football Director Afshin Peyrovani and other representatives of the team urged local officials, as well the Asian Football Confederation to not allow these problems to happen again because this has disrupted their training and recovery schedule.

Peyrovani also protested against the injustice in the allocation of seats for the match.

The Iranian club has sent an official protest letter to the AFC.

Also on Wednesday, players and coaches of Persepolis had to head back home from Tehran Mehrabad Airport after their flight to Saudi Arabia was canceled because the kingdom failed to issue a permit for their flight. The team flew to Saudi Arabia on Thursday evening instead.

Persepolis will face Al Hilal at Prince Faisal bin Fahd Stadium in Riyadh on Saturday evening.

Bolton on Trump’s COVID negligence, Afghanistan exit, Iran regime change

Speaking with RT’s Afshin Rattansi, Bolton remained true to his hawkish foreign policy views, addressing the recent US pullout from Kabul, the rise of Islamic State Khorasan (ISIS-K), sanctions against Iran, Cuba and Venezuela, the 2018 bombing of Syria, and more.

Bolton served as Trump’s national security advisor from April 2018 to September 2019, and frequently clashed with the 45th president on how aggressive the US policy should be. He was fired after Trump called for US withdrawal from Afghanistan – something he still considers a mistake. 

Calling Trump’s peace deal with the Taliban “flawed in many respects,” Bolton said it was essentially adopted by President Joe Biden, who disregarded warnings from the Pentagon, State Department and the White House to plow ahead. 

“This is a retreat by the US from the international stage, something Biden believed in since at least 2009, ironically Trump believed in it too. I think it’s a mistake for the US, I think it’s a mistake for global stability, certainly it’s a mistake for the people of Afghanistan,” Bolton told Rattansi, arguing that the Taliban takeover will lead to the country once again serving as a base for terrorists.

Bolton also doubled down on overthrowing the government in Tehran – something the US has been trying to do for decades – calling it deeply unpopular among the Iranian people.

“It’s only through regime change in Iran that you’re gonna get a strategic decision there not to pursue nuclear weapons,” he said.

He brushed away Rattansi’s question about the 1953 US-UK coup that overthrew the democratic government of Mohammad Mossadegh, arguing it was the right thing to do and not connected with the 1979 revolution that established the Islamic Republic.

Asked if the US sanctions against Iran were worth the deaths of civilians – a question once memorably asked of his predecessor as the US envoy to the UN, Madeleine Albright – Bolton dodged. The deaths weren’t caused by the sanctions themselves, but the “mishandling” of the Iranian economy and “corruption” by the government, he stated.

He also insisted sanctions against Cuba were absolutely working, pointing to “very large demonstrations” in July, though they seem to have petered out after a couple of weeks.

Bolton has nursed a vendetta against Trump ever since his dismissal, blaming him for many things in a memoir published in 2020. Speaking with RT, he also blamed the 45th president for the US response to the coronavirus pandemic.

Answering the frequent accusation that he dismantled the pandemic preparedness unit at the National Security Council, Bolton noted he didn’t abolish it, but “did something really bureaucratically quite responsible: I merged it with the biological weapons unit of the NSC.”

That unit did its job, he insisted, raising red flags in January, but “Trump’s unwillingness to take Covid seriously in the beginning” because of the election was the problem, Bolton told Rattansi.

Daesh claims responsibility for Kandahar mosque blast

The Daesh terror group claimed responsibility late Friday for a deadly mosque attack in Afghanistan that killed at least 47 people and wounded dozens in the southern province of Kandahar. 

The attack on the Fatimiya mosque was carried out by two suicide bombers, according to a statement circulated by the terror group on social media.

It came one week after a bombing, claimed by the local Daesh affiliate, killed 46 at a Shia mosque in the northern Afghanistan province of Kunduz.

