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Iran sets record in anti-covid vaccination drive

That’s according to official figures released by Iran’s Health Ministry.

So far, 19,982,954 people have received the first jab of the vaccine while 10,355,300 others have been fully inoculated. The total number of vaccinated people is 30,338,254.

Meanwhile, authorities said on Tuesday 635 more people died of Covid over the past 24 hours, pushing the total death toll to 111,892.

The vaccination process in Iran was slow initially but it has now gained steam. Authorities say the entire population will be vaccinated against Covid within the next few months.

BBC Likely Helped Assassination of Panjshir’s Fahim Dashti

Dashti’s death was confirmed by the Panjshir front but there were contradictory reports on the circumstances of his death.

Now there are speculations that point the finger at BBC Persian for helping the attackers locate Dashti’s whereabouts before his killing.

This is about a strange move by the British broadcaster as they aired a live phone interview with Dashti, before his death.

During the interview, the BBC cut Dashti’s image and voice to show his phone number on the monitors. This is said to have helped attackers trace Dashti’s location through his phone number.

According to IRIB, this is an assassination method previously used time and again by Israel against resistance forces in Lebanon and Palestine.

According to the NRF, Dashti, along with a local anti-Taliban commander, was killed in a volley of helicopter and drone strikes that hit Panjshir’s capital Monday.

There are reports that blame the attacks on Pakistan, which is accused of harboring close ties with the Taliban.

Fahim Dashti was a nephew to Abdullah Abdullah, the former Afghan chief executive officer who led the High Council for National Reconciliation. Dashti was a well-known journalist and at some point chaired the country’s National Journalists Association. He was once critically injured in the suicide attack that killed Ahmad Shah Masoud, the iconic military commander, 21 years ago.

Heavy clashes continue in Afghanistan’s Panjshir

“Since Sunday night, the positions of resistance fighters have been attacked by drones, so many of them had to retreat and leave for high-mountain areas. On Monday, intensive clashes continued and they have been underway until now,” a source close to the National Resistance Front (NRF) in the region told TASS on Tuesday.

The source noted that the fighting is also underway in Andarab district in the neighboring Baghlan province.
According to the source, due to the tense situation in the Panjshir Gorge and constant shelling on the part of the Taliban “the majority of local residents left their homes and went high into the mountains”.

Additionally, the source confirmed information that the Taliban made public earlier that the movement managed to capture the office of the region’s governor as well as the mausoleum of Ahmad Shah Massoud (1953-2001), the father of Ahmad Massoud who leads the armed resistance in the province.

On Monday, Taliban Spokesperson Zabiullah Mujahid reported that Panjshir was completely controlled by the Taliban and the war on Afghanistan’s territory was over.
In his turn, Ahmad Massoud announced that the resistance to the radicals continues, urging all Afghanistan’s citizens to join the national uprising.

Representative of the resistance fighters Ali Maisam Nazary specified later that the resistance is adopting the guerilla war tactics.

After the Joe Biden administration had announced the end of Washington’s 20-year-long military operation in Afghanistan and the launch of its troop pullout, the Taliban embarked on an offensive against Afghan government forces.

On August 15, Taliban fighters swept into Kabul without encountering any resistance, and gained full control over the Afghan capital within a few hours. Afghanistan’s President Ashraf Ghani claimed he had stepped down to prevent any bloodshed and subsequently fled the country. Vice President Amrullah Saleh announced that, in the absence of the head of state, the constitution empowered him to become the caretaker president and urged the Afghan people to join the resistance against the Taliban.

UK Labour leader slams PM’s handling of Afghanistan withdrawal

Prime Minister Boris Johnson during a virtual press conference at Downing Street, London, following the announcement that the legal limit on social gatherings is set to be reduced from 30 people to six. The change in the law in England will come into force on Monday as the Government seeks to curb the rise in coronavirus cases. PA Photo. Picture date: Wednesday September 9, 2020. See PA story HEALTH Coronavirus . Photo credit should read: Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire

Johnson has been accused by of being “incapable of international leadership”, as he described people eligible for evacuation left behind in Afghanistan as a “national disgrace”.

The labour leader’s remarks came as the prime minister defended the 20-year intervention in the region, insisting the armed forces enabled millions of girls to go to school while protecting the UK from terrorism.

Speaking after Johnson provided an update to MPs, Starmer claimed the government did not have a plan for to “get everybody out” of the country, who remain eligible for sanctuary in Britain, following the closure of Kabul international airport last week.

“There is no international agreement on resettlement of Afghan refugees,” the labour leader said, adding, “We have a prime minister incapable of international leadership, just when we need it most”.

