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Man Turns into Attraction after Selling Cold Drinks for 30 Years!

Ali Tagari (which literally means cold), has been selling cold drinks along the street for over 30 years. He is very well-known in the south-western city of Ahvaz to such an extent that some say he has become a tourist attraction himself.

Ali began his job in 1987 when Iraq’s imposed war on Iran ended. At that time Ali and his two brothers were looking for a job to make a living. Finally, they decided to buy a few boxes of beverages, and sell cold drinks in the hot weather of Khorram Koushk Street in Ahvaz.

This street was very crowded at that time, and still after 30 years, Ali is selling these drinks. On the corner of a sidewalk, there is a pot full of ice cubes and soft drinks!

The key to Ali’s success is his sociability. Ali Tagari is a man who does not even have a shop to sell beverages, but has managed to cope with the difficulties for many years.

Cold carbonated soft drinks, lemonade, and non-alcoholic beer have turned this 53-year-old man into one of Khuzestan’s tourism brands and attractions, so much so that every stranger loves to take a photo with him.

Iran to Become Self-Sufficient in Aircraft Engine Production: Top General

Iran Will Definitely Change Approach to UAE: Top General

In a meeting with the Defence Ministry’s personnel on Saturday, Major General Baqeri highlighted the major advances that Iran has made in the military and defence sector, particularly in the aviation industry.

The Islamic Republic has been making steady progress in the production of aircraft engines in recent years, the general said, describing the engine technology as the main subject in the propulsion systems in the course of manufacturing aircraft, missiles, drones and many other equipment.

Baqeri said development of the technical know-how to make engines began with the local production of a number of simple components, adding that Iran is now on the verge of manufacturing the engines of modern jets and helicopters and achieving full self-sufficiency in developing such systems.

What makes Iranian technicians’ achievements outstanding is that the self-sufficiency has been gained under the foreign sanctions, he added.

The senior commander also highlighted the great contribution that the military sector has made to non-military industries, referring to the supply of critical auto parts for the local carmakers by the Defence Ministry.

In August 2016, Iran unveiled a domestically-made turbojet engine, dubbed Owj.

Iranian military technicians have in recent years made great headways in manufacturing a broad range of indigenous equipment, making the armed forces self-sufficient in the arms sphere.

Tehran has always assured other nations that its military might poses no threat to regional countries, saying that the Islamic Republic’s defence doctrine is entirely based on deterrence.

Iraq’s Interior Minister in Iran for Arba’een Coordination

Upon arrival in Tehran’s Imam Khomeini International Airport, Yassin Taha al-Yasseri was welcomed by Iranian Deputy Interior Minister for Economic Affairs Dinparast.

During a meeting at the airport, the Iranian official expressed hope that the Iraqi minister’s meetings in Tehran would pave the way for further promotion of Iran-Iraq ties in various fields, especially in facilitating the presence of millions of pilgrims in Arba’een.

Al-Yasseri is to hold talks with his Iranian counterpart Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli later on Saturday.

The two sides are to hold talks over re-opening Khosravi border crossing in Iran’s Kermanshah province to further ease the passage of millions of pilgrims during this year’s Arba’een.

Last month, Iraq removed visa requirements for Iranian pilgrims going to the Arab country for Arba’een rituals based on an agreement signed by the two sides in Tehran.

The deal was signed by Iranian Deputy Interior Minister Hossein Zolfaqari and his Iraqi counterpart in a meeting held in Tehran on Monday morning.

Based on the deal, from now on Arba’een pilgrims can enter Iraq with their passports and letters of insurance.

The long-awaited agreement came after repeated calls by Iran for a visa-free regime in order to facilitate the visit of Iranian pilgrims to the neighbouring state.

Around 2 million Iranians normally visit Iraq during the period, which coincides with the 40th day of the martyrdom of Imam Hussein (AS), the third Shiite imam whose shrine is in the holy city of Karbala, in central Iraq.

The Arba’een mourning ceremony is one of the largest religious gatherings in the world.

Last year, around 20 million pilgrims from all over the world gathered in Karbala on Arba’een.

