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IAEA chief in Tehran for talks with Iranian officials

Early Sunday, Rafael Manuel Grossi touched down at Imam Khomeini International Airport where he was welcomed by Deputy Chief of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) Behrouz Kamalvandi.

Grossi is in Tehran heading a delegation to hold talks with new AEOI chief Mohammad Eslami.
The visit comes ahead of the meeting of the IAEA’s 35-nation Board of Governors.

The Agency has reportedly informed member states of lack of progress on two central issues regarding Iran’s nuclear program.

Tehran has already warned against any unconstructive move at meeting of the IAEA board of governors.

New production line of Iran anti-Covid vaccine set in motion

That’s according to the managing director of Iranian pharmaceutical company Shifa Pharmed.

According to the source, the machinery purchased for the Covid vaccine production line was imported with delay. It was in fact supposed to arrive in Iran in March or May so that the production line would be able to produce 20 million doses as of September. The delay has been blamed on the confiscation of the machinery at an airport in India on the grounds that Iran was under the US sanctions and also due to Covid restrictions.

Iran has been producing a number of other Covid vaccines like Noura and Fakhra which are going through clinical phases. Thanks to vaccine imports and production, the inoculation process in Iran has accelerated recently.

Authorities hope that the entire population will fully get vaccinated in the next few months. They also hope to export surplus shots abroad.

US Iran envoy calls meetings with E3, EU ‘productive’

Stephan Klement, EU Ambassador and European External Action Service (EEAS) Special Advisor on Iran Nuclear Issue and Robert Malley, US Special Envoy for Iran, from left, talk in front of the 'Hotel Imperial' near to 'Grand Hotel Vienna' where closed-door nuclear talks take place in Vienna, Austria, Sunday, June 20, 2021. (AP Photo/Florian Schroetter)

“Just finished a series of productive meetings in Paris with our EU and E3 colleagues about the future of JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action) talks and the importance of a quick return to mutual compliance,” he wrote on Twitter.

President Joe Biden Iran’s envoy, Malley, also stated on Thursday that he had a “good and constructive” meeting with Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov on the goal of returning to the JCPOA, also known as the Iranian nuclear deal.

“Good & constructive meetings in Moscow with Ryabkov where we discussed our shared goal of a return to negotiations and quick mutual resumption of compliance with the JCPOA,” Malley tweeted.

UN condemns Taliban violence against ‘peaceful rallies in Afghanistan’

The Taliban’s violent crackdown on protests against their hardline rule has already led to four documented deaths, according to a UN human rights official who said the group had used live ammunition, whips and batons to break up demonstrations.

Ravina Shamdasani, the UN’s rights spokesperson, told a briefing in Geneva that it had also received reports of house-to-house searches for those who participated in the protests.

The demonstrations against the Taliban’s return to power, many of which have been led by women fearful of their status under the group, have been the target of violence in a number of locations and were formally banned this week without prior authorisation by the Taliban’s new interior ministry.

Describing the crackdown on dissent as “severe”, Shamdasani also described how journalists covering the demonstrations had faced intimidation, including in one case the threat of “beheading”, apparently a reference to an incident in which two Afghan journalists were detained, flogged and threatened earlier this week.

“We have seen a reaction from the Taliban, which has unfortunately been severe,” Shamdasani stated, adding, “In one case, one journalist was reported to have been told, as he was being kicked in the head, ‘You are lucky you haven’t been beheaded’. Really there has been lots of intimidation of journalists simply trying to do their job.”

“We call on the Taliban to immediately cease the use of force towards, and the arbitrary detention of, those exercising their right to peaceful assembly and the journalists covering the protests,” Shamdasani noted.

The UN’s comments follow increasing concern over the deteriorating human rights environment in Afghanistan since the Taliban swept to power last month in the midst of the US-led withdrawal of foreign forces.

Despite public assurances on media freedom, women’s rights and freedom of expression, the Taliban have rapidly moved to crack down on burgeoning opposition to their return, not least demonstrations that have sprung up in a number of cities.

Earlier this week, in its first move since an interim cabinet consisting entirely of male, Pashto-speaking Taliban loyalists was appointed, the new interior ministry, led by Sirajuddin Haqqani, who is wanted in the US for terrorism, banned protests that had not been pre-authorised by the Taliban.

The UN statement adds weight to widespread reporting by media and rights monitors of serious human rights violations that have emerged since the Taliban took power, including claims of extrajudicial killings, arrests, violence, and suppression of freedom of expression and women’s rights.

With Afghanistan facing a looming humanitarian crisis, the US also reiterated on Thursday the message that help from Washington is contingent on the Taliban’s caretaker government living up to its previously voiced commitments to stability for Afghanistan and the region, and demonstrating widespread inclusion.

The US deputy ambassador, Jeffrey DeLaurentis, speaking at the UN security council on Thursday, stressed the US position once again that “any legitimacy and support will have to be earned”.

