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Iran executes attacker convicted in deadly assault on Azerbaijani Embassy in Tehran

Azerbaijan Embassy Tehran

According to the Iranian judiciary, the incident occurred on January 27, 2023, when the assailant stormed the embassy armed with a Kalashnikov rifle. One Azerbaijani national was killed and two others were injured in the assault.

The Tehran Prosecutor’s Office immediately launched an investigation, revealing that the attacker acted on personal motives.

The man claimed his wife had entered the embassy in April 2022 and never returned home. Believing she remained inside the embassy and refused to see him, he decided to carry out the attack.

The charges against the suspect included premeditated murder, illegal possession and use of firearms – a Kalashnikov and a handgun – and disturbing public order.

After completing the investigation, the Tehran Criminal Court held several hearings with the presence of the defendant and his legal team.

The court ultimately sentenced the man to death and the verdict was upheld by Iran’s Supreme Court.

The case strained diplomatic relations between Iran and the Republic of Azerbaijan at the time of the incident.

US not ruling out reopening embassy in Damascus

Marco Rubio and Trump

“We don’t have an embassy in Syria. It’s operating out of Turkey, but we need to help them,” US Secretary of State Marco Rubio told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Tuesday.

He stated US embassy staff in Turkey would assist the new Syrian officials in determining what type of assistance they will need to move forward in rebuilding the country.

In a surprise move, President Donald Trump announced the lifting of all sanctions on Syria during a trip to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, last week. Syria had been consistently under some measure of US sanctions for more than 40 years.

Trump also met with Sharaa in Riyadh and stated he was impressed by the leader, a former al-Qaeda fighter who fought against US forces in Iraq.

“It’s entirely driven by security concerns,” Rubio said of the continued suspension of embassy operations.

He added, “It’s not the transitional authorities. We don’t think they would harm us, but there are other elements on the ground in Syria.”

Those elements could be referencing Alawis whose loyalty in some cases remains to former President Bashar al-Assad, who fled Syria in December 2024 as rebels advanced on Damascus, as well as holdouts from anti-Assad and Islamic State-aligned militant groups who have refused to join the ranks of the new unified Syrian army.

“We have all kinds of requirements that are there for a reason. If someone is hurt, do you have a medical evacuation plan? Can you secure a facility from an attack from an armed group, many of whom are still running loose in the country? Unfortunately, it’s one of the fundamental challenges the transitional authority is facing,” Rubio told lawmakers.

While Sharaa’s government is not currently assessed as a threat to US interests, “the transitional authority figures, they didn’t pass their background check with the FBI”, Rubio added.

“They’ve got a tough history… But on the flip side of it, if we engage them, it may work out [or] it may not work out. If we did not engage them, it is guaranteed to not work out.”

Rubio met with Syria’s Foreign Minister Asaad al-Shaibani in talks hosted by Turkey last week. Three weeks ago, Shaibani was also given a visa to come to the United Nations headquarters in New York and raise the new Syrian flag there.

Rubio said if the Trump administration had not engaged with Sharaa’s government and pushed for sanctions relief, Syria would have been “maybe weeks, not many months, away from potential collapse and a full-scale civil war of epic proportions. Basically, the country splitting up”.

“The good news is that there is a Syrian national identity,” he continued, adding, “It is one of the places in the Middle East where Alawites and Druze and Christians and Sunni and Shia and Kurds have lived alongside each other, underneath the banner of a Syrian identity, until it was broken by a butcher, Assad.”

The lifting of the sanctions, Rubio said, is primarily designed to allow neighbouring countries to assist Sharaa’s team, and “to build governance mechanisms that allow them to actually establish a government [and] unify the armed forces”.

That, however, will not be enough, he stated.

To attract much-needed foreign investment in Syria, the US will begin by issuing waivers under the Caesar Syria Civilian Protection Act, which was signed into law during Trump’s first term in 2019.

However, waivers have expiry dates, and until further progress is made by the interim government, that seems to be the extent to which the US will issue relief.

“I don’t think the issue with them right now is a matter of willingness or lack of willingness. It’s a lack of capability,” Rubio said of Sharaa’s efforts to rein in armed factions.

For Washington, there’s also the crucial matter of its primary partner in the region, Israel.

“We’ve had conversations with them about this, what we view as an opportunity for Israel, if, in fact, Syria is stable and has in it a government that has no interest… in fighting a war,” Rubio told lawmakers.

