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Child Cancer Project Threatened by Trump’s Iran Sanctions

Dr Trish Scanlan was in unfamiliar surroundings when she broke down and cried some weeks ago.

Sitting with the chief of paediatric oncology in the Mahak hospital in Tehran, the capital of Iran, she became overwhelmed when she found what she had spent more than a decade travelling the world in search of.

Scanlan works with children suffering from cancer in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. In her 11 years there, she has failed to save a single child suffering from a particularly aggressive form of cancer called acute myeloid leukemia (AML), which affects the blood and bone marrow.

Dozens of children are diagnosed with the condition each year, and the treatment is both toxic and expensive. The hospitals in Tanzania are simply not equipped for the job.

“We don’t have enough blood products, platelets and other support care to get the children through the treatment because it’s basically like hitting them over the head with a sledgehammer, and doing that at least four times,” Scanlan says, as reported by The Irish Times.

“We get through one, two or even sometimes three of these courses, and they usually die of fever, sepsis, or want of blood. We’ve never managed to cure a child. They all died, which is really sad because Crumlin for example would probably save about 60 per cent.”

“I’ve tried to get help. I’ve had help from all over the world for all the things I do, but to treat a child with AML costs $50,000.

Loads of countries and hospitals help us but it was beyond their ability to provide support for 30-40 children. It’s a lot of cash,” she added.

“I had tried and tried and tried. I had been all over Europe, America, South Africa and India, but I had never been able to access a hospital that was willing and able to support these kids.”

On edge
A few weeks ago, Scanlan flew to Tehran. As she landed, she was on edge. “When you arrive in somewhere like Iran – the ‘axis of evil’ – you wonder what people going to be like,” she says. “I thought I was going to a closed, suspicious sort of place.”

But, as she made her way through the airport, queuing for visas and collecting baggage, she found “entirely the opposite” was the case.

“People were offering me cakes and tea,” she says. “I’ve never been to a place where the people were doing everything in their power to make each situation as pleasurable and friendly as possible.”

During her stay, Scanlan visited Mahak hospital, an independent organisation supporting children with cancer, funded entirely through charitable donations. The idea was to go and see how they do things, and hopefully learn something to take back to Tanzania.

“Everywhere we went people knew about Mahak,” she says. “It provides all the cancer services for Iran. They will pay for children’s cancer care in any hospital in the country. You send them the bill and they pay it. If the children survive, they pay for all of their schooling up to and including university. I can’t tell you how unbelievable they are.”

Following her tour of the hospital and meetings with department heads, Scanlan asked whether she could give a presentation of her work in Tanzania. They agreed, and she told them all about the children suffering and dying from AML.

“When I’d finished, we all sat down and they asked what they could do to help,” she says. “I asked was there any way they could take the AML kids, and they just said: ‘Sure. No problem. No charge.’

“They asked could we afford to transport them and I said we’d find a way. If we could get the kids to the door of the hospital, they would take care of them after that. I started to cry. I’ve been looking for an answer to this for 10 years, so it was pretty insane.”

Sanctions
The very next day though, everything changed. US president Donald Trump withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal, re-imposing sanctions on the Persian Gulf state. “The price of things – simple commodities – went up overnight by as much as 50 per cent,” says Scanlan.

“A run on the banks had closed foreign exchange. Naively I thought the sanctions wouldn’t affect the hospital or the work of the charity where they don’t apply, but they do apply to the money it uses to pay for everything.”

“From one day to the next after that, people were glued to the television screen or radio. They were waiting for the next announcement. It wasn’t a small deal what happened. They were holding their breath, waiting for how it was going to affect them.”

The following night, Scanlan had dinner with the two women who set up Mahak. “These were jolly, fun, really dynamic women,” she says. “Both of them were like: ‘We think war is coming.’ These were not histrionic, dramatic women.”

“Both of them had set this up 27 years ago in the middle of sanctions. These weren’t women to flip. They said the offer was still there but that we needed to think very carefully about bringing children to a potential warzone.”

Despite the change in the landscape, Scanlan is determined to press on. “We’re going forward with the idea, but we’re on tenterhooks because we certainly don’t want a child to go and be at risk,” she says.

