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Khersin: Most Intact Salt Cave in Iran’s Hormozgan

It’s located in Siaho some 80 kilometers from Hormozgan’s provincial capital, Bandar Abbas.
The cave is made up of slippery salt rocks. Hence, people should be wary when they walk inside the cave.
The entrance of the cave is 3 meters high and 4 meters wide. The cave is 178 meters long.
There is a straight corridor inside that leads spelunkers to the bottom of the cave 170 meters away without any misleading routes on the path.
This is a positive aspect of the cave. Khersin is a village in the north of Hormozgan Province with an arid and dry weather in summer and mild mountainous weather in winter. The salt cave is a national natural landmark.

Wildfire burning Iran’s Kouh-e-Nour forests

That’s according to the head of Boyer Ahmad’s Natural Resources Department. Abbas Hassanzadeh said the fire broke out at 8 pm on Tuesday.

Hassanzadeh added that the Natural Resources Department has deployed three fire fighting teams to contain the blaze.

He added that the fire is raging on in insurmountable parts of Kouh-e Nour, which has caused the firefighters to face an uphill task reaching the site of the fire. There has been no report on the cause of the fire.

Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province is home to 16,249 square kilometers of pasture and 800,000 hectares of forests, which have witnessed 38 fires so far this year.

Acting Taliban FM denounces US actions, calls for ties

In his first address to the media since the Taliban announced its new caretaker government last week, Muttaqi said on Tuesday that the group would not allow “any country” to impose sanctions or embargoes on Afghanistan, including the US.

[We] helped the US until the evacuation of their last person, but unfortunately, the US, instead of thanking us, froze our assets,” he added. 

Since the Taliban took control of the Afghan capital, Kabul, on August 15 as former President Ashraf Ghani fled the country, the US Federal Reserve, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank have cut off Afghanistan’s access to funds, resulting in a widespread liquidity crunch in the cash-dependent economy.

Muttaqi thanked the international community for pledging more than $1bn of aid for Afghanistan at a UN donor conference on Monday.

“We welcome the pledge of emergency aid funding committed to Afghanistan during yesterday’s meeting hosted by the UN in Geneva,” he stated.

No government has yet agreed to formally recognise the Taliban-led administration in Kabul, which could further imperil the Afghan economy, which has been highly dependent on foreign aid for the last 20 years. According to the World Bank, foreign aid makes up some 40 percent of Afghanistan’s gross domestic product.

Muttaqi said the government was willing to work with any country, including the US, but added it will not be “dictated to” by any state.

UN chief Antonio Guterres remarked at the donor conference that it would be “impossible” to provide humanitarian assistance to Afghanistan without engaging with the Taliban.

“I do believe it is very important to engage with the Taliban at the present moment for all aspects that concern the international community,” he noted.

He told ministers that believed aid could be used as leverage with the Taliban to achieve improvements on human rights, amid fears of a return to the brutal rule that characterised the Taliban’s first stint in power from 1996 to 2001.

The European Union’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell on Tuesday stressed the EU has “no other option but to engage with the Taliban”.

Muttaqi urged countries around the world to open formal relations with the Taliban-led government, citing an end to war in the country.

“Security is being maintained across the country,” he added, and stressed that Afghanistan was open for foreign investment.

Muttaqi also said the government would not allow Afghanistan to be used as a base for armed groups to launch attacks on other countries.

In another assurance to the international community, Muttaqi stated that all Afghans are free to leave the nation if they possess the necessary documentation. 

Activists have accused the Taliban of keeping Afghans, including those with proper documentation, from leaving the country during the international evacuation efforts ahead of the August 31 foreign troop withdrawal deadline.

He called reservations expressed by Paris and other capitals, “unfair and unjust”, before restating that the interim government will respect all human rights, including those of women.

However, in recent weeks, the Taliban has come under heavy criticism for its violent crackdown on protests and media outlets covering recent demonstrations in the country.

Despite his criticisms of Washington, whom he accused of destroying Afghan property, including at Kabul’s Hamid Karzai International Airport, Muttaqi expressed the Taliban’s gratitude towards nations including Qatar, Pakistan and Uzbekistan for their delivery of aid to the nation. 

He promised to equally distribute aid among the Afghan people. 

Source: Al-Jazeera

Russia rejects reports of ‘military aspect’ of Iran’s nuclear program

The statement came in response to a New York Times article, which quoted experts who analyzed the latest reports of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) as saying that in approximately one month, Iran could obtain a sufficient amount of nuclear materials to build one nuclear warhead.