Iran’s Private Sector Ready to Operate in Lebanon: Official

“No government had been established in Lebanon for around 13 months. Moreover, the issue of the coronavirus pandemic, US sanctions and issues in banking relations as well as last year’s Beirut port explosion have been among impediments to the expansion of relations between the two countries in economic and trade areas,” said Mirmasoud Hosseinian, the director general of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Islamic Republic of Iran’s Department for Middle East and North Africa.

The top diplomat added efforts are being made to hold an Iran-Lebanon joint economic commission by the end of this year.

He said the private sector can conduct activities in Lebanon in a variety of fields.

“At the moment, the main problem facing Lebanon is economic issues, and we can play an important role in this regard by exporting technical and engineering services,” the official said in an exclusive interview with the Iranian Students News Agency (ISNA).

“Iran has not violated the laws of the Lebanese government in this regard. A great part of Lebanon’s economy is run by the private sector, and we have sold fuel to businessmen of the private sector in Lebanon, and Hezbollah has supported and managed this idea,” he explained.

He further added Iran intends to keep sending fuel to Lebanon as several other fuel shipments are scheduled to be dispatched to the Arab country.

This is while Iran has already sent several fuel consignments to Lebanon.

Elsewhere in his remarks, the official said Lebanese authorities have welcomed talks between Iran and Saudi Arabia.

“Iran and Saudi Arabia are two major countries in the region, and if relations between the two countries improve, it will influence Iran’s ties with a large number of countries in the Persian Gulf region and North Africa,” he said.

He also touched upon Iran-Egypt relations, and said the two countries have numerous issues.

“We hope these issues will soon be resolved,” he said.

Turkey urges world to engage with Taliban

Turkey has called on the international community to help the Taliban overcome Afghanistan’s humanitarian crisis, officials said after holding talks with the group’s leaders, adding that this does not imply formal recognition.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu received his acting counterpart Amir Khan Muttaqi in Ankara, as Afghanistan’s new government continues its diplomatic push for support.

Speaking after the closed-door talks, Cavusoglu urged international engagement with the Taliban.

“We have told the international community about the importance of engagement with the current Taliban administration. In fact, recognition and engagement are two different things,” he stated.

“The Afghan economy should not collapse. Therefore, we have said the countries that froze Afghanistan’s accounts abroad should act more flexibly so that salaries can be paid,” he continued.

The World Bank halted funds to Afghanistan after the Taliban swept back to power in August. The international community has condemned the group’s actions in some provinces, where they brought back public hangings and barred women and girls from going to school or returning to work.

Turkey has sought to use its position as the only Muslim-majority member of the NATO defence alliance to secure a greater role in Afghanistan after the US troop withdrawal.

Cavusoglu said he had urged the Taliban to uphold women’s rights, including access to jobs and education.

“We asked them not to see this as a precondition or a demand, but that this is also the expectation of the other Muslim countries,” he added.

Turkey’s foreign minister also stressed the need to ensure security at the airport before regular flights could resume.

“Today, we explained to them once more the expectations on the issue of security – not only ours but the entire international aviation community – for running the airport and especially the start of regular flights,” he stressed.

The Taliban representative has been holding talks with foreign officials, warning them that Western sanctions will further undermine security in Afghanistan.

The meeting between Turkey’s foreign minister and the high-level delegation of Taliban rulers was the first since the group’s takeover of the country.

It comes after Taliban leaders held a series of talks with the United States, 10 European nations and European Union representatives in Qatar earlier this week.

Turkey, which hosts more than 3.6 million Syrians, has warned European countries that it will not accept an influx of migrants from Afghanistan.

Sixth Peak in COVID-19 Lurking ahead for Iranians

According to the news website, www.iribnews.ir ,  upwards of 47.7 million citizens have received the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine and over 22.8 million have got their second-dose jabs That means at least 50 million Iranians need to receive the second-dose vaccination in order for the nation to reach a point of collective security.

This is while the trend of observing health protocols, namely wearing masks, is on the decline as over half of the country’s population now venture into public places without wearing masks.