He added there have been some assurances from Damascus.

“Obviously, you have to prove it, but they have said this is a nationalist project. They are seeking to build a nation. They’re not viewing themselves as a launch pad for revolution. They’re not viewing themselves as a launch pad for attacks against Israel.”

Israel occupied Syria’s Golan Heights, where Sharaa’s family comes from, in 1967, and today, Trump recognises it as Israeli territory despite the UN asserting its illegality.

When Assad’s reign collapsed, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered troops into the Golan Heights buffer zone “to ensure that no hostile force embeds itself right next to the border of Israel”.

He also ordered the bombing of dozens of sites across Syria that he maintained were weapons caches for Hezbollah, an ally of Assad.

Britain summons Israeli envoy,  suspends free trade agreement talks with Tel Aviv

Starmer Lammy

Speaking in parliament on Tuesday afternoon, Foreign Secretary David Lammy condemned “this Israeli government’s egregious actions and rhetoric”, adding that the government is “isolating Israel from its friends and partners around the world”.

He criticised Israel for expanding its military operations in the Gaza Strip and restricting the entry of humanitarian aid.

Lammy said: “I find this deeply painful as a lifelong friend of Israel and a believer in the values expressed in its declaration of independence.”

He argued that Israel’s approach is “incompatible with the principles that underpin our bilateral relationship, rejected by members across this house, and frankly it’s an affront to the values of the British people”.

The foreign secretary added: “Therefore today I am announcing we have suspended negotiations with this Israeli government on a new free trade agreement.

“We will be reviewing cooperation with them under the 2030 bilateral roadmap. The Netanyahu government’s actions have made this necessary,” he continued, noting, “Today my honourable friend the foreign minister for the Middle East is summoning the Israeli ambassador to the Foreign Office to convey this message.”

Lammy also added that Palestinians must have their own state and live “free of occupation”.

Negotiations on a UK-Israel free trade agreement began in July 2022 under the previous Conservative government.

In the initial agreement, the UK government agreed to oppose the use of “apartheid” to describe Israel’s treatment of Palestinians and pledged to confront “anti-Israel bias” in international institutions, including at the United Nations’ Human Rights Council.

“The world is judging,” Lammy said.

“History will judge them [the Israeli government]. Blocking aid, expanding the war, dismissing the concerns of your friends and partners. This is indefensible and it must stop.”

A number of MPs have questioned the effectiveness of the policy shift by the Labour government and have asked for more strident action against Israel.

They include Conservative politician Kit Malthouse who said Lammy knows that Israel does not “give a damn” about the sanctions announced on Tuesday and continued to kill Palestinians since the foreign secretary’s statement was issued.

Speaking in parliament, Malthouse added: “Many of us in this chamber have tried to spur the government into taking action over the last few months. We’ve tried anger and outrage, and got nowhere. We’ve tried shaming ministers into action and got nowhere. So maybe we need to beg.”

“I’m urging, begging the foreign secretary to pluck up all his moral authority and courage, stand up in government against the blockage in Downing Street, and please try to save these children’s lives as soon as possible.”

The Scottish National Party leader in Westminster, Stephen Flynn, called for a vote in parliament on recognising a Palestinian state.

The UK further announced sanctions on three individuals in the occupied West Bank, including prominent settler leader Daniella Weiss, who appeared in a recent BBC documentary presented by Louis Theroux, as well as two illegal outposts and settler organisations.

In response to the announcement by the British government, the Israeli Foreign Ministry announced the suspension of trade negotiations would harm the UK’s economy and was motivated by anti-Israel sentiment.

“If, due to anti-Israeli obsession and internal political considerations, the British government is willing to harm the British economy, that’s their decision,” the ministry said.

“The British Mandate ended exactly 77 years ago. External pressures will not divert Israel from its path,” it added.

14k Gaza babies could die within days without aid: UN

Gaza

Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, the UN’s humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher emphasised the urgency of the situation, saying that thousands of trucks loaded with baby food and nutritional supplies are ready to enter Gaza but remain stalled at the border.

“This is not food that Hamas is going to steal,” Fletcher stated.

“We run the risk of looting. We run the risks of being hit as part of the Israeli military offensive. We run all sorts of risk trying to get that baby food through to those mothers who cannot feed their children right now because they’re malnourished,” he added.