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on August 17

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on November 5

19 Dey:

1- Nasrallah Expresses Solidarity with Zarif

2- Rouhani’s Chief of Staff: UK’s Release of Iranian Tanker a Diplomatic Victory for Entire Establishment

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on August 17


 

Abrar:

1- Araqchi: We’re Not after War, but Will Respond to Any Aggression Strongly

2- US Threatens Crew of Grace-1 Tanker with Sanctions

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on August 17


 

Aftab-e Yazd:

1- Britain Backs Off: Iran’s Diplomatic, Military Moves Work

2- UK Humiliated US by Releasing Iran’s Tanker: Analyst

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on August 17


 

Ebtekar:

1- Fate of Piracy

2- Corbyn against Johnson: Labour Leader Seeking to Oust New PM

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on August 17


 

Etemad:

1- Military Might, Diplomatic Victory

2- Between Tehran and Washington [Editorial]

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on August 17


 

Ettela’at:

1- Judiciary Chief: It’s End of Life of Those Involved in Financial Corruption

2- Forex Market in Iran Getting Stable, Predictable: Chief Banker

3- Any Attack on Iran to Set Region Ablaze: Nasrallah

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on August 17


 

Hamshahri:

1- Adrian, Free in the Sea

* Grace-1 Tanker Renamed to Adrian Darya after Release

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on August 17


 

Javan:

1- Iran Dictates Its Might; UK Defeated by Logic of Resistance

2- IRGC Chief: All Border Peaks in Northwestern Iran under IRGC’s Control

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on August 17


 

Jomhouri Eslami:

1- US, UK’s Piracy Failed

2- Nasrallah in Letter to Zarif: Your Presence Strengthened with US Sanctions

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on August 17


 

Kayhan:

1- Nigerian Shiites’ Leader Declines Treatment with Humiliation

2- Nasrallah: Israel’s Destruction to Be Aired Live

3- Iran’s Oil Tanker Released: Resistance 20 – 0 Negotiation

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on August 17


 

Khorasan:

1- Trump’s Economy Shaken

* Is US Entering Economic Recession after Downfall of Wall Street Stock Exchange Market?

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on August 17


 

Shargh:

1- Release of Iran’s Tanker in Defiance of Trump

2- From Tanker Seizure to Deployment in Strait of Hormuz

3- Release of Tanker: De-Escalation or Political Compromise?

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on August 17

Tehran Hosting Exhibition of Villagers, Nomads’ Capabilities

The exhibition focuses on local rituals and ceremonies, puppet theatre, various rural and nomadic programs, and rural start-ups. Folklore music and dance is also a popular part of the event.

Moreover, the villagers and nomads seize the chance to offer their products directly to the costumers in the fair.

The exhibition was inaugurated on August 15 in the presence of senior officials including First Vice-President Es’haq Jahangiri, Vice-President for Women Affairs Massoumeh Ebtekar, and Mohammad Omid, who is Jahangiri’s deputy for Development of Rural Affairs and Deprived Areas.

What follows are photos of the exhibition, which will be open to visitors until August 18:

Colourful Fantasies of Down Syndrome Patient Displayed in Tehran

Kishani started painting three years ago. Now she is a fairly experienced artist. The paintings of Down syndrome patients exclusively root in their inner lives: it is more of a tool to pour out their emotions.

Without any education in art basics and artistic styles, Kishani has created various paintings in different phases of her work. Some are childlike images that show the artists’ perception of her surroundings: people, animals, cities, plants- the elements of daily life depicted simply and purely as seen with an innocent eye.

Some other paintings are far from reality, illustrating Kishani’s explorations in the realm of colour and form, like abstract paintings shaped by colour stains or colour poured on the canvas. Although the majority of these paintings contain no precious forms of external stuff, sometimes you can recognize an object, a flower pot for example.

The artists’ painting, coming out directly from her heart and subconscious, can be considered primary figures that exist in anybody’s spirit: one just needs to make an effort to express them.