Moreover, the National Coronavirus Task Force is to lift Covid restrictions like in the past and replace them with a smart plan.

All these ambiguities can make the situation difficult when the sixth surge in coronavirus infections and deaths hits. 

As we remember, we had several tough and tragic months during the fifth peak in the disease.

The number of cases and fatalities during the fifth wave was so high that we now show no reaction to the deaths of some 100 coronavirus patients per day and regard it as normal. This comes as there was talk of pushing the daily COVID-19 deaths to below 50.

Epidemiologist Masoud Younesian says the nation has been harmed whenever it has regarded the pandemic as something ordinary.  

“Vaccination is necessary to prevent infection with coronavirus, but it is not sufficient,” he says. 

“We’d better not lift the restrictions hastily because we need some time until most of the population receive both doses of the vaccine,” he adds.

Meanwhile Health Minsiter Bahram Einollahi says the necessary measures have been adopted to deal with a possible sixth peak in Covid-19 in the country.

“We hope with the huge amount of the vaccine administered and thanks to people observing health protocols, the next peak will be less severe than the previous one,” he explains.

“[Medical] personnel, doctors, nurses and scientific committees are on alert, and given the experience we have gained in the past, there are no worries as far as treatment is concerned,” he says.

China warns US over irresponsible remarks on Taiwan

Taiwan island is China’s territory and the US is in no position to point fingers over the Taiwan question, Beijing stressed, slamming US Defense Department Spokesperson John Kirby’s statement on recent military exercises conducted by the Chinese People’s Liberation Army near the island of Taiwan.

For some time now, the US has been making negative moves to sell arms to Taiwan and strengthen official and military ties with the island, including the launch of a $750 million arms sale plan, the landing of US military aircraft on the island and frequent sailing of US warships across the Taiwan Straits. These provocative actions damage China-US relations and undermine regional peace and stability, said Zhao Lijian, spokesperson of the Chinese Foreign Ministry. 

Kirby had told reporters that the US commitment to Taiwan is “rock solid” and that “the US is united with Taiwan against the current danger posed by the People’s Republic of China”.

The remarks by the US senior official seriously violate the one-China principle and the provisions of the three China-US joint communiqués, sending an extremely wrong and irresponsible signal to the outside world, Zhao stated. 

The one-China principle is the political foundation of China-US relations. On the Taiwan question, the US should abide by the principle and the joint communiqués, rather than something it has unilaterally cooked up, Zhao added. 

“Taiwan independence” is a dead end, and the Chinese mainland will take all necessary measures to resolutely crush any attempt at “Taiwan independence”. China’s resolve and will to safeguard national sovereignty and territorial integrity are firm, Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Hua Chunying has also stressed at previous routine press briefing, urging the US to correct its mistakes and stop supporting secessionists in the island. 

On Wednesday, official Twitter accounts of the US State Department posted photos and tweets of Under Secretary of State José Fernandez and Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Daniel Kritenbrink respectively meeting with Taipei Economic and Cultural “Representative” Bi-khim Hsiao, claiming that the US commitment to Taiwan remains rock-solid, and the US will further strengthen ties with Taiwan. Media reports said that the US has invited Hsu Yen-pu, Taiwan’s “Army Commander,” to visit the US.

American leaders and senior officials have repeatedly stated that the US has never had any intention of changing its one-China policy. However, its words and deeds have repeatedly shown that such commitments are nothing but empty words. The US should stop its clumsy tactic of saying one thing while doing another, the Chinese Embassy in the US announced. 

The embassy warned the US not to fantasize about seeking China’s support and cooperation while wantonly challenging China’s red line on the Taiwan question, adding that China will never accept it.

On Wednesday, Ma Xiaoguang, spokesperson for the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council, mocked an official from the island’s legislative department for daydreaming that the island could “establish diplomatic relations with the US before 2028”. Ma added the official would not see his daydream come true even when he enters coffin.