Tuesday, December 23, 2025
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Tehran emergency services report 357 deaths in eight days as air pollution calls surge

According to Mohammad Esmaeil Tavakoli, head of Tehran Province EMS, 31% of the 57,000 emergency calls received during this period were related to pollution-induced health issues.

Speaking on a television program, Tavakoli said EMS has no legal obligation to station ambulances in public squares during pollution episodes, explaining that earlier policies had been revised.
He emphasized that the Ministry of Health is responsible for responding to public health needs, with EMS acting as its pre-hospital arm.

Tavakoli noted that in November, when the latest pollution wave began, EMS received 227,000 calls and conducted 93,000 missions, 22% of which were linked to poor air quality. In the most recent eight-day period, emergency missions rose to 28,000, with cardiac and respiratory complaints making up 31% of cases.

He also highlighted structural shortages, citing a deficit of 400 EMS stations and 500 ambulances in Tehran Province.

Although the system operates helicopters, fixed-wing aircraft and 240 motorlances, heavy traffic and the city’s geography limit response capacity.

Tavakoli urged authorities to address systemic gaps and asked the public to trust that emergency services remain fully operational despite the strain.

Egypt trains Palestinians for future Gaza police force

Gaza Strip

Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty announced the plan to train 5,000 officers for Gaza during talks with Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa in August.

A first group of more than 500 officers were trained in Cairo in March and since September the two-month courses have resumed to welcome hundreds more people, the Palestinian official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

He added all members of the force will be from the Gaza Strip and paid by the Palestinian Authority, which is based in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank.

“I’m very happy with the training. We want a permanent end to war and aggression, and we’re eager to serve our country and fellow citizens,” stated a 26-year-old Palestinian police officer.

He told AFP he hoped the security force would be “independent, loyal only to Palestine and not subject to external alliances or objectives”.

“We received outstanding operational training, with modern equipment for border surveillance,” said a Palestinian lieutenant who also requested anonymity for security reasons, as did everyone interviewed by AFP.

The lieutenant, who left Gaza with his family last year, added the training focused on the fallout of the October 2023 Hamas attack on Israel that triggered the war and the damage done to the Palestinian cause.

Hamas’s attack on Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,200 people.

Israel’s retaliatory assault on Gaza has killed at least 70,100 people, according to figures from the territory’s health ministry that the UN considers reliable.

The training also highlighted the role of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) as the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people and stressed the importance of “protecting the dream of creating” a fully sovereign and independent Palestinian state.

A senior security official from the Palestinian Authority confirmed that its President Mahmoud Abbas had instructed Interior Minister Ziad Hab al-Reeh to coordinate with Egypt on the training.

During talks sponsored by Egypt late last year, the Palestinian movements — including the two main ones, Hamas and Abbas’s Fatah — agreed to a force of around 10,000 police officers.

Egypt would train half of them while the other 5,000 would come from the police force in Gaza, which has been under Hamas control since the militant group seized power there in 2007.

Under the agreement, the security force would be supervised by a committee of technocrats approved by the Palestinian movements.

A senior Hamas official confirmed to AFP that the movement supported “the details regarding security and management of the Gaza Strip” agreed during the talks.

The subject was also addressed in US President Donald Trump’s peace plan, which led to last month’s fragile Gaza ceasefire, and was later endorsed by a UN Security Council resolution.

The plan notably authorises the creation of an international force that would be responsible for securing border areas and demilitarising Gaza.

The European Union also wants to train up to 3,000 Palestinian police officers in the Gaza Strip under a scheme similar to one it already runs in the West Bank, an EU official told AFP.

The EU has financed a police training mission in the West Bank since 2006, with a budget of around 13 million euros ($15 million).

But many details remain up in the air.

A Hamas official questioned to AFP the possibility of an agreement with Israel on the precise details of a police force in Gaza.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government opposes any role for Hamas or the Palestinian Authority in Gaza after the war ends.

AFP journalists have regularly observed that Hamas maintains armed men in Gaza to ensure traffic flows and to mediate disputes between residents, effectively providing a form of law enforcement.

Hamas has announced it no longer wants to govern Gaza but added that it does not intend to disappear and remains a central part of Palestinian political life.

On the thorny issue of disarmament, Hamas has stated it is not opposed to handing over part of its arsenal, but only as part of a Palestinian political process.