He said the standards the international community had set were clear and included facilitating safe passage for Afghans and foreign nationals who wanted to leave Afghanistan and respecting the country’s obligations under international humanitarian law “including those related to the protection of civilians”.

“We’re watching closely to see that those standards are met,” he continued.

DeLaurentis added, “The United States remains committed to the people of Afghanistan”, and stated that, as the country’s largest humanitarian donor, it was helping partners on the ground provide assistance, “but the needs are vast”.

On Friday, the World Food Programme reported that about 93% of households in Afghanistan were not consuming sufficient food after the increase in prices that followed the Taliban’s return to power. A UN development programme appraisal the day before suggested the country could sink into almost universal poverty by next year without international help.

The UN’s concerns were voiced as evacuation flights resumed for foreigners, but thousands of at-risk Afghans who had helped the US were still stranded in their homeland with the US embassy shuttered, all American diplomats and troops gone and the Taliban in charge.

Scores of foreigners, including Americans and Britons, left Afghanistan on the commercial flight out of Kabul on Thursday with the cooperation of the Taliban.

Source: The Guardian

MI5 chief warns of Afghanistan ‘morale boost’ for extremists

Even during the coronavirus pandemic period we have all been enduring for most of the last two years, we have had to disrupt six late-stage attack plots,” McCallum, the head of the UK’s domestic counter-intelligence and security service, told the BBC Radio 4’s Today show.

McCallum said 31 late-stage attack plots had been foiled in the past four years.

“That number includes mainly Islamist attack plots but also a growing number of attack plots from right-wing terrorists,” he added.

“So, the terrorist threat to the UK, I am sorry to say, is a real and enduring thing,” the chief stressed.

Speaking on the eve of the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, McCallum warned that the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan last month had likely “emboldened” lone-wolf extremists in the UK.

While it takes time to build terrorist infrastructure, encouragement to act can come suddenly, he explained, noting, “Overnight, you can have a psychological boost, a morale boost to extremists already here, or in other countries.”

The US-led coalition invaded Afghanistan in 2001 to fight the Taliban and Al-Qaeda, the group behind the 9/11 plot, whose leader Osama Bin Laden was killed in a raid in 2011.

The nearly two-decade-long occupation of the country by NATO member states, including the UK, failed to crush the militants and bring about peace and stability.

The insurgent Taliban overran Afghanistan in a sweeping offensive that culminated in the capture of Kabul on August 15 and ran concurrent with the final stage of the withdrawal of US troops. The last American soldier left the country in late August.

The Taliban’s victory has led to the resurgence of groups such as Al-Qaeda and Daesh in Afghanistan that claimed responsibility for the suicide bombing outside Kabul’s airport that killed 13 US soldiers and nearly 200 Afghan civilians last month amid the frantic evacuation from the capital.

Commenting on the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks in the US, a spokesperson for the Chinese Foreign Ministry on Friday called on countries to cooperate in counter-terrorism efforts and avoid double standards and slander against other countries’ legitimate counter-terrorism and de-radicalization measures.

At a press briefing in Beijing, Zhao Lijian, the spokesperson, also said that the US should learn a “profound lesson” from its 20-year war in Afghanistan, after which terror threats were not eliminated and the number terrorist organizations and foreign terrorists in Afghanistan actually grow.

Biden, Obama, Clinton mark 9/11 anniversary

They were joined by several officials, including former Secretary of State and first lady Hillary Clinton and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. After Biden arrived at the ceremony, he was spotted talking briefly with Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, FBI Director Christopher Wray and Attorney General Merrick Garland also attended the ceremony, according to the White House.

The solemn ceremony at the National September 11th Memorial began with an honor guard representing the New York Police and Fire Departments and the Port Authority Police Department.

Families of people who died in New York, Virginia and Pennsylvania on September 11, 2001, are reading the names of the 2,977 people lost over the course of the emotional ceremony, which began at 8:40 am Saturday morning. The ceremony also remembers the six lives lost during the February 26, 1993, World Trade Center bombing.

The attendees observed moments of silence at 8:46 am, the time the first plane hit the North Tower of the World Trade Center; at 9:03 am, when the second plane hit the South Tower; at 9:37 am, when the plane struck the Pentagon; at 9:59 am, the time of the fall of the South Tower on September 11, 2001; at 10:03 am, when Flight 93 crashed in an empty field near Shanksville, Pa.; and at 10:28 am, the time of the fall of the North Tower on September 11, 2001.

The president and first lady left the memorial just before 10 am to travel to Shanksville to participate in a wreath laying ceremony commemorating those who died on Flight 93 at the memorial site there. Biden will later return to Washington, D.C., to participate in a wreath laying ceremony at the Pentagon.

Biden is not scheduled to deliver remarks during the day on Saturday, but he instead released a video statement on Friday recognizing the lives lost in the deadliest attack in US history that took place 20 years ago and calling for national unity.

“To me, that’s the central message of September 11. It’s that at our most vulnerable, in the push and pull of all that makes us human and the bottom for the soul of America, unity is our greatest strength. Unity doesn’t mean that we have to believe the same thing but we must have a fundamental respect and faith in each other and in this nation,” Biden said in the six-minute video.