“It’s mind-blowing what’s happened.”

“I don’t know what the future holds. But I know that in recent weeks, a hospital in Iran, funded by ordinary Iranians, offered to help children with cancer in Tanzania. In times full of threats, this was a promise of humanity.”

Women in Iran Can Finally Go to Stadiums, but to Watch Matches on JumboTron!

Azadi Sports Complex in Western Tehran will host football fans who would have the chance to watch the games along with their families on a 1,200 square-metre screen to be installed in the field.

According to Nasser Mahmoudifard, the director of the stadium, all the grounds have been prepared to host the football fans, and the doors will be opened as of Friday if other bodies okay the plan.

It is anticipated that at the first stage around 10,000 tickets would be sold.

The move is expected to be a great first step to allow women to go to stadiums in the Islamic Republic, as repeatedly promised by President Hassan Rouhani.

The FIFA World Cup 2018 will kick off on Thursday, June 14, in Russia.

Iran National Football team, known as Team Melli, is scheduled to play against Morocco in its first match on Friday.

The group consists of Portugal, Spain, Morocco, and Iran.

Women in Iran Can Finally Go to Stadiums, but to Watch Matches on JumboTron!

IRGC’s Construction Base Ready to Work with Foreign Investors

General Ebadollah Abdollahi made the remarks on Tuesday, highlighting the great capacities available in Iran for foreign investment.

Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of a meeting on “Resistance Economy”, he further noted that a mega project to supply water to the western parts of the country will be operational by the end of the current Iranian year (March 20, 2019).

“The country’s biggest water project named ‘Runoff Waters of the West’ will come on stream by the year end,” he added.

The project has been conducted in an area with a length of 1460 kilometres, covering 17 dams, 150 km of tunnels and 700 km of transmission lines, he stated, as reported by Tasnim.

The Khatam al-Anbia Construction Base has already completed other large water supply projects, the commander said, adding that from a total of 45 billion cubic metres of reservoirs built in the country, 25 billion cubic meters have been built by the construction base.

“Iranians to Become World’s Largest Cultural Lobby in 10-20 Years”

Beheshti, the head of the Iranian Research Centre for Cultural Heritage and Tourism, has predicted that “Iranians will be the world’s largest lobby within the next one or two decades.”

“They will not need any wheeling and dealing as the Zionists do,” he said, as quoted by IRNA.

“The Iranian diaspora plays a key role in getting Iran out of global isolation on the cultural front regardless of political and economic issues,” said the official while addressing an expert meeting titled “Where is Iran? Where is the Iranian?”

“Although this community (Iranian expatriates abroad) has an independent existence, it is attached to its motherland as well, and is not indifferent and can turn into a bridge to restore global interactions,” he said.

 

Long History of Living in Iran

He said the length of time that humans have lived in Iran is almost as long as the history of man’s life as a whole.

“Iran is marked by the most ancient eras of life, and this land ranks first or second in terms of many of the turning points in man’s life such as domesticating animals and plants, getting settled down in one place, formation of villages, discovery of metal, emergence of cities, the invention of clay, etc.,” he said.

He then said Iran is not too large or too small compared to many territories.

“The size of Iran leads to Iranians having a common fate while preserving their unified existence,” he said.

 

Where is Iran?

He referred to the Persian language and Nowruz rituals as signs of cultural unity.

“Wherever Nowruz is celebrated, either Shahnameh (the Book of Kings, the magnum opus of renowned Iranian poet Ferdowsi) is highly respected, or Persian poems are written and recited. Such a place is Iran (including Iran itself or areas influenced by the Iranian culture)” he said.

 

12,000 Poets in Bosnia Writing Poems in Persian

Beheshti said there are 12,000 poets in Bosnia who write poems in the Persian language, which shows how influential the Iranian culture is in that country.

 

Iran’s Cultural Influence in Russia during Seljuk Era

He then quoted two Iranologists as saying that Iran had a strong cultural presence in Russia in the past.

“A document has been discovered in Russia which dates back to 1,000 years ago (the Seljuk era). It shows a number of Russian tribal chiefs pledging to cooperate with one another. What is interesting is that a large number of these people have names mentioned in Shahnameh, which indicates Iran’s cultural influence,” he noted.

 

Iran Home to 70,000 Dialects

While explaining Iran’s cultural influence, Beheshti also touched upon the cultural diversity inside the country. He said there are between 20 and 60 languages and 70,000 dialects in Iran, which bear witness to cultural diversity in the country.

 

Iran’s Cultural Diversity Rooted Inside

He said cultural diversity in Iran is rooted inside the country.

“In the United States and Canada, cultural diversity comes in from outside as people of other lands enter the two countries. This is while Kurds and Azeris in Iran became Kurds and Azeris inside the country,” he said.

He said Kurds and Azeris have a common origin.

“The origin of both these ethnic groups is the Medes. In fact, the Medes who resided in plains became Azeris, and the ones living in mountains became Kurds,” he said.

He underlined that the two ethnic groups have different features because of their different situations.

 

Iran or Land of Persia

In the West, he said, there is a pattern which seeks to create a nation-state and establish unity as well as an official identity. However, he adds, “these are all artificial because there is no such country as ‘Canada’ in reality; rather, this country is created on paper and based on an agreement among a few. The same goes for Belgium and many other countries,” he said.

 

Reza Shah Limited Iranian Culture

He underlined that the above-mentioned Western pattern was used in Iran at the time of Reza Shah (a former despotic Iranian ruler) and caused some disorder in this land.

“Before that time, this land was never named ‘Iran’ and was known as ‘Persia’.”

“Iran is, in fact, a large cultural territory in Shahnameh, and is something equal to Europe. So, naming this land ‘Iran’ is like giving the name ‘Europe’ to ‘Belgium’ and regard all European things such as the Renaissance, the philosophy of Ancient Greece, etc. as belonging to Belgium,” he noted.

 

Rumi Born in Balkh, Died in Konya, Wrote Poems in Persian

He then touched upon the registration of historical sites and cultural items on the World Heritage List as well as the controversy over which monument or item belongs to which country. As a case in point, he cited the prominent poet Rumi, who was born in modern Afghanistan’s Balkh, died in Konya in modern Turkey, and wrote his magnum opus Masnavi (a collection of poems), in Persian. Today, all the above-named countries say Rumi belongs to them.

 

Iranian Expats Not to Lose Sense of Belonging to Motherland

The official then drew a comparison between Iranian emigrants and those of other countries.

“The Iranian society is one which does not easily lose its features and sense of belonging to its motherland. An example of this is the Parsi community in India. They are people who still belong to their mother land after a thousand years,” he said.

 

Iranian Expats Always Seeking Major Achievement in Host Countries

He touched upon the emigration of members of the Iranian society throughout history. He said Iranians have always aimed for high levels of accomplishment in the countries they are living in, and that is why “we are witnessing the third generation of the Iranian community securing top levels of achievement in different areas.”

Researchers Use Cinnamon to Develop Antibacterial Nanocomposites

The nano-materials produced will not only remove waste pollutants, but can also be used as antibiotics in treatment programs.

Researchers at the knowledge-based company which has developed the nano-products say the project was aimed at developing a simple and green method to synthesize silver nanoparticles and its nano-ingredients with anti-bacterial and magnetism-absorbing properties.

For a brief review of Iran’s achievements in various fields of science and technology, check the book “Science and Technology in Iran: A Brief Review

To that end, researchers used cinnamon, which has anti-bacterial properties, ISNA reported.

Given that cinnamon is produced on a large scale, it is easily accessible and economical.

On the whole, the product developed by the researchers can be used as a new strategy to kill resistant bacteria.

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on November 19

Newspapers today widely covered the historic meeting between US President Donald Trump and North Korean Leader Kim Jong-un on Tuesday, which was to be held in an island in Singapore.

Also a top story was the remarks by IRGC Quds Force Commander Major General Qassem Soleimani about Saudi Arabia’s interference in the Lebanese elections.

Also a top story was the new crisis emerging in Iraq after calls for recounting of votes and a fire in a warehouse where ballot boxes were kept.

The above issues, as well as many more, are highlighted in the following headlines and top stories:

 

19 Dey:

1- Gen. Soleimani Calls Recent Lebanon Elections a Referendum

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12


 

Abrar:

1- Zarif: Shanghai Cooperation Organisation Underlines All-Out Support for JCPOA

2- Muqtada al-Sadr: Iraq in Danger

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12


 

Aftab-e Yazd:

1- Russian Mischief: Certain Russian Media Depict Iranians as Angry, Grumpy People

2- Europe’s New Steps to Protect Iran against Sanctions

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12


 

Arman-e Emrooz:

1- General Soleimani’s Account of Saudi Petrodollars Used on Lebanon Elections

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12


 

Donya-ye Eqtesad:

1- Bin Salman’s Disturbed Dream for Saudi Arabia in 2030

  • World Bank Evaluates Saudi Vision 2030

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12


 

Ebtekar:

1- Iraq on Verge of New Crisis

2- Why Arab Countries’ Alliance against Qatar Wasn’t Successful

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12


 

Etemad:

1- Immigrants Wandering in Mediterranean Sea: Italy Refuses to Accept Refugees’ Ship

2- Turn to Unity: A Review of Conservatives’ Stances towards Rouhani’s Gov’t

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12


 

Ettela’at:

1- Iran First VP: We’ll Overcome Sanctions

2- West Bank Rises to Help Gaza Strip

3- Qassemi: We’re Not Optimistic about Trump-Kim Talks

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12


 

Iran:

1- Displaced People of Karachi in Tehran’s Shahr-e Rey

  • A Report on Hard Days of Pakistani Immigrants in Iran

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12


 

Javan:

1- Gen. Soleimani: Saudi Arabia Spent $200 Million in Lebanon, but Failed

2- Tehran Warns Pyongyang: Be Careful Not to Repeat Fate of Iran Nuclear Deal

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12


 

Ka’enat:

1- Is US Looking for Deal with North Korea Because of Iran?

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12


 

Kayhan:

1- Government’s Duty Is to Resolve People’s Problems, Not to Allocate Place to Protests!

2- Can Europe Get Rid of US Domination?

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12


 

Resalat:

1- Gen. Soleimani: Hezbollah Has Turned from Resistance Party into Resistance Gov’t of Lebanon

2- Europe Gives US Economic Warning

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12


 

Roozan:

1- Storm of Diplomacy in Sentosa Island: US, North Korean Leaders to Hold Historic Meeting

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12


 

Sazandegi:

1- Iraqi Democracy on Fire: Warehouse Where Ballot Boxes Were Kept Burns

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12


 

Sepid:

1- Drug Precursors Produced for Six Recombinant Medicine Used in Curing Cancer, MS

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12


 

Setareh Sobh:

1- Iran’s Oil Clients Refuse to Obey Sanctions

2- $15-Million Meeting in Sentosa Hotel

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12


 

Shargh:

1- Iranian Hyde Parks: Gov’t Dedicates Places to Protest Gatherings

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12


 

Sobh-e Now:

1- Zionist Thieves of Iran’s Waters: A Report on Israel’s Role in Death of Iranian Qanats

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on June 12

Handicrafts, Promising Field of Investment in Iran’s Qom

Painting on tiles is one of the most popular handiworks of Qom. Religious designs are drawn on white tiles and then are painted with special glazes. Afterwards, they are cooked for 9 hours at 1,000 degrees Celsius in a furnace.

Some of the handicrafts in Qom province include hand-woven carpets, inlay works, wood carving, pottery, stone carving, precious stones carving, and ring-making. Of these, 300 handicrafts have been officially registered in Iran and 4,200 licenced artists are active in 50 fields in Qom province.

What follows are ISNA’s photos of Qom’s handicrafts:

Iran Not Optimistic Trump Remains Committed to N. Korea Deal

Speaking at his weekly press conference in Tehran on Monday, Qassemi pointed to the US-North Korea summit due to be held on Tuesday and said, “Iran’s stance on the Korean Peninsula is clear; we are keen to see peace and stability in the region.”

