Tuesday, January 13, 2026
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Iran confirms serious damage at Fordow nuclear facility, reiterates peaceful intentions

Abbas Araghchi

Speaking in an exclusive interview with CBS News, Araghchi stated that no one has precise information yet on the incident but added, “As far as I know, the damage is extensive and severe, and the facility is currently unusable.”

He said the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) is currently assessing the situation and will report its findings to the government. When asked whether Iranian inspectors had accessed the site, Araghchi deferred to the AEOI.

In response to claims by US President Donald Trump that Iranian nuclear facilities were “wiped out” in American attacks, Araghchi acknowledged heavy damage but emphasized that Iran’s enrichment technology is indigenous and cannot be erased by military strikes.

He reiterated that Iran’s nuclear program remains peaceful, guided by a religious fatwa against nuclear weapons.

“We have no intention of pursuing nuclear arms,” he said, adding, “This industry is a matter of national pride, and we will continue to protect and restore it.”

Araghchi also stated that decisions about resuming uranium enrichment will depend on ongoing assessments and strategic policy reviews.

Destructive approach’ by EU a blow to diplomacy: Iran’s foreign minister

In a phone call with EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas on Tuesday, Araghchi denounced what he described as the leniency shown by some parties toward the lawlessness and crimes of the Zionist regime.

He emphasized the responsibility of all governments to condemn the military aggression by Israel and the United States against Iran.

Referring to the open support for the attacks by Germany and some other European governments, Araghchi warned that any statements that implicitly or indirectly justify such blatant violations of international law and the crimes committed by the Israeli regime would be tantamount to complicity in those crimes.

The Iranian foreign minister underscored the Iranian nation’s firm defense of its territorial integrity and national security in the face of Israeli and American military aggression. He described the attack on Iran’s peaceful nuclear facilities and the killing of Iranian civilians as an unprecedented blow to diplomacy, the non-proliferation regime, and UN Security Council Resolution 2231.

Araghchi said the Armed Forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran are fully prepared to defend the nation’s sovereignty against any form of aggression.

“When the Zionist regime ceased its attacks, we halted our defensive operations as a gesture of goodwill. This clearly demonstrates that, unlike the warmongering Zionist entity, the Islamic Republic of Iran neither initiated the war nor seeks its continuation,” he added.

Araghchi also reiterated Iran’s distrust of the United States, stating that “the Israeli and US military attacks occurred while Iran was engaged in negotiations and diplomacy, and it was the US that betrayed the diplomatic process.”

According to a statement by the Iranian Foreign Ministry, Kallas underlined that there is no evidence suggesting Iran is expanding its nuclear program to develop weapons. She underscored the need for a diplomatic solution to the Iranian nuclear issue and expressed support for ongoing efforts to reduce tensions and promote regional stability.

Israel agrees to necessary conditions to finalize 60-day Gaza ceasefire: Trump

Trump

“Israel has agreed to the necessary conditions to finalize the 60 Day CEASEFIRE, during which time we will work with all parties to end the War,” Trump wrote on his social media platform Truth Social.

“The Qataris and Egyptians, who have worked very hard to help bring Peace, will deliver this final proposal,” said Trump.

He also urged Hamas to accept the deal. “I hope, for the good of the Middle East, that Hamas takes this Deal, because it will not get better – IT WILL ONLY GET WORSE,” Trump added.

Despite international calls for a ceasefire, the Israeli army has killed more than 56,500 Palestinians in a deadly onslaught in the Gaza Strip since October 2023.

Last November, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

Israel also faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice for its war on the enclave.

UN rapporteur says dozens of tech firms and corporations profiting from Israeli ‘economy of genocide’

Israeli settlements West Bank

Albanese’s call for action comes in a scathing new report in which she names over 60 companies, including major technology firms like Google, Amazon and Microsoft, alleging their involvement in what she calls “the transformation of Israel’s economy of occupation to an economy of genocide”.

“By shedding light on the political economy of an occupation turned genocidal, the report reveals how the forever-occupation has become the ideal testing ground for arms manufacturers and Big Tech . . . while investors and private and public institutions profit freely,” Albanese writes in the report.

“Too many influential corporate entities remain inextricably financially bound to Israel’s apartheid and militarism.”

The detailed, 24-page report, which is set to be presented to the UN Human Rights Council on Thursday, identifies dozens of corporate actors, including those involved in the arms, technology, construction and energy sectors, which it says are complicit.

They range from companies which the report says are destroying Palestinian life, including weapons companies Elbit Systems and Lockheed Martin, to heavy equipment manufacturers whose machinery is used in building illegal Israeli settlements, such as Caterpillar and HD Hyundai.

The report also focuses on the historic and current role of technology companies which it says have profitted from “the unique testing ground” of the occupied territories, highlighting how the repression of Palestinians has “become progressively automated”.