 

Four die in Iran after drinking bootleg alcohol, three detained

Ambulance Iran

The sale and consumption of alcohol has been banned in Iran since the 1979 Islamic revolution, leading to a huge illicit trade in bootleg products, some of them adulterated. Only non-Muslim minorities in Iran, which include Christians, Jews and Zoroastrians, are exempt from the alcohol ban, provided they do not drink in public.

“The consumption of homemade alcoholic beverages has led to the deaths of four people and the poisoning of five others in (southeastern) Iranshahr over the past 24 hours,” state news agency IRNA reported late Saturday, quoting a local medical official.

“Two injured people are in intensive care,” he was quoted as saying.

Police in Iranshahr have “identified and arrested three of the alcohol distributors”, IRNA added.

In October 2024, authorities executed four people who had been convicted of selling contaminated bootleg alcohol that had fatally poisoned 17 people the previous year.

 

Iran confiscates Eswatini-flagged vessel for smuggling fuel

IRGC Boat

“We seized a vessel carrying smuggled fuel in the form of gasoil and flying Swaziland’s (Eswatini) flag. It was brought to Bushehr’s coast following a judicial order and its content will be unloaded,” a navy commander said.

He added that the vessel’s 13 crew were from India and one neighbouring country.

 

Saudi deputy foreign minister visits Tehran for bilateral and regional talks

Iran and Saudi Arabia Flags

According to the ministry, the visit aims to facilitate discussions on bilateral relations as well as regional developments, including the situation in the occupied Palestinian territories, Lebanon and Syria.

The trip comes amid continued efforts by Tehran and Riyadh to strengthen dialogue following the restoration of diplomatic ties last year.

Al-Sati is scheduled to meet Iran’s foreign minister during his stay in Tehran. Iranian officials say such exchanges are part of a broader framework designed to manage regional issues through direct engagement and to expand areas of cooperation where possible.

Israel has ‘de facto state policy’ of organised torture: UN

The UN committee on torture expressed “deep concern over allegations of repeated severe beatings, dog attacks, electrocution, waterboarding, use of prolonged stress positions [and] sexual violence”.

The report, published as part of the committee’s regular monitoring of parties that have signed the UN convention against torture, also said Palestinian detainees were humiliated by “being made to act like animals or being urinated on”, were systematically denied medical care and subject to excessive use of restraints, “in some cases resulting in amputation”.

The UN committee of 10 independent experts raised concern about the wholesale use of Israel’s unlawful combatants law to justify the prolonged detention without trial of thousands of Palestinian men, women and children. The latest figures published by the Israeli human rights group B’Tselem announced that as of the end of September the Israel Prison Service was holding 3,474 Palestinians in “administrative detention”, meaning without trial.

The new UN report, covering a two-year period since the beginning of the Gaza war on 7 October 2023, draws attention to the “high proportion of children who are currently detained without charge or on remand”, noting the age of criminal responsibility imposed by Israel is 12, and that children younger than 12 have also been detained.

Children categorised as security prisoners, the report added, “have severe restrictions on family contact, may be held in solitary confinement, and do not have access to education, in violation of international standards”. It appeals to Israel to amend its legislation so that solitary confinement is not used against children.

The UN committee, which was established to monitor implementation of the 1984 UN convention against torture, goes further, arguing that the daily imposition of Israeli policies in occupied Palestine, taken as a whole, “may amount to torture”.

The report said 75 Palestinians had died in custody over the course of the Gaza war, during which detention conditions for Palestinians had undergone a “marked deterioration”. It found the death toll to be “abnormally high and appears to have exclusively affected the Palestinian detainee population”. It added that “to date, no state officials have been held responsible or accountable for such deaths”.

Israel’s government has repeatedly denied the use of torture. The UN committee heard evidence from representatives of Israel’s foreign ministry, justice ministry and prison service who argued that prison conditions were adequate and subject to supervision.

However, the committee pointed out that the inspector charged with investigating complaints on interrogations had brought “no criminal prosecutions for acts of torture and ill-treatment” over the past two years, despite widespread allegations of such practices.

It noted that Israel had pointed to just one conviction for torture or ill-treatment in that two-year period, an apparent reference to an Israeli soldier sentenced in February this year for repeatedly attacking bound and blindfolded detainees from Gaza with his fists, a baton and his assault rifle. In that case, the committee found that the seven-month sentence “appears not to reflect the severity of the offence”.