“Such speculations are not welcome. It is extremely hard for a non-nuclear state to create a nuclear bomb. There are no signs indicating that Iran is working in this direction. It is nothing but speculation, intended to make waves around the issue when all parties involved need to sit at the negotiating table again together with the United States and solve the problem of restoring the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action,” Ulyanov said.

He added Russia welcomed Iran’s declaration of its readiness to resume negotiations on reviving the nuclear deal.

“The exact date for the resumption of talks is unknown so far. However, an official spokesperson for Iran’s foreign ministry said yesterday that the negotiation process was to resume soon. No such statements have been made by the Iranian side before. Hopefully, this indicates that the Iranians are almost ready to return to the negotiating table in Vienna. If this is the case, we welcome it. We believe that it is high time to do so,” noted Ulyanov, who also represents Russia in the IAEA Board of Governors.

Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh stated at a press conference on September 13 that the republic would resume nuclear deal talks in the Austrian capital of Vienna soon.

States parties to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) (Iran, Russia, the United Kingdom, Germany, China and France) plus the United States held six round of negotiations in Vienna in April-June 2021 in a bid to restore the deal in its original form. The sides took a pause in the negotiations in late June, and have so far been unable to resume the talks due to presidential elections in Iran and subsequent efforts to form a new cabinet in the country.

Source: TASS

South Korea says North launched two ‘ballistic missiles’

South Korea’s JCS noted that it is carefully analysing the information with US intelligence agencies. 

Japan’s Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga condemned North Korea’s launch of ballistic missiles, dubbing the action a threat to peace and security in the region. Suga also ordered to urgently convene the country’s National Security Council.

“North Korea’s ballistic missile launches threaten the peace and security of our country and the region. They are in violation of the UN Security Council’s decisions. We express our strong protest and strongly condemn [them]”, Suga stated.

Prior to the official statement by the South Korean and Japanese authorities, the nations’ media reported about two unidentified projectiles launched within the space of several minutes.

The state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported on September 13 that Pyongyang had carried out a successful test of a cruise missile. North Korean experts reportedly held thrust tests for missile engines on the ground, flight tests, control and guidance tests, and a number of others. The said missiles are reportedly capable of hitting targets at a distance of 1,500 kilometres.

Following the reported launch, Japan’s Defense Minister Nobuo Kishi stated that if the information on the success of North Korea’s cruise missile tests is confirmed, it could become a potential threat to the peace and security of the region.

On September 14, diplomats from Japan, South Korea, and the United States held a trilateral meeting on North Korea in Tokyo. The meeting was attended by US Special Envoy for North Korea Sung Kim, Head of the Japanese Foreign Ministry’s Asian and Oceanian Affairs Bureau Takehiro Funakoshi, and the South Korean Foreign Ministry’s Special Envoy for peace and security on the Korean Peninsula Noh Kyu-duk.

One of the key topics of discussion was a possible response to the statement by Pyongyang about successful missile tests. The parties agreed to continue cooperation on the denuclearisation of North Korea by combining dialogue with North Korean authorities and sanctions pressure.

Source: Yonhap news agency

Iran to pursue assassination of anti-terror icon through legal channels

Speaking at a meeting in the Foreign Ministry with members of a committee tasked with following up the assassination, Amir Abdollahian said the US officials’ role in the assassination of General Soleimani is unforgivable and it’s Iran’s definite policy to bring the state terrorists behind the crime to justice.

The foreign minister noted that the memory of General Soleimani must be kept alive as a national and international anti-terrorism hero.

The members of General Soleimani’s family were present at the meeting in Iran’s Foreign Ministry.

General Soleimani was assassinated along with his companion Abu Mahdi Muhandis in a US drone strike outside Baghdad’s airport in January 2020.

The attack was carried out at the direct order of former US president Donald Trump.

General Soleimani played the key role in defeating Daesh and other terrorist groups in Iraq and Syria and is revered as an anti-terror icon in Iran and the wider region.

EU says has no option but to engage with Taliban

In a speech at the European parliament on Tuesday, the EU’s high representative for foreign affairs said the bloc could only influence future developments by engaging with the new regime.

“The embassies of the member states have been closed and they are not going to reopen but we still have a delegation that can be seen – just not an embassy, as we are not a state,” Borrell continued. 