What follows are Honar Online’s photos of the exhibition which wrapped up on August 14:

US Sanctions Killing Cancer Patients in Iran: Report

Iranian kid suffering from cancer / Photo by Getty Images

Last month, the US Department of State released a video addressed to the people of Iran. In the video, Trump administration official Brian Hook claims that it is a “myth” that sanctions target Iran’s access to medicine. For more than a decade, my fellow Iranian medical professionals and I have been struggling to protect patients from the fallout of US sanctions. We have studied sanctions impacts on Iran’s health care sector and advocated for better responses from our own government. Our findings make clear that the harms being inflicted on Iranian patients are not mythology.

Today’s integrated and interconnected world depends on banking systems and trade networks that are dominated by the United States. Consequently, the US government is able to use economic sanctions to cause harm to economic, political, and even social relations in target countries with relative ease.

Although US sanctions are engineered in a way that may appear not to target humanitarian access to food and medicine, in practice US sanctions function as a tool of economic war. Officials in Washington continue to insist that they maintain “exemptions” to their sanctions to protect humanitarian trade, even after the International Court of Justice has ruled that these exemptions are insufficient, leaving “little prospect of improvement” in the “serious detrimental impact on the health and lives” of Iranians individuals. At the end of the day, it is incumbent on the United States to heed this humanitarian warning.

Under US President Donald Trump, the situation has gotten worse. Census Bureau data shows that the United States exported an average of $26 million of pharmaceutical products to Iran annually during the Barack Obama-era sanctions. Exports have averaged just $8.6 million a year in the last two years under the more draconian sanctions policies of Trump.

The Trump administration has also made it more difficult for European countries to export medicine to Iran. Swiss pharmaceutical exports to Iran fell 30 percent from 235 million Swiss francs ($240 million) in 2017 to 163 million francs ($167 million) last year, according to Swiss customs data. Even though sanctions were only fully re-imposed in November 2018, Swiss exports that year fell below the 173 million francs ($178 million) annual average observed from 2008 to 2015.

Similarly, French pharmaceutical exports to Iran fell 25 percent from 194 million euros ($218 million) to 146 million euros ($164 million) last year, slipping below the 2008 to 2015 average of 150 million euros ($168 million), according to data from Eurostat.

In response to such pressures, and as part of its post-revolution policies of self-sufficiency, Iran has made important strides in safeguarding its people’s access to medication. Iran is a world leader in the production of generic drugs, helping significantly lower the cost of health care. According to Akbar Barandegi, director general of Iran’s Food and Drug Administration, almost 97 percent of the country’s needed pharmaceutical doses are provided by about 100 local pharmaceutical companies, most of which belong to the private sector. Just 3 percent of demand is met with imports, purchased from many of the world’s largest pharmaceutical companies.

These purchases may form only just a small proportion of total demand, but they relate to specific medications vital for the well-being of many patients, particularly those with advanced or chronic diseases.

Last year, several of my colleagues who work in the field of paediatric oncology published a note in the Lancet showing that chemotherapy drugs such as asparaginase, the leukaemia treatment mercaptopurine, and even the basic pain killer paracetamol had run out of stock, threatening the treatment of thousands of children. Access to these medications is being significantly disrupted as a result of US sanctions against Iran. This disruption takes three primary forms.

First, sanctions impact the availability of imports. While imports represent just 3 percent of Iran’s total demand by unit, they account for 39 percent of the country’s needs by value, reflecting the fact that imported medicines are typically five times more expensive than domestically-made equivalents and the fact that Iran tends to import specialized drugs, which are generally more expensive.

Just as with raw materials, banking restrictions have made it more difficult for Iranian importers to pay European and Asian suppliers for medicine. Shortages of imported medicines and skyrocketing costs are putting the most vulnerable patients—those with rare or advanced diseases—at the greatest risk.

There is particular concern over the risk to paediatric cancer patients. In this face of these import disruptions, opportunists have begun smuggling counterfeit and low-quality medicines into Iran through routes from Pakistan, Turkey, and the United Arab Emirates. Should disruptions grow worse, it could also lead to introduction of counterfeit or impure ingredients to domestically-manufactured medications, leading to not only low-quality drugs, but also new public health risks.