The report was published on a day when three Israeli border police officers were released after questioning over the fatal shooting of two Palestinians who had been detained in Jenin.

Video of the incident on Thursday evening showed the two men, Youssef Asasa and Mahmoud Abdallah, crawling out of a building. Asasa and Abdallah can be seen holding their hands up and lifting their shirts to show they are unarmed.

The men, both claimed by Palestinian Islamic Jihad as fighters in its al-Quds Brigades, were detained for a few seconds by border police officers, including a bald-headed officer with a beard who appears in the video to take charge and kick both detainees before making a gesture, seemingly ushering them back inside the building. Seconds later Asasa and Abdallah were shot by the officers at a range of about 2 metres.

According to Israeli media, the three border officers questioned on Friday about the incident claimed they “felt an immediate and tangible threat” to their lives. In their reported account of what happened the two detainees had refused to strip naked and had “put their hands in their pockets”, and then one of the men tried to “escape back into the building”.

The video from the scene, the authenticity of which has not been disputed by the Israeli authorities, does not show any obvious resistance from the two men, nor does it show them with their hands in their pockets. They appear to be reluctant to re-enter the building under the apparent orders from the border police officer.

The three border police officers were released after questioning on condition they did not discuss the case with others.

 

Iran’s foreign trade surpasses $76.5 billion in first eight months of year

Iran Trade

The figures show that overall trade value declined 9.38% compared with the same period last year, while total weight increased by 1.53%.

Exports stood at 105.23 million tons valued at $36.99 billion, reflecting a 1.17% rise in volume but a 3.48% drop in value year-on-year.
Imports reached 25.82 million tons worth $39.54 billion, marking a 3% increase in volume and a 14.29% decrease in value.

Analysts attribute part of the rise in export volume to energy imbalances affecting Iran’s industrial and mining sectors.

Reduced access to stable energy supplies has reportedly pushed producers toward exporting more raw materials, including iron ore concentrate and pellets, to utilize otherwise idle production capacity.

According to recent figures from the Iranian Steel Association, exports of iron ore concentrate rose by 82% in the first seven months of the year compared with the previous year.

Steel producers have expressed concern that the surge in raw material exports could strain domestic supply chains, as concentrate is a key input for steel manufacturing.

Iran condemns US move to declare Venezuela airspace closed

Esmael baghaei

In a statement on Saturday, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said the declaration fit a long pattern of hostile US actions against Venezuela’s sovereignty.

He called the move arbitrary, reckless, and lacking legal legitimacy.

The spokesman added the White House’s self-declared directives posed an unprecedented threat to international flight safety.

He warned the claim risked destabilizing global aviation norms and endangering wider peace and security.

The statement reflected concerns in diplomatic and aviation circles that no country can unilaterally close another state’s airspace under civil aviation law.

US President Donald Trump had earlier posted an informal warning on Truth Social telling airlines and pilots to treat Venezuela’s airspace as “entirely closed.”

Venezuela rejected the warning as politically driven and aimed at isolating the country, not protecting safety.

The government revoked the licenses of six international airlines that suspended operations, denouncing them for bowing to US pressure and aiding “state terrorism.”

Venezuela’s civil aviation authority last week condemned foreign carriers for siding with US-backed destabilization efforts and following “unilateral terror directives” instead of international law.

The US Navy has increased activity in Latin American waters.

Washington deployed the USS Harry S. Truman strike group to the Atlantic in recent months as part of broader militarization tied to anti-narcotics claims.

Since September, the US has carried out lethal maritime strikes under a counter-narcotics pretext, killing more than 80 people in Central and South American waters.

Baqaei stated that aviation safety cannot be subordinated to geopolitics or used as leverage.

He added the US position only strengthened Venezuela’s moral authority in defending legal order, peace, and stability.

Russian attack on Ukraine kills six as Kyiv envoys travel to US for peace negotiations

“While everyone is discussing points of peace plans, Russia continues to pursue its ‘war plan’ of two points: to kill and destroy,” Ukrainian Minister of Foreign Affairs Andrii Sybiha wrote on X on Saturday.

President Volodymyr Zelensky stated that Russia had launched about 36 missiles and nearly 600 drones in the attack.

The Kyiv City Military Administration also announced two people were killed in the strikes on the capital, Kyiv.