He noted, “History will tell the tale of Operation Pitting as on of immense bravery. We are proud of all those who contributed, their story made even more remarkable by the fact whilst they were saving lives political leadership was missing in action”.

The Conservative MP Tobias Ellwood, who also chairs the Commons Defense Committee, stated that the limits of UK and Western influence had been “exposed” by the crisis in Afghanistan.

“There’s now a void of leadership in the West and NATO,” he continued, insisting the government needed a “complete overhaul of Whitehall to upgrade our strategic thinking” and foreign policy if Britain wanted to fill the void.

During the debate on Monday, Johnson also told Theresa May — his predecessor in No 10 — that the government had “no direct information as yet” over any increase to the UK’s terror threat following the fall of Afghanistan to the Taliban insurgency.

In his update, the prime minister said 15,000 people were brought to safety during the evacuation, but revealed 311 people eligible to come to the UK through a special resettlement scheme remain in Afghanistan.

He stated of those people, 192 had responded to calls, adding, “We will do absolutely everything we can to ensure that those people get the safe passage that they deserve using the levers that I have described”.

Referring to the imminent 20th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Johnson told MPs, “If anyone is still tempted to say that we have achieved nothing in that country in twenty years, tell them that our armed forces and those of our allies enabled 3.6 million girls to go to school.”

“Tell them that this country and the Western world were protected from Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan throughout that period; and tell them we have just mounted the biggest humanitarian airlift in recent history.”

Source: The Independent

Hezbollah praises Palestinians prison break as ‘strong slap in face’ of Israel

Expressing congratulations to Palestinian people and resistance groups on the success of the prison break, Hezbollah praised in a statement on Monday the operation as an “unique achievement” and said it was highly commendable.

“The operation was a one-of-a-kind achievement and a strong slap in the face of the Israeli occupation forces as well as their strict security measures,” the statement added.

The Lebanese resistance movement noted, “It is a further evidence of the vitality, smartness, patience and continuous struggle of the Palestinian people to liberate their land and prisoners”.

Hezbollah stressed that the achievement is regarded as a new chance to highlight the plight of Palestinian prisoners at the regime’s jails, and an opportunity to expose Israel’s abusive practices as well as the serious violations of the Palestinian prisoners’ rights.

Israeli media reported on Monday that at least six Palestinian prisoners had escaped from the maximum security Gilbao Prison overnight, with regime troops launching a manhunt to arrest them.

Five of the prisoners were said to belong to the Palestinian resistance movement Islamic Jihad.

The cellmates, serving life sentences, are believed to have fled through an underground tunnel from the Israeli prison, which they had managed to dig over the past few months.

Source: Press TV

Third person dies in Japan after receiving contaminated Moderna vaccine

A 49-year-old man in Japan died last month after he was given a dose of Moderna Inc.’s COVID-19 vaccine that was among batches later recalled from use by its local distributor, the health ministry said Monday.

Moderna and Takeda Pharmaceutical Co. announced last Wednesday they would recall three lots of the vaccine after stainless steel contaminants were found in some vials.

The man’s dose came from one of the three lots that had also contained doses used on two men in their 30s who died in Japan after receiving their second shots in August, the ministry added.

No foreign matter has been confirmed in either of the vials.

The 49-year-old man, who was allergic to buckwheat, received his second shot on August 11 and his death was confirmed on the morning of the following day, according to the ministry.

It stated any causal relationship between his inoculation and death remains unknown.

When announcing the recall, Moderna and Takeda noted, “Stainless steel is routinely used in heart valves, joint replacements and metal sutures and staples. As such, it is not expected that injection of the particles identified in these lots in Japan would result in increased medical risk.”

The cause of death in the three cases is still being investigated.

Source: The Japan Times

Taliban opens fire to disperse Anti-Pakistan rally in Afghan capital

On Tuesday, hundreds of people rallied outside the Pakistani Embassy in Kabul, holding banners and chanting against what they stated was meddling by Islamabad, who have long been accused of having close ties to the Taliban movement.

In videos shared by local journalists on social media, the crowds were heard shouting slogans like “death to Pakistan”, “we don’t want a Pakistani puppet government” and “Pakistan, leave Afghanistan”, among others.

Pakistan’s espionage agency, which has gained notoriety for supporting terror groups against India, is believed to be working with the Taliban and laying the groundwork for the new government in the country where a US-led alliance fought a war against terror for 20 years.

“ISI stay away,” reads a placard in the hands of a woman at the rally outside the Pakistani Embassy in the Afghan capital.