“[It] can be used if the security conditions are met in order to discuss with the government in a closer way than through video conferences or through messages,” he added.

Borrell described the swift collapse of the previous US-backed government as a “tragedy” that had proven that “nation building” was more difficult than former US president George Bush had ever appreciated.

The former Spanish foreign minister stated the EU would not recognise the Taliban government but that the bloc had much to gain from talking with the new administration.

The EU is setting conditions on its level of engagement with the Taliban, however, including the protection of human rights.

“Maybe it’s a pure oxymoron to talk about human rights but this is what we have to ask them,” Borrell said. 

“To have any chance of influencing events, we have no other option but to engage with the Taliban … engaging means talking, discussing and agreeing when possible,” he added. 

There is concern in Brussels and the EU capitals at a potential migration crisis as more people seek to flee Afghanistan in the coming months.

Borrell noted he had not been encouraged by the make-up of the new government, which includes individuals on a United nations sanctions list.

Borrell told MEPs that he did not believe, however, that the number of people fleeing the country and entering the EU would match those that came after 2015 as Syria was sucked into civil war.

“We don’t want to create a ‘pull effect’ but we want to protect a lot of Afghan people that deserve our protection and we have to discuss with the Taliban how we can offer and make effective these protections,” Borrell added.

Source: The Guardian

Iran to increase nuclear electricity generation capacity to 8MG

Mohammad Eslami was speaking on Tuesday after visiting Iran’s nuclear power plant in the southern city of Bushehr. 

He said the AEOI has plans on building several other nuclear power plants to hit the 8,000 megawatt target. According to the AEOI chief, the power plant’s current electricity generation capacity is 1,000 megawatts and it plays a key role in meeting Iran’s need for electricity. 

He said the government will accelerate funding for construction of the second and third units at the Bushehr nuclear power plant. 

The AEOI chief blamed the delay in completing the construction on funding shortfalls, adding that the construction operation is underway and efforts are being made to complete the units as planned. 

Eslami noted that the Bushehr power plant is working at full capacity and has generated more than 50 billion kilowatts of electricity over the past 15 days. 

Eslami was appointed as Iran’s vice-president and AEOI chief earlier this month. Elsewhere in his remarks, Eslami noted that Iran’s policy is to expand nuclear power as a clean source of energy to meet its current and future needs.

Witness in Netanyahu’s corruption trial killed in plane crash

Haim Geron, the former senior official at Israel’s Ministry of Communications, and his wife were killed off the island of Samos late on Monday. He was one of 300-plus witnesses listed for Netanyahu’s trial.

Greek authorities are investigating the private plane crash that killed Geron.

The former PM is accused of fraud, bribery and breach of trust and the charges centre around his relationships with businessmen, media tycoons and a leading Israeli telecoms firm.

The small Cessna 182 carrying Geron and his wife took off from Haifa in Israel and crashed near Samos airport.

The coastguard and divers recovered the bodies of the two 69-year-old victims a few hours later.

Greece’s air crash investigations unit announced it had started an investigation into the cause of the incident.

“Shortly before landing, communication with the control tower on Samos was lost and the Civil Aviation Authority informed the search and rescue centre about the loss of communication,” said the Air Accident Investigation and Aviation Board.

The Israel’s Foreign Ministry identified the victims and added consular officials were working to repatriate the bodies.

Netanyahu, whose lengthy tenure in power ended earlier this year, has denied the corruption allegations and mocked the size of the witness list.

Source: Sky News

New appointments at Iran’s Foreign Ministry

By virtue of an order from the Iranian foreign minister, Messrs Ali Bagheri, as deputy foreign minister for political affairs; Mohammad Fathali, as  administrative and financial assistant; Mehdi Safari, as deputy foreign minister for economic diplomacy were appointed. The order says: “It is hoped that under God’s auspices and through following the orders of the Leader, you will succeed in realizing the policies and strategies of the diplomatic apparatus, especially balanced, active, dynamic and smart foreign policy, and also in cooperating with the honorable deputies, managers and experts in performing their duties.”

The Iranian foreign minister, in separate rulings, appreciated the services of the former deputies Messrs Seyyed Abbas Araghchi, Ali Abolhassani and Seyyed Rasoul Mohajer, and appointed them as his advisors.

Bagheri served as deputy secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council from 2007 to 2013. Fathali was also former Iranian ambassador to Lebanon. And Mehdi Safari was former Iranian ambassador to Russia, China and Austria.