Regional officials and police said one person had died in the region surrounding the capital, two in the southeastern Dnipropetrovsk region, and one in a midday attack in the Kherson region in the south.

Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko noted 29 people were wounded in the city, noting that falling debris from intercepted Russian drones hit residential buildings. He also said that the western part of Kyiv had lost power.

“The world should know that Russia is targeting entire families,” Kyiv’s military administration head, Tymur Tkachenko, said.

Following the attack, the European Union’s ambassador to Ukraine, Katarina Mathernova, cast doubt on Russia’s stated interest in a peace deal.

“While the world discusses a possible peace deal. Moscow answers with missiles, not diplomacy,” Mathernova wrote on X.

On the diplomatic front, Zelensky stressed that his negotiators had left for the United States to seek a “dignified peace” and a rapid end to the war, started by Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022.

Zelensky is under growing pressure from Washington to agree to a US proposal to end the war, which critics say heavily favours Moscow.

At Kyiv’s insistence, US President Donald Trump’s initial 28-point plan to end the war was revised during talks in Geneva with European and US officials. However, many contentious issues remain unresolved.

The Ukrainian team is being led by former defence chief Rustem Umerov, following the resignation on Friday of Zelenskyy’s chief of staff, Andriy Yermak, amid a corruption probe.

“The task is clear: to swiftly and substantively work out the steps needed to end the war,” Zelensky posted on X.

“Ukraine continues to work with the United States in the most constructive way possible, and we expect that the results of the meetings in Geneva will now be hammered out in the United States,” the Ukrainian president added.

According to media reports citing US officials, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, US special envoy Steve Witkoff and Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, will meet the Ukrainian delegation on Sunday in Florida.

 

Tens of thousands rally in Europe, demanding justice over Israeli war on Gaza

The demonstrations, held to mark the United Nations International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People on Saturday, came as the death toll from Israel’s war on Gaza surpassed 70,000 people.

In the French capital, Paris, an estimated 50,000 marched along the city’s major streets, chanting “Gaza, Gaza, Paris is with you” and “From Paris to Gaza, resistance!”.

They also waved Palestinian flags while denouncing “Israeli genocide”.

“This is not acceptable. We are still so far from justice or accountability,” one protester told Al Jazeera.

“We, the people, know that this [Israel’s war] is wrong. But why do the people in power not feel that this is wrong?” asked another protester.

Anne Tuaillon, head of the France Palestine Solidarity Association (AFPS), one of about 80 non-government organisations, unions and parties behind the call to protest, stated that “nothing has been resolved” seven weeks after a ceasefire took effect on October 10.

“The ceasefire is a smokescreen. Israel violates it every day, blocks humanitarian aid and continues to destroy homes and infrastructure in Gaza. We are calling for a permanent ceasefire and an end to the genocide,” she told the AFP news agency.

Protests were also held in London, Geneva, Rome and Lisbon.

In the British capital, London, organisers announced that up to 100,000 joined the march demanding accountability for Israeli “crimes” against Palestinians and pleading for “protection” of those still suffering under siege despite a ceasefire.

In Italy, where mass demonstrations and union-led strikes have repeatedly mobilised against Israel’s war, the UN’s special rapporteur on the occupied Palestinian territory, Francesca Albanese, and climate activist Greta Thunberg, attended the main demonstration in the capital, Rome.

The Wanted In Rome news website, in a report ahead of the rally, said some 100,000 were expected to take part.

In a statement posted on X, Albanese said that Israel is “committing genocide against the Palestinians” not just in Gaza, but in the occupied West Bank, too.

“Look at the totality of conduct/crimes against the totality of the Palestinians in the totality of the land slated for ethnic cleansing. Israel must be stopped, and we will,” she wrote.

Under the US-brokered ceasefire, Israel has pulled back to a so-called “yellow line” inside the Gaza Strip. But it remains in control of more than half of the besieged territory, and has launched several deadly attacks in breach of the agreement.

Since the ceasefire deal, at least 500 Israeli violations have been recorded, resulting in at least 347 Palestinians being killed and 889 being injured.

In a statement, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres stressed that “the killing of so many civilians, the repeated displacement of an entire population and the obstruction of humanitarian aid should never be acceptable”.

On Thursday, rights group Amnesty International warned that “Israeli authorities are still committing genocide” in Gaza, waging new attacks and curbing critical aid access, despite the declared ceasefire.