According to report, Taliban members fired shots into the air to disperse the crowds.

Pakistan’s intelligence chief Faiz Hameed was in Kabul at the weekend, reportedly to be briefed by his country’s ambassador but is likely to have also met with Taliban officials.

The Taliban have yet to announce a government, but Afghans – fearful of a repeat of the group’s previous brutal reign between 1996 and 2001 – have staged small demonstrations in cities including Kabul, Herat and Mazar-i-Sharif.

Tuesday’s protest comes after the Taliban claimed total control over Afghanistan a day earlier. The Taliban’s announcement has been rejected by its rivals, who insisted that the fighting continues.

Source: Agence France-Presse and NDTV

Iran Closely Monitoring Afghanistan Developments: Top Commander

“We cannot remain indifferent toward the people of Afghanistan,” Brigadier General Esmail Qaani, the commander of the Quds Force of Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC), was quoted as saying by MP Seyyed Nezamodding Mousavi.

“Based on remarks by general Qaani, what is going on in Afghanistan and the decisions made by Afghan people are very important to the Iranian Establishment and people,” added Mousavi.

“Comments by general Qaani and reports we have received from relevant diplomacy and security apparatuses show that Iran has a thorough grasp of the issue of Afghanistan, meaning Iran’s foreign policy, security and defense apparatuses have not been caught unawares by these developments,” the parliamentarian added.

“The developments we see in Afghanistan today have a background dating back to more than 20 years, and what is going on in Afghanistan today began five or six years ago until they got to this point,” said Mousavi, spokesman for the presiding board of the parliament.

He added Iran had already tried to hold meetings between the warring sides in Afghanistan.
“These intra-Afghan negotiations were held, and Iran’s initiative in that regard was welcomed,” he explained.

Top senator predicts US forces back in Afghanistan soon

“We will be going back to Afghanistan as we went back into Iraq and Syria,” Graham said in an interview with BBC.

Replying to BBC HARDTalk Presenter Stephen Sackur, who asked whether he sincerely believes that Washington will be willing to go back to the country that is now under de-facto control of the Taliban, Graham stated that Washington simply had no other choice.

“We’ll have to because the [terror] threat will be so large,” the senator argued, adding that Afghanistan could turn into a hotspot for what he called “radical Islamic behavior”, as well as a safe haven for Al-Qaeda terrorists.

According to Graham, concerns for the rise of terrorist elements is exactly the reason why the US “went back” to Iraq, where “5,000 troops” are stationed today.

BBC reported in July following the talks between Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi and Joe Biden that there were currently 2,500 US troops in Iraq helping local forces to repel the Daesh (also known as ISIL or ISIS) threat.

Graham claims that the US has few options regarding should deal with the current situation in Afghanistan.

“Here is my solution: help the resistance in the Panjshir valley, the Taliban will not be able to govern Afghanistan, they are hated by the Afghan people. What’s gonna happen over time as you see the resistance rise? ISIS will come after the Taliban large and the entire country is going to fracture in the next year, creating a perfect storm for Western interests to be attacked,” he continued.

The Republican senator said that in response, the United States could either take a “that’s no longer my problem” stance or a “hit before they hit you” approach.

Last month, Graham stated in the interview with CBS that he feared that a “parade of horribles” was about to unfold in Afghanistan, adding, “The chance of another 9/11 just went through the roof.”

The senator had previously called for the impeachment of Biden over the Afghan withdrawal fiasco and evacuation chaos, saying that the US president had “been derelict in his duties as commander-in-chief”.

“I don’t think he got bad advice and took it. I think he ignored sound advice,” Graham raged, adding, “I think the best you could describe is dereliction of duty at the highest level.”

The Taliban forces took Afghanistan’s capital Kabul on August 15 almost without a fight, and proclaimed the end of the 20-year-long war the next day. The militants still continued fighting the National Resistance Front in the province of Panjshir, the only territory in Afghanistan which is believed to not have fallen under the group’s control. However, the Taliban had announced several times in the last few days that the group had finally managed to capture the province, with the National Resistance Front repeatedly refuting these claims.

Israeli fighter jets bomb Gaza Strip in nighttime raid

On Monday night, Israeli warplanes attacked several sites in the besieged Gaza Strip causing damage but no injuries.

The regime’s fighter jets attacked three sites in and around Khan Younis in the south of the Gaza Strip causing fire and damage to property nearby.

Israel claims the attack was in retaliation to the firing of incendiary balloons from Gaza into bordering towns causing fire in the fields.

Source: WAFA news agency