On Monday evening, Israel allowed five aid trucks carrying baby food and other essential supplies to enter Gaza through the Karem Abu Salem (Kerem Shalom) crossing, situated at the southern tip of the Gaza Strip, marking the first such delivery in nearly three months.

Fletcher however described the delivery as a “drop in the ocean” and added that the aid had not yet reached the communities in need.

The humanitarian crisis in Gaza has escalated dramatically over the past 11 weeks due to a total blockade imposed by Israel, which has severely restricted the entry of food, medicine, and fuel into the territory. According to the UN-backed Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, one in five Gazans faces starvation, and nearly 71,000 children under five are at risk of acute malnutrition.

International pressure on Israel to ease the blockade has recently intensified. On Monday, the UK, France, and Canada said they would take “concrete actions” against Israel if it did not lift restrictions on aid and halt its renewed offensive in Gaza.

An additional joint statement, signed by 22 countries, also urged Israel to fully resume impartial humanitarian operations.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was forced to ease the devastating 11-week aid blockade on Sunday night, saying it was necessary for Israel to prevent a “starvation crisis” in Gaza for “diplomatic reasons”.

Meanwhile, Israeli air strikes have intensified across Gaza with at least 60 people, more than half being women and children, killed overnight on Monday.

More than 300 Palestinians were killed over only the last three days, according to the health ministry.

The UN also announced that people are dying from preventable diseases as medicines wait at the border, while attacks on hospitals deny people care and deter them from seeking it.

Over the past week, Israeli raids rendered Gaza European Hospital in Khan Younis, southern Gaza, and the Indonesian Hospital in northern Gaza non-operational, forcing the evacuation of thousands and cutting off access to critical medical services for already vulnerable communities.

Convicted killer of Kurdish woman executed in Iran

Iran Prison

The execution was conducted following the final ruling issued by Iran’s Supreme Court.

According to the investigation, on September 5, 2022, the convict — described by authorities as a known thug in Marivan — attempted to abduct and assault a 36-year-old woman from the village of Cheshmider, in the county of Sarvabad. During the incident, Shalir Rasouli fell from the second floor of a building while trying to escape and succumbed to her injuries three days later at a hospital in Sanandaj.

Following his arrest, the accused was charged with multiple counts including premeditated murder, three counts of kidnapping, assault with a knife, and public intimidation.

The First Criminal Court of Kurdistan Province convicted him of intentional homicide under the Islamic Penal Code, sentencing him to qisas (retribution-in-kind for murder), with additional sentences for the other charges.

After confirmation by the Supreme Court, the death sentence was officially enforced on Tuesday morning.

Tasnim: Report on cancellation of Iran nuclear talks attributed to Foreign Ministry ‘fabricated’

Araghchi Witkoff

According to Tasnim on Tuesday, a quote attributed to Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Esmail Baqaei regarding the alleged cancellation of diplomatic talks is “not authentic.”

The news agency confirmed, following an internal review, that Baqaei has made no public comments on the status of negotiations.

The clarification comes after Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister for Legal and International Affairs, Kazem Gharibabadi, confirmed earlier on Tuesday that Tehran has received a proposal regarding the next round of indirect negotiations with the US and is currently reviewing it.

Deputy Foreign Minister: Contradictory US positions affect atmosphere of talks with Iran

Majid Takht Ravanchi

Majid Takht-Ravanchi, in an exclusive interview with a Fars News Agency correspondent on the sidelines of the Tehran Dialogue Forum, referred to recent remarks by Steve Witkoff, the US senior negotiator, about uranium enrichment in Iran—specifically that even one percent enrichment is unacceptable.

Takht-Ravanchi added, “Witkoff once said that Iran does not need enrichment beyond 3.67 percent. Then he said that even one percent is unacceptable. It’s unclear what their actual position is.”

He stated: “Such contradictory or conflicting positions do have an impact on the negotiations.”

He further noted: “Enrichment is a very critical issue. The Americans are aware of our sensitivities, positions, and rights—so we’ll see what stance they take in practice.”

He also mentioned that the time and location of the fifth round of indirect negotiations between Iran and the US have not yet been determined.

Regarding talks between Iran and Europe, Takht-Ravanchi said: “In our discussions, the Europeans have expressed interest in maintaining contact with us at various levels. We are in contact at the deputy foreign minister level and in capitals, and at the ministerial level, a time still needs to be set.”

He emphasized: “Talks with Europe have always been ongoing and have not been cut off.”