In October 2023, when Israel’s internal military cloud overloaded, Microsoft Azure and the Project Nimbus Consortium, run by Google and Amazon, “stepped in with critical cloud and AI infrastructure”, the report says.

The report also focuses on AI systems that have been developed by the Israeli military to process and generate targets during the war on Gaza, pointing to the collaboration between Palantir Technology Inc and Israel which predates October 2023.

“There are reasonable grounds to believe Palantir has provided automatic predictive policing technology, core defence infrastructure for rapid and scaled-up construction and deployment of military software, and its Artificial Intelligence Platform, which allows real-time battlefield data integration for automated decision making,” the report added.

It noted 48 of the companies named have been “duly informed of the facts” that led Albanese to make her allegations, 15 of which responded directly to Albanese’s office. Their replies were not published.

Lockheed Martin told MEE that foreign military sales are government-to-government transactions and suggested that the US government was therefore best placed to answer questions about the report.

But these companies are “just the tip of the iceberg”, the report says, adding that Albanese’s office has developed a database of 1,000 entities in total from submissions received in a call for input into the investigation.

The report also finds that since the start of the Israeli assault on Gaza, the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange has risen by 179 percent, adding $157.9bn in market value.

Israel’s mission in Geneva told Reuters that the report was “legally groundless, defamatory and a flagrant abuse of her office”.

Albanese calls on UN member states to impose sanctions and full arms embargos on Israel, and suspend all trade agreements and investor relations on any inviduals or entities that endanger Palestinians.

She also states the International Criminal Court and national judiciaries should pursue investigations and prosecutions of corporate executives and entities for “their part in the commission of international crimes and laundering of the proceeds from those crimes”.

French NGOs file complaint against French-Israeli soldiers over crimes in Gaza

Gaza War

The complaint, submitted with civil party status to the crimes against humanity unit of the Paris judicial court, targets two members of the Israeli military’s elite Ghost Unit.

The soldiers are accused of being involved in the execution of unarmed civilians in Gaza City and Khan Younis between November 2023 and March 2024.

The NGOs said the case is based on investigative reporting by Palestinian journalist Younis Tirawi, who reported on the unit’s operations and its use of precision targeting.

The complaint relies on the French nationality of the soldiers to invoke France’s extraterritorial jurisdiction.

“The mechanism is essential when justice cannot be rendered in the country concerned,” the International Federation for Human Rights said in a statement, highlighting the absence of criminal investigations in Israel and other European states.

The complaint comes amid growing international legal efforts to hold individuals accountable for crimes committed during the Gaza conflict.

In October 2024, Belgium’s Belgo-Palestinian Association filed a similar case against a Belgian-Israeli soldier from the same unit. Human rights organizations said additional complaints are being prepared in Germany and Italy.

At the core of the complaint are allegations of summary executions and the humiliation of civilians, with some incidents reportedly documented in videos shared online.

The NGOs argue that these acts form part of a wider policy that could constitute crimes against humanity and genocide.

According to the International Federation for Human Rights, around 4,000 French nationals are currently serving in the Israeli military.

The organizations say the legal action seeks to establish France’s competence to prosecute international crimes committed abroad and to prompt broader accountability for dual nationals involved in armed operations.

By filing as civil parties, the NGOs aim to trigger a formal investigation and encourage similar legal actions in other countries with universal jurisdiction laws.

They also question the effectiveness of international institutions, including the International Criminal Court, in addressing large-scale atrocities.

Iran says arrested over 50 Israel-linked terrorists in Sistan and Baluchestan

Iran Police

In a Tuesday statement, the Quds Base of the IRGC Ground Forces said that the operation was carried out within a span of two weeks in the southern areas of the province thanks to unprecedented and effective cooperation from the public and timely reports.

The statement added that as part of the ongoing operational exercises, security forces from the Quds Base, the Intelligence Ministry, the IRGC intelligence organization, and the intelligence organization of police, inflicted heavy blows on the enemy’s “proxy terrorist elements.”

The operational objectives of the detained individuals, affiliated with terrorist groups from eastern Iran, included spreading insecurity in the southern part of the province and conducting sabotage and harassment operations targeting economic and infrastructure sectors, according to the statement.

A significant amount of weaponry and ammunition, including American-made arms, was also seized from these individuals.

The statement stressed that efforts to arrest other potential domestic collaborators and those responsible for unrest and insecurity in Sistan and Baluchestan were still ongoing.

Over 170 NGOs call for US and Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation’s closure

The GHF began operating in late May, following a three-month total blockade on the Gaza Strip by Israeli forces. Since then, more than 500 Palestinians have been killed and around 4,000 wounded by Israeli troops while attempting to access food and aid supplies.

“Today, Palestinians in Gaza face an impossible choice: starve or risk being shot while trying desperately to reach food to feed their families,” the NGOs said in a joint statement on Tuesday.

The signatories include Oxfam, Save the Children, Amnesty, Doctors Without Borders and Action Aid.