Second, sanctions interrupt domestic production by interrupting supply chains. Iran’s pharmaceutical manufacturers use over 10,000 different compounds in their production processes. The pressure of US sanctions and the chilling effect on international banks have already made it impossible for many suppliers to reliably receive payment for raw materials sold to Iran. Some medications require 15 substances from different manufacturers in various countries in order to be produced. The absence of even one substance brings the production of that medicine to a halt.

Finally, the impact of sanctions on Iran’s economy hurts health care providers and consumers alike by reducing purchasing power. Lower government revenues and reduced access to foreign currency put a strain on health care spending, making imported drugs more difficult to afford for patients even when hospitals have them in stock.  According to data released by the Central Bank of Iran, the cost of health care in Iran rose nearly 20 percent between November 2017 and November 2018.

Declining output will also create unemployment. The Iranian Pharmaceutical Industries Syndicate estimates that pharmaceutical manufacturers employ approximately 25,000 staff, while a further 100,000 workers are employed in distribution companies, pharmacies, and aftersales support. These workers are some of Iran’s best and brightest, and around 20 percent of those employed are university graduates. Their futures are at stake.

What may seem like sterile banking sanctions are truly much more dangerous. These sanctions disrupt the access of the Iranian public—especially the poor, the elderly, children, women, and patients suffering from chronic diseases—to the medications they require.

Medicines become more expensive and of worse quality. An unreliable supply chain leads to incomplete treatment of diseases and their becoming chronic. The crisis deepens when the slowdown in domestic production increases the country’s need to import drugs. All this is happening against the backdrop of the Iranian government’s strained resources as it is forced to import medicines at a higher price tag in those instances when a banking channel is available.

Responsible leaders in the United States recognize that there is little to gain by smothering humanitarian trade. European governments have sought clarity on humanitarian trade, only to be rebuffed. This forced France, Germany, and the United Kingdom to establish a special purpose vehicle, called INSTEX, to try to facilitate humanitarian trade. Iranians welcome this move, but the United States should not shirk its moral responsibilities. The Swiss government is negotiating directly with the Trump administration on a banking channel for humanitarian trade, but its efforts have so far been blocked by officials who are seeking the most extreme interpretation of “maximum pressure.” Iran’s European suppliers understand that this situation is dire, but the Trump administration remains unaccommodating.

During the Iran-Iraq War, the United States turned a blind eye to Saddam Hussein’s use of chemical and biological warfare against Iranian and Kurdish soldiers and civilians. Most damningly, the United States not only refused to place sanctions on Iraq to deter use of nerve agents, but it also refused to aid Iran’s access to the antidotes required to treat the victims of chemical attacks.

I happen to be one of those victims; Saddam’s chemical weapons burned my lungs and eyes, causing lifelong injuries for which I continue to take medication, and which have gotten progressively worse in my old age. Seared in my memory are the hundreds of victims I saw in warzone emergency facilities near the Iran-Iraq border who had little or no access to treatment equipment, especially antidotes.

Nearly 40 years on, the US government continues to suffer from the same moral failures, and I continue to witness the results up close. Though I have survived this unconventional war, many of my countrymen and my patients have not—and their sanctions-induced deaths are not a myth.

 

* Article by Abbas Kebriaeezadeh, a professor of pharmacology at the Tehran University of Medical Sciences. He is vice chairman of the Iranian Pharmaceutical Industries Syndicate and chairman of Baran Chemical and Pharmaceutical Company.

US Issues Warrant to Seize Iranian Tanker Released by Gibraltar

This picture shows the Iran-operated Grace 1 off the coast of Gibraltar on August 15, 2019. (AFP photo)

On Thursday, Gibraltar’s government announced it was releasing the supertanker seized by British Marines in the Strait of Gibraltar despite pressure from the US for the vessel’s continued detainment.