“That is the task before us, not just to lead by the example of our power, but to lead by the power of our example. And I know we can,” he added.

Vice President Kamala Harris will deliver remarks at the Shanksville memorial later Saturday morning. Former President George W. Bush, who was president at the time of the 2001 terror attacks, will also speak.

Other officials, like Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Mark Milley, participated in a Saturday morning ceremony at the Pentagon and recognized the sacrifice of service members who fought in the war in Afghanistan that was precipitated by the 9/11 attacks.

“As Secretary of Defense and a veteran of the Afghan war, let me underscore again how much we owe to all those who fought and to all those who fell while serving our country in Afghanistan,” Austin said in remarks.

“As the years march on, we must ensure that all our fellow Americans know and understand what happened here on 9/11 and in Manhattan and in Shanksville, Pa. It is our responsibility to remember and it is our duty to defend democracym” he added.

Former President Donald Trump, who released a two-minute video Saturday morning marking September 11 that mostly criticized Biden’s withdrawal of US troops in Afghanistan, is not expected to attend any of the ceremonies. He is expected to provide commentary at a boxing match later Saturday.

Source: The Hill

China rules out double standards in fighting terrorism

“Terrorists are terrorists. Defining terrorists based on political self-interest is essentially condoning terrorist activities, which seriously undermines the international counter-terrorism cooperation,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian said.

China opposes any country using the guise of protecting ethnic minority groups or freedom of religion to attack others’ legitimate anti-terrorism and de-extremism measures, or to condone or even use terrorist organizations to seek geopolitical self-interest, he added.

Zhao made the remarks when asked to comment on the 20th anniversary of the September 11, 2001 terror attacks in the United States at a daily briefing in Beijing on Friday.

The US went to war in Afghanistan after the 9/11 attacks. It completed a withdrawal from the country last month.

Zhao stated, instead of being eradicated, the number of terrorist organizations and foreign terrorist fighters on Afghan soil had increased during America’s 20-year war in the country.

Calling the US the culprit of the Afghan issue, Zhao said the end of its military intervention should be the beginning of its assumption of responsibilities.

The US should help Afghanistan realize stability and prevent chaos, contain the threat of terrorism and move toward sound development, added the spokesman.

Zhao also noted that important progress has been made in international cooperation on counter-terrorism over the past 20 years.

He warned, however, that the situation is still complicated and grave, with terrorists’ abuse of new technologies or their possible use of the COVID-19 pandemic to incite terrorist activities.

Source: CGTN

Iranian drama “Zalava” wins grand prize at Venice Intl. Film Critics’ Week

The movie is set in a remote mountainous Kurdish village called “Zalava”, in western Iran, in 1978. The drama pits science against superstition as a skeptical military officer investigates reports of demonic possessions and finds his beliefs tested by a mysterious exorcist.

In their joint statement, jurors praised Arsalan Amiri’s “fresh talent” and “playful cinematic language”. They also lauded the movie’s clear stance against “superstition and ignorance.”

In February, Amiri’s drama received the award for best directorial debut at the 39th Fajr Film Festival in the Iranian capital Tehran.

Former French minister charged over handling of coronavirus

Buzyn has been indicted for “endangering the lives of others” as part of an ongoing investigation into the COVID-19 crisis in the country.

The investigation into the mishandling of the pandemic in France was opened in July of 2020.

Buzyn, who served as the country’s health minister from May 2017 to February 2020, was summoned to appear in front of the judges on Friday.

The hearing was conducted in the Law Court of the Republic, a special court which deals with complaints against serving or former ministers.

She has been accused of “voluntarily abstaining from fighting a disaster” and “putting the lives of others at risk”.

Current French Health Minister Olivier Veran is reportedly also expected to be summoned by the same judges in the coming weeks.

Source: Le Parisien

Tehran confirms IAEA chief visit to Iran

Kamalvandi said Grossi will meet the AEOI’s head Mohamams Eslami on different issues including Tehran’s cooperation with the IAEA on Sunday.

Kamalvandi said Grossi will leave for Vienna after talks with Eslami. Reuters has cited the IAEA as saying that the agency informed member states this week there had been no progress on two central issues regarding explaining uranium traces found at several old, undeclared sites and getting urgent access to some monitoring equipment so the agency can continue to keep track of parts of Iran’s nuclear program as provided for by the 2015 deal.

Iran has said all its nuclear activities are legal and within the framework of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. It also says it won’t allow IAEA inspections of its sites beyond the Safeguards Agreement.

Meanwhile, Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi has warned the IAEA over the consequences of its “unconstructive” attitude towards Tehran. Raisi said the IAEA approach could derail talks to fully revive the Iran nuclear deal.

Western members of the agency must decide whether to push for a resolution criticizing Iran over the IAEA’s claims at next week’s meeting of the agency’s 35-nation Board of Governors. A resolution could endanger talks on the nuclear deal.