On Iran’s cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), he stated: “We are working with the Agency. Our cooperation with the IAEA is good, and we hope it continues so that our interactions with the Agency remain on the right track.”

EU approves 17th package of Russia sanctions over Ukraine war

EU Ukraine

“New measures also address hybrid threats and human rights. More sanctions on Russia are in the works,” Kallas said on X.

The step comes as the U.S. signals disinterest in imposing additional sanctions against Russia, even as Moscow refuses Western-backed ceasefire proposals.

The 17th package was supported by EU ambassadors last week, but has since then been criticized as weak and watered down.

The new sanctions target members of Russia’s military and political elite and foreign entities in China or the United Arab Emirates, accused of helping the Kremlin evade already-imposed measures.

The EU will also sanction more than 20 entities and individuals disseminating disinformation, and 20 judges and prosecutors involved in legal cases against Russian opposition, specifically Vladimir Kara-Murza and late Alexei Navalny.

The package also targets components vital to Russia’s defense industry, namely chemicals, materials, and dual-use goods.

The EU has threatened Russia with additional sanctions unless President Vladimir Putin commits to a ceasefire and agrees to seriously engage in peace efforts. President Volodymyr Zelensky also announced that a new “strong EU sanctions package” is underway.

While European leaders have proclaimed that additional sanctions are coordinated with Washington, U.S. President Donald Trump, who held a phone call with Putin on May 19, said he does not intend to impose new measures on Moscow to avoid disrupting peace efforts.

EU reaches initial deal to lift Syria’s economic sanctions: Report

Ahmed al-Sharaa

Ambassadors from the EU’s 27 member states struck a preliminary agreement for the move, which should be formally unveiled by foreign ministers meeting in Brussels later on Tuesday, diplomats said, noting that the final decision is up to ministers.

This follows an announcement by the United States last week that it is lifting sanctions on Damascus.

The country’s new leadership has urged the West to ease the restrictions to help Syria recover from years of despotic rule and civil war.

EU diplomats told the AFP news agency the agreement should see sanctions cutting Syrian banks off from the global system and freezing central bank assets lifted.

But diplomats said the bloc was intending to impose new individual sanctions on those responsible for stirring ethnic tensions, following deadly attacks targeting the Alawite minority.

Other measures targeting the al-Assad government and prohibiting the sale of weapons or equipment that could be used to repress civilians were set to remain in place.

The latest move from the EU comes after its first step in February, suspending some sanctions on key Syrian economic sectors.

Officials said those measures could be reimposed if Syria’s new leaders break promises to respect the rights of minorities and move towards democracy.

More than 20 countries urge Israel to allow full resumption of aid into Gaza immediately

Gaza War

In a joint statement, foreign ministers of the countries including Australia, Canada, Japan and France, stressed that the population faces starvation and Gaza’s people must receive the aid they desperately need.

Recalling that Israel’s security cabinet is said to have approved a new model for delivering aid into Gaza, which the UN and our humanitarian partners cannot support, the statement stressed that humanitarian principles matter for every conflict around the world and should be applied consistently in every warzone.

” Humanitarian aid should never be politicised, and Palestinian territory must not be reduced nor subjected to any demographic change,” the readout said.

“As humanitarian donors, we have two straightforward messages for the Government of Israel: allow a full resumption of aid into Gaza immediately and enable the UN and humanitarian organisations to work independently and impartially to save lives, reduce suffering and maintain dignity.”

The statement reiterated an immediate return to a ceasefire and working towards the implementation of a two-state solution, “the only way to bring peace and security to Israelis and Palestinians and ensure long-term stability for the whole region.”

The joint statement was signed by EU officials and the foreign ministers of Australia, Canada, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden and the UK.

Israel, which abandoned the Jan. 19 ceasefire with Hamas, has kept all crossings into Gaza closed to food, medical, and humanitarian aid since March 2, deepening an already severe humanitarian crisis in the enclave.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said Sunday that Tel Aviv will permit the entry of “a basic quantity of food” for Gaza’s population “to prevent the emergence of a hunger crisis.”

He said a famine “could jeopardize the continuation of Operation Gideon’s Chariot,” referring to a new phase of Israel’s ground offensive in northern and southern Gaza.

The Israeli army has pursued a brutal offensive against Gaza since October 2023, killing more than 53,000 Palestinians, most of them women and children.