The warrant unveiled on Friday read, “A seizure warrant and forfeiture complaint were unsealed today in the US District Court for the District of Columbia alleging that Oil Tanker “Grace 1,” all petroleum aboard it and $995,000.00 are subject to forfeiture based on violations of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), bank fraud statute, and money laundering statute, as well as separately the terrorism forfeiture statute.”

The DOJ also alleged that there had been “a scheme to unlawfully access the US financial system to support illicit shipments to Syria from Iran.”

Britain’s naval forces unlawfully seized the Grace 1 and its cargo of 2.1 million barrels of oil in the Strait of Gibraltar on July 4 under the pretext that the supertanker had been suspected of carrying crude to Syria in violation of the European Union’s unilateral sanctions against the Arab country.

Tehran, however, rejected London’s claim that the tanker was heading to Syria, slamming the seizure as “maritime piracy.”

Following the incident, Spain’s Foreign Ministry reported that the UK had seized the vessel at the request of the US, which has been trying to trouble Iran’s international oil vessels as part of its campaign of economic pressure against the Islamic Republic.

The Gibraltar government had also said the US applied to seize the oil tanker after a report by British media that the vessel’s release was imminent.

Iran’s Ports and Maritime Organization said Tuesday that Britain was expected to soon free the Grace 1, after the two sides exchanged certain documents to pave the way for the supertanker’s release.

Iranian Lab Doing Tests on Monkeys to Treat Ocular Diseases

According to the laboratory manager, it seeks to provide an interdisciplinary environment for educational and research activities and collaborations to expand the activities of professors and researchers in various fields of cognitive neuroscience. It is also necessary for the development of young and capable human resources in this field.

To this end, laboratory studies have been conducted on a monkey investigating the neural mechanisms of controlling visual perception and eye movements.

Researchers conducting cognitive studies on these monkeys hope they can acquire a better understanding of the animal’s brain. Such cognitive behaviours will also provide effective strategies for treating diseases in the systems of perception and eye movement disorders.

Iran recently hosted a conference for researchers and professors in the field of cognitive neuroscience to present solutions to transform challenges into effective opportunities in a bid to facilitate research and educational activities and to make use of potentialities for more useful cooperation.

At another meeting, a neuroscientific research was conducted at the Ferdowsi University of Mashhad’s vision and eye-movement laboratory to better understand the brain and cognitive motions of this type of monkeys.

Iran Says Gave No Promise for Oil Tanker Release

“Iran has made no commitment for the release of the Grace 1 tanker,” Mousavi said on Friday, denying reports that Tehran has given written promise that the Grace-1 oil tanker will not berth at a Syrian port in violation of the EU sanctions.

“As we said earlier … Syria was not its destination and we have upheld the same … and reiterated that it was nobody’s business even if it was Syria,” Mousavi said.

His comments came after Fabian Picardo, chief minister for the British territory, said the detention order was lifted after written assurances from Tehran that the ship would not discharge oil in Syria in violation of European Union sanctions.

“They have made such claims in order to save face,” Mousavi said.

He also stressed that the country will continue to sell its oil to any of its old and new customers.

On Friday, the supertanker Grace-1 was renamed to “Adrian Darya” and reflagged under the Iranian flag upon the ship owner’s request, a senior Iranian official said, as the vessel prepares to leave Gibraltar.

“Based on the owner’s request, the oil tanker Grace 1 will depart for the Mediterranean after being reflagged under the Iranian flag and renamed Adrian Darya after preparing for the journey,” Iran’s state TV quoted Jalil Eslami, deputy head of Iran’s Ports and Maritime Organisation, as saying.

“The 25-member crew will start their journey after preparations, including refueling,” Eslami said.

The Grace-1 was seized by British Royal Marine commandos off the coast of the territory at the western mouth of the Mediterranean on July 4 on suspicion of violating European Union sanctions by taking oil to Syria, a claim Iran has denied.

Britain’s Mediterranean territory Gibraltar decided on Thursday to free the Panama-flagged tanker, and announced that the vessel can set sail on Friday.

The release came after the United States launched a new, last-minute legal bid to hold it, but to no avail.