Previously, during the two-month ceasefire between mid-January and mid-March, 400 aid distribution points were in operation in the enclave. That has now been replaced by four militarised distribution sites, forcing over two million people into crowded zones where they face Israeli gunfire.

“The humanitarian system is being deliberately and systematically dismantled by the Government of Israel’s blockade and restrictions,” the groups wrote.

“A blockade now being used to justify shutting down nearly all other aid operations in favour of a deadly, military-controlled alternative that neither protects civilians nor meets basic needs.”

They added that under the GHF scheme, “starved and weakened” civilians are trekking for hours through “dangerous terrain and active conflict zones”.

Israeli military officials admitted they fired at Palestinian civilians lining up for aid in Gaza even though they posed no threat, according to a report by Haaretz newspaper on Monday.

The admission follows a report by the newspaper on Friday in which Israeli soldiers admitted they were directed to fire at starving civilians at the GHF distribution points in Gaza.

Officials in the Southern Command unit said they were “ordered to fire at unarmed crowds near food distribution sites in Gaza, even when no threat was present” and added “that civilians had been killed due to ‘inaccurate and uncalculated’ artillery fire”.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejected Haaretz’s reporting, labelling it “malicious falsehoods”.

They said that in the most serious incident, between 30 and 40 people were targeted.

“Amidst severe hunger and famine-like conditions, many families tell us they are now too weak to compete for food rations,” the NGOs added.

“Those who do manage to obtain food often return with only a few basic items – nearly impossible to prepare without clean water or fuel to cook with.”

They noted that the Sphere Association, which sets minimum standards for humanitarian aid, warned that the GHF did not adhere to core humanitarian standards and principles.

The groups called for donors not to fund militarised aid schemes that violate international law and “risk complicity in atrocities”, and to take concrete steps to end the suffocating siege on Gaza.

They urged third states to restore a unified UN-led coordination mechanism “grounded in international humanitarian law and inclusive of Unrwa, Palestinian civil society, and the wider humanitarian community”.

Last week, 15 human rights and legal organisations announced the GHF may be complicit in international crimes.

Summer night in Tehran: war entered without knocking

The house, once shared with her mother and the two cats, collapsed in an instant. Beds, mirrors, windows—every memory scattered into the dust. Bleeding, her clothes torn, her hands empty, she ran into the street for help.

These photographs document one of countless places in the world where war arrives uninvited:

Netanyahu says he will visit Washington next week to meet Trump

Trump Netanyahu

“I am expected to leave next week for meetings in the United States, including with President Donald Trump,” Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper quoted Netanyahu as saying during a cabinet meeting.

“These events follow the great victory we achieved in Operation ‘Rising Lion.’ Exploiting success is no less important than achieving success,” he added, in reference to recent airstrikes on Iran.

Trump said Tuesday he hopes a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip will be reached soon.

“We hope (a ceasefire) is going to happen and we’re looking for it to happen sometime next week,” Trump told reporters before departing the White House for the opening of a temporary migrant detention center in Florida.

Later, Trump said he will discuss Gaza and Iran with Netanyahu next week in Washington, DC.

“He’s coming here. We’re going to talk about a lot of things. We’re going to talk about the great success we had in Iran … We’re also going to talk about Gaza,” he stated.

Turkey arrests four over cartoon depicting Abrahamic prophets

The cartoon, published last week, triggered a backlash from government officials and religious groups in Turkiye.

On Tuesday, the Istanbul chief public prosecutor’s office announced a formal investigation under charges of “openly insulting religious values”.

Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya posted a video on X showing the arrest of cartoonist Dogan Pehlevan on Monday.

“I strongly condemn the shameless caricaturing of our Prophet,” Yerlikaya said.

“This is not press freedom. This is not freedom of expression. These provocative acts, which insult our sacred values and deeply hurt Muslim consciences, will not go unpunished.”

He added that a total of six detention orders had been issued. Two people who were overseas have yet to be arrested.

Yerlikaya also stated that the magazine’s graphic designer and two other senior staffers were detained, along with the cartoonist.

Justice Minister Yilmaz Tunc confirmed the investigation is proceeding under Article 216 of the Turkish Penal Code, which criminalises “incitement to hatred and enmity”.

In a statement posted on X, LeMan apologised to readers who were offended but insisted the cartoon had been misinterpreted. The magazine said Pehlevan aimed to highlight “the suffering of a Muslim man killed in Israeli attacks” and denied any attempt to mock Islam.

“The name Muhammad is among the most common in the Muslim world in honour of the Prophet. The cartoon does not portray him, nor was it intended to disrespect religious beliefs,” the magazine added, accusing critics of wilfully distorting its message.

LeMan urged authorities to investigate what it described as a targeted smear campaign and called for stronger protection of press freedom.

Later in the evening, videos surfaced online of crowds of protesters marching to LeMan’s office in Istanbul, kicking the building’s doors and chanting slogans.

The case has reignited debates in Turkiye over the boundaries of free expression and religious sensitivity.