Thursday, January 1, 2026
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Piazoo: A Yummy Traditional Iranian Food

Piazoo looks like broth and is one of the oldest and most delicious meals in Iran’s cold province of Zanjan.

Years ago, local women cooked the meal with onions, walnuts, tomatoes, lentils, dried apricots and potatoes and served it when family members got together during the cold winter nights.

 

Ingredients:

Lentils: 1 cupful

Dried Apricots and Cherry Plums: 1 cupful

Tomato Paste: 2 spoonfuls

Wheat Flour or Ground Walnuts: 2 spoonfuls

Oil: As much as necessary

Salt and Turmeric: As much necessary

 

Recipe

First, rinse the dried apricots and cherry plums in warm water and leave them be for some time. Sauté chopped onions in a little oil. Then add wheat flour or ground walnuts.

After that, add tomato paste, salt and turmeric. Finally, add lentils. Add enough water and put the meal on the oven to boil.

Turn down the flame, so that the lentils are cooked through. After the food is cooked, add the apricots and cherry plums. Their sour taste will give a special flavour to the food. Check that there is neither too little nor too much water. After the food is completely cooked, serve it and enjoy your meal.

Rescue Efforts Hindered as Iranian Oil Tanker Giving Off Poisonous Gases

Leakage of the poisonous gases have hindered rescue work and cleanup efforts around the oil tanker Sanchi, which is in danger of exploding after the collision, Sirous Kian-Ersi said on Monday.

Three Chinese fireboats are busy pumping water to contain the fire but have failed to do so due to the raging blaze, he added.

Authