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Father of Iran’s Ophthalmology Dies at 82

Khodadoust, one of the world’s best surgeon in corneal transplantation, died on Saturday of his heart diseasee.

Born in Shiraz, Khodadoust was a distinguished surgeon with specialty in ophthalmology and corneal transplantation. After finishing his primary and high school in the same city, he was employed as a teacher in a primary school in Darab County.

Passing University exam in 1954, he began to major in medicine. Six years on, he finished university with an excellent degree and after spending a year in Shiraz University as assistant otorhinolaryngologist, he was sent to the US by the then government for taking an advanced special training course in Otorhinolaryngology, a Farsi report by Khabar Online said.

Professor Khodadoust was the first and only foreign assistant professor of otorhinolaryngology in Johns Hopkins University in 1962.  He finished the three-year course as the best assistant otorhinolaryngologist of Wilmer clinic.

During his stay in the US, he was involved in extensive research in basic sciences and published a number of articles in various academic magazines.

After finishing the course, he began his career as a trainer and assistant professor for two consecutive years in the ophthalmology section of the same university. In 1968, he rejected interesting job offers by Johns Hopkins University and returned to Iran to serve as a professor in Shiraz University.

He served as a visiting professor at Johns Hopkins University every two years from 1968 to 1980. During the period, he also taught in a number of countries like China, Turkey, Syria, Oman, Peru, Ecuador and Italy.

Back in 1980 he left Iran for the US and began a new career there as Hopkins University professor. Two years later, he was also elected as the head of ophthalmology Section of Sisil University. In 1992, Khodadoust established Connecticut Ophthalmology Center in New Haven. He visited Iran every two years to take part in clinical and training courses in Tehran and Shiraz hospitals.

Khodadoust was widely deemed in the US as one of the best surgeons in ophthalmology and corneal transplantation. Some special transplantation surgeries have been named after him.

Iran, ICRC Discuss Cooperation to Alleviate Humanitarian Disasters

Hossein Jaberi Ansari, a top aide to Iran's Foreign Minister, meeting ICRC President Peter Maurer in Tehran / Photo retrieved from Jaberi Ansari's Telegram channel

In the Saturday meeting in Tehran, Jaberi Ansari and Maurer exchanged views on the humanitarian efforts made by Tehran and the ICRC as well as areas of mutual cooperation to contain the human consequences of the current crises in Syria, Yemen and Libya.

During the talks, Maurer presented a report on the ongoing activities of the ICRC concerning the crises in Syria, Yemen and Libya, calling on the Islamic Republic of Iran to help these efforts prove more successful.

For his part, Jaberi Ansari elaborated on the disastrous humanitarian situation in Yemen and the silent deaths of the people of that country due to the ongoing belligerent policies of Saudi Arabia.

“Unfortunately, nations have fallen victim to the ambitious and illogical objectives of bellicose politicians,” he said.

Jaberi Ansari also touched upon the policies Iran has adopted to help settle regional crises as well as the extensive efforts made by Iran in humanitarian areas. He said Iran is fully prepared to work with international organizations and the ICRC to lessen the ongoing humanitarian disaster caused by regional crises.

“Iran Has No Information on Levinson’s Fate”

An undated photo of Robert Levinson before his disappearance; and a photo received by his family in April, 2011 / Photo retrieved from AP

In reaction to a statement by the US State Department about the American national, Bahram Qassemi noted, “The Islamic Republic of Iran has already announced time and again that the person in question had traveled to Iran at a certain point in time, and then left Iran, and [Tehran] has no information about his fate after he left the country.”

He said Iran adopted a humanitarian approach towards the issue in order to help Levinson’s family.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran has no commitment to the US government regarding the issue, and Iran’s assistance in the past was on humanitarian grounds,” the spokesman said.

Qassemi said US officials have already announced that they identified the whereabouts of the former FBI agent somewhere in South Asia.

“Bringing the accusation that Iran is not cooperating on the issue is undoubtedly a baseless claim because the Islamic Republic of Iran, taking humanitarian issues into account, has denied no help in that regard,” Qassemi added.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran’s assistance and cooperation concerning the issue of the American national come as the US government, in return, has adopted an inhumane approach when it comes to helping the Iranian nationals detained in the United States. The US has not only kept them in prisons and long-term detention, but also does not allow their families to visit them.”

Iran Summons UK Ambassador to Protest at London Police’s Performance

Iran Condemns Bahrain’s Plan to Normalize Relations with Israel

“Following the attack of people affiliated with an extremist religious group on Iran’s Embassy in London, the UK ambassador was summoned by the foreign ministry’s Director General for Europe,” said Foreign Ministry Spokesman Bahram Qassemi on Saturday.

The spokesman said Iran has objected to the performance of the UK police in the face of the attack.

“The Director General for Europe urged the UK government to fulfill its duty to protect diplomats and diplomatic premises and take more protective measures for the Iranian buildings.”

Hopton, for his part, expressed regret over the incident and explained about the performance of the UK police and the arrest of protesters.

The ambassador said he will convey Iran’s message to London and will provide Tehran with answers as soon as possible.

Several hours after the beginning of the raid on Friday, the London police arrested the four supporters of a radical group residing in the UK after they climbed onto the balcony of Iran’s embassy building and disrespected the Iranian flag.

Attackers Storm Iran’s Embassy in London

 

US Seeking to Destroy Muslim States: Iran Leader’s Aide

Iran Leader's Top Aide Velayati Infected with Coronavirus: Report

In an address to a religious ceremony in Tehran on Friday, Ali Akbar Velayati said the US’ excessive greed in the region has led to the massacre of innocent people in Yemen.

“The US is secretly seeking to penetrate into the region and destroy the Islamic countries particularly Syria, Yemen and Iraq from inside, but it will end up in total failure,” he was quoted as saying in a Farsi report by Fars News Agency.

He also called on Saudi Arabia to stop its airstrikes on the impoverished nation of Yemen.

“Final victory is with Yemenis because they are sacrificing their lives in fight against the Saudi aggression,” he said.

 

It’s Hard to Believe Iran, Iraq Were at War

Velayati also congratulated the Iraqi nation on their victory over arrogant powers and terrorist groups and said Iraq is potentially the most important country of the Arab world because of its natural, cultural and religious capacities.

“Baghdad has been serving as the hub of the Islamic world throughout the political history of Islam. That’s why there are lots of commonalities between the Iranian and Iraqi nations,” he said.

Velayati said the imposed war on Iran by Iraq under the former dictator Saddam Hussein was brought about despite the intentions of the two nations.

He underlined that Saddam enjoyed the full support of the US and the Zionist regime during the war and added the Iraqi nation played no major role in the war.

Velayati referred to the numerous visits of Iranian pilgrims to Iraq’s holy cities and said the relations between the two nations are so warm that it is hard to believe they were involved in a war in the past.

He referred to the Iraqi government’s request from Iran to provide it with military advisors, and added, “It is up to Iran to defend Iraq because the two sides have been involved in joint fight against others in the past.”

Marriage Proposal at Iranian Photo Festival Raises Eyebrows

Soroush Javadian seized an opportunity to ask Elnaz Qandforoush to marry him, when the latter took the stage to receive her award as the best photographer in the mobile photography section.

The parents of both photographers were also on the stage, watching their children’s romantic story.

The festival was inaugurated at the Iranian Artists Forum in Tehran late last month, the Persian-language Khabar Online reported.

Organized by Tassvir magazine, the festival is considered a major picture-related event in the country.

 

EU Must Choose between Keeping Iran Deal, Appeasing Trump: UK Diplomat

French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and British Prime Minister Theresa May - File Photo by Emmanuel Dunand, AFP

From 2001 to 2006, Jenkins served as Britain’s Ambassador to the IAEA with a primary focus on the nuclear aspects of international peace and security, especially the Iranian nuclear issue, at a point when the nuclear talks between Iran and the European Union appeared to hold promise.

He has been active within the international movement supporting negotiations with Iran and seeking diplomatic solutions that respect Iran’s rights to a civil nuclear power industry.

Speaking in a recent interview with the Persian-language Etemad daily, Jenkins criticised the policy of keeping US President Donald Trump in the Iran nuclear deal at any price, saying that such an approach is wrong.

He also described the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) as the most important diplomatic achievement of the EU in modern era, and urged the bloc to preserve it.

What follows is the full text of Sara Massoumi’s interview with Jenkins, published earlier this week by Etemad newspaper:

EU Must Choose between Keeping Iran Deal, Appeasing Trump: UK DiplomatWhat are the dangers of E3 decisions to appease President Donald Trump to discourage him from withdrawing from the JCPOA?

I am less worried than I was earlier this month when I learned that the E3 had agreed to take part in a “working group” with US State Department officials to look for ways of meeting President Trump’s recent demands, the most notable of which relates to the fact that voluntary restrictions on uranium enrichment, offered by Iran as confidence-building measures, will lapse between 2026 and 2031. I am hearing that there have been diplomatic conversations between the E3 and Iran, and I am confident that these will have enabled the E3 to understand how the Iranian government views President Trump’s demands. This will have helped the E3 to perceive that satisfying President Trump is totally incompatible with preserving the JCPOA. That ought to be enough to persuade them that any thought of appeasing President Trump must be abandoned.

Do you think the E3 will finally accept to fix the flaws which Trump asked for?

No, I think that the E3 will be forced to choose between trying to fix the alleged flaws – and inevitably failing because the “flaws” cannot be “fixed” without Iran’s consent and that consent will never be forthcoming – and defending what is one of the very few really significant EU diplomatic achievements of the last 15 years. Since the E3 (and the EU) still want to be seen as rational and enlightened actors on the international stage, I believe that they will opt for preserving the JCPOA. President Trump’s demands are unreasonable. Preserving a hard-won nuclear non-proliferation agreement is rational.

Iran insists that its ballistic missile program is not negotiable but it seems the EU has its own concerns about it. How do you see the future of this deadlock?

Yes, the EU has expressed concern about Iran’s development and possession of missiles. Since most of Europe is beyond the range of Iran’s missiles, I sense that this is largely a “proxy” concern. Nonetheless, it exists. How to resolve it, however, is far from clear. Iran has as much right to acquire missiles to deter potential aggressors as any other state in the region. Iran’s missile programme is not in violation of international law. So demanding that Iran restrict or terminate it is a non-starter. At the most, in my view, the EU can explore with Iran, on a basis of respect and reciprocity, whether Iran is ready to volunteer measures which would demonstrate that its intentions are defensive, not offensive. Also, promoting a region-wide dialogue on missile proliferation, as some people have been advocating, bears thinking about.

How serious are the flaws of JCPOA which Trump asks the E3 to fix? Do you think the complaints like the sunsets will be a danger for nuclear proliferation?

The JCPOA is not flawed. It is fit for purpose. Those who claim it is flawed are either disingenuous or ignorant of what is and is not compatible with international nuclear non-proliferation law. That is why President Trump’s demand is unreasonable. When restrictions on uranium enrichment lapse, Iran will remain subject to its NPT and IAEA safeguards obligations, and to a pledge to calibrate production of enriched uranium to commercial needs. There is no reason to suppose that under such circumstances Iran will pose any greater a proliferation threat than other NPT Non-Nuclear Weapon States.

Do you think that, if the United States pulls out, the JCPOA is worth preserving for Iran?

Yes, I do – very much so. With the US out Iran will not receive all the trade and investment benefits that it anticipated when it negotiated the JCPOA. (Shamefully, Iran has not received them at any stage over the last two years because the US has failed to respect its commitments). But Iran will still receive some of those trade and investment benefits. There will still be plenty of European and Asian companies and banks that do not have US business interests and consequently have no reason to fear the US Treasury’s disproportionate fines and threats. Iran will still be in a much better position than it was between 2012 and early 2016 when sanctions halved Iran’s oil exports and severely affected other forms of trade, as well as foreign investment. Conversely, if Iran allows President Trump to provoke Iran into withdrawing from the JCPOA, this will “make his day”; it will cause jubilation in the White House, Jerusalem and Riyadh. Why? Because it will enable these enemies of Iran to start once more spreading disinformation about the nature and intent of Iran’s nuclear programme, so as to win global opinion over to restoring penal sanctions and, ultimately, to the use of force to deprive Iran of dual-use nuclear technologies. Much better, if the US pulls out, to react by showing contempt and scorn than by giving President Trump what he really wants when he talks about flaws!

Iran complains that it couldn’t enjoy all of the benefits of removing nuclear sanctions because of US actions. Do you think EU and other JCPOA partners could compensate economically if the US withdraw from the JCPOA?

Sadly, no! Most of the larger European companies and banks have important US business interest. They are and will be unready to sacrifice those in order to do business in or with Iran. Their directors owe it to shareholders to base their decisions on cost/benefit considerations. European governments cannot hope to persuade them to do otherwise. The EU could try to influence decisions by re-introducing a so-called “blocking regulation”, first used in 1996 as a counter to the US Helms-Burton Act. But experts doubt whether banks and companies with US interests would see the protection afforded by that regulation as sufficient. All this said, however, there are plenty of European banks and companies, and many more Asian banks and companies that do not have US interests. They cannot fully compensate for US bad faith, but they can ensure, as I said above, that Iran is still much better off with the JCPOA than it used to be, or than it would be without it.

Iran Slams West’s Monopoly on Human Rights Bodies

UN Human Rights Council's Headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland

Mohammad Javad Larijani, the secretary of the Iranian Judiciary’s Human Rights Council, says in Iran’s view, the US and Europe, who have committed bloody crimes, by no means are qualified to talk about human rights.

“So we must play an active role in the conceptual and structural reconstruction of human rights,” he said on Saturday, according to a Farsi report by ISNA.

Larijani was speaking before departing Tehran for the UN headquarters in Geneva to attend a meeting on Iran during the 37th regular session of the United Nations Human Rights Council.

In the UNHRC meeting, scheduled for Monday, UN members will discuss the latest report of the late UN special rapporteur for human rights in Iran Asma Jahangir, a Pakistani lawyer who took the post in September 2016.

She had frequently delivered reports to UN bodies censuring the Iranian government for widespread rights violations before she died of cardiac arrest early February.

Iran has refused to allow the UN special rapporteurs to visit the country, arguing the use of country-specific mechanisms to address human rights issues is unacceptable.

Besides, Iran says the situation of human rights in Iran by no means is a special situation to warrant a special mandate.

Tehran says the appointment of a UN special rapporteur on Iran results from the heavy influence of western governments in the UN and part of its pressure campaign against Iran since the Islamic Revolution toppled the rule of US-backed dictator Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.

 

Disservice to Human Rights Cause

Larijani said the US and a number of its European allies, who are actively contributing to flagrant violations of the rights of millions of people across the region, abuse the noble cause of human rights in order to advance their short-sighted political interests.

“One of the major obstacles to furthering the cause of human rights is double standards and political deception at the UN,” Larijani said.

The secretary said western states use human rights as a cover for defending terrorists in Syria, and at the same time they keep mum over genocide by aggressors in other countries.

“Today, thousands of people have been martyred and millions of people are on the verge of fatal hunger in Yemen. However, the aggressors are being widely supported [by the west] and the defenders [of the Yemen nation] are being attacked [for human rights violations],” he said.

He was referring to the Saudi Arabia’s military campaign against Yemen, which has left a huge number of casualties and triggered a deadly cholera epidemic across the poorest Arab country.

Tehran will not remain silent in the face of glaring contradictions in the behaviour of western countries, Larijani said, adding it will work to reveal the true face of the self-proclaimed champions of human rights.

Iran Leader Blasts Double-Standard Policies on Use of Chemicals

At a Saturday meeting with a group of teenagers and youths in Tehran, the Leader pointed to the use of chemical weapons by the regime of the former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein against Iranian people during the eight-year war in 1980s.

In the course of that war, Ayatollah Khamenei said, France gave its most advanced planes and helicopters to the Saddam regime, while Germany supplied it with toxic chemical materials.

“Those who are today attacking a certain group over the accusation of using chemicals, openly gave Saddam such materials for making bombs,” the Leader said.

Ayatollah Khamenei said there are still Iranian soldiers who continue to suffer from the aftereffects of Saddam’s chemical attacks, and many others have been martyred.

Hundreds of thousands of Iranians were killed in the Iraqi-imposed war and many more were affected by the chemical weapons like mustard gas that were used by the Saddam regime.

Iran Leader Blasts Double-Standard Policies on Use of ChemicalsIraq once possessed a huge arsenal of chemical weapons, the production of which was facilitated by exports of chemicals as well as financial and technological support from the United States and other Western countries.

According to reports, the US spy agency CIA knew about Iraq’s use of chemical weapons as early as 1983, but the US took no action against the violations of international law, and even failed to alert the UN.

Ayatollah Khamenei’s remarks come at a time when the US and its allies are accusing the Syrian government of using chemical weapons during its fight against terrorist groups. Damascus has rejected the accusations, saying they are meant to protect the foreign-backed terrorists in the face of army gains.

The Leader further said International powers imposed the eight-year war Iran with the aim of destroying the Islamic Revolution, but they failed to achieve this goal thanks to the Iranian youth’s bravery, prudence and sacrifices.

Despite the West’s widespread financial and military support for the Saddam regime, Iranians managed to foil all enemy struggles against the Islamic Revolution by relying on their “faith” and the guidelines of late Imam Khomeini, the Leader added.

IRGC Chief Says Basij Forces Ready to Plant Trees across Iran

IRGC Chief Says Basij Forces Ready to Plant Trees across Iran

Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of an event celebrating the ‘IRGC Tree Planting Week’ in Tehran on Saturday, Major General Jafari said the numerous forces serving in the Basij, who are under the IRGC’s command, are ready to provide various services in the country.

The Basij forces are ready to help in tree planting programs across Iran, particularly in high-priority areas like Khuzestan, the commander added, referring to a southwestern province of Iran that is struggling with heavy dust pollution and desertification.

Pointing to the IRGC-sponsored tree planting programs carried out in vast areas of Khuzestan and the sources of dust pollution, the general said such initiatives will continue in the coming Iranian year, which begins in less than two weeks.

It is up to the administration and the executive officials to tap into the huge potential of Basij forces in tackling environmental problems, he added.

On Tuesday, Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei planted fruit saplings to mark the national Week of Natural Resources, calling for efforts to protect Iran’s plants, forests and grasslands and to prevent destruction of trees in cities.

Back in November 2015, in a letter to heads of the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of the Iranian government, Ayatollah Khamenei had outlined 15 environmental policies developed in consultation with the Expediency Council in line with implementing the first paragraph of Article 110 of the Islamic Republic of Iran’s Constitution.

Development of an integrated national environmental system and the necessity for comprehensive, coordinated and systematic management of the country’s vital resources (including water, soil, air, and biodiversity) are among the most important policies underlined in the letter.

The general policies call for criminalization of destruction of the country’s environment and punishment for polluters and destroyers of the environment.