Iran welcomes any step toward boosting the welfare of the people of this region, he said, adding, however, that given the past record of the US and Trump, who, during his presidency, has violated international treaties, especially the 2015 nuclear deal, Iran remains deeply pessimistic about the US president’s intentions.

“North Korea should act with caution,” the spokesman urged, stressing that “the nature of the US government is not such that one can be optimistic about it”.

“We support peace and stability in the Korean Peninsula that is in the interest of the people, but we are very skeptical about the intentions of the United States,” he added.

The remarks came as North Korean and US negotiators met in Singapore Monday for final preparations on the eve of an unprecedented summit between Kim Jong Un and Donald Trump, seeking to bridge the gaps over Pyongyang’s nuclear arsenal.

Tuesday’s meeting will be the first between a sitting US president and a leader of North Korea, whose nuclear and ballistic missile ambitions have raised global concerns and seen tensions soar.

It is an extraordinary turnaround from the rhetoric of last year, when Trump threatened the North with “fire and fury” and Kim dubbed him a “mentally deranged US dotard”.

The summit has raised hopes of progress towards a peace treaty to formally end the Korean War, the last festering legacy of the Cold War, after hostilities only stopped with an armistice.

But Pyongyang is demanding as yet unspecified security guarantees and the end of what it calls a “hostile policy” towards it, and has not made clear what concessions it is offering over the nuclear arsenal it calls its “treasured sword” to defend against a US invasion.

Iran, China to Use National Currencies in Trade Transactions

Masoud Karbasian noted that four memoranda of understanding (MoU) were signed between Tehran and Beijing during Iranian President Hassan Rouhani’s trip to China.

“One of these memoranda of understanding signed between this ministry (Iran’s Ministry of Finance and Economic Affairs) and the Chinese Infrastructure Development Organization concerns the use of financial resources of both countries for investment and the use of national currencies of both countries in trade transactions,” said the minister as quoted by Fars News Agency.

“Also under the MoU, trade relations between the two countries were depicted within the framework of ‘One Road, One Belt,’ and it was stressed that the share of both countries in the road map for the plan be specified.”

He said another MoU focuses on the promotion of technical and scientific cooperation between the two sides and was signed in the presence of both presidents.

The minister further said Tehran and Beijing also agreed to work together on foreign exchange.

“The third MoU signed during the trip was about cooperation in the field of exchange and securities, which was inked between the exchange and securities organizations of both countries,” said the economy minister.

He then noted that the fourth cooperation document was about fighting narcotics.

“Under the memorandum of understanding, both countries will work together in combating illicit drugs and organized crime.”

As the minister added, the two sides also agreed to step up bilateral interactions in banking as well as oil and petrochemical sectors and to boost mutual trade.

North Korean Leader Signs Denuclearisation Deal with Trump

The US, in turn, “committed to provide security guarantees” to North Korea following a “comprehensive, in-depth and sincere exchange of opinions” with Kim, according to a document signed by both leaders.

Following the historic meeting, Trump announced that denuclearisation on the Korean Peninsula would begin “very quickly.”

In a televised ceremony held in Singapore, the two leaders signed a joint statement that Trump called “comprehensive.” In the statement, Trump “committed to provide security guarantees” to North Korea, and Kim “reaffirmed his firm and unwavering commitment to complete denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula.”

But the statement was short on details, and it was not clear if the two leaders had signed another document laying out potential next steps or a timetable. The joint statement was not immediately released to reporters, but it was legible in a photo of Trump holding it up at the ceremony.

The statement said the two nations would hold “follow-on negotiations” led by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and a high-level North Korean official “at the earliest possible date, to implement the outcomes” of the summit meeting.

It also said the two nations would “join their efforts to build a lasting and stable peace regime” on the divided peninsula, meaning talks to reduce military tensions that could eventually lead to a formal peace treaty to end the Korean War.

“We had a historic meeting and decided to leave the past behind,” Kim said at the signing ceremony, adding that “the world will see a major change.”

“We’re very proud of what took place today,” Trump said. “I think our whole relationship with North Korea and the Korean Peninsula is going to be a very much different situation than it has in the past.” He said that copies of the document would be distributed and that he would speak to reporters later about it.

The signing ceremony came after several hours of discussions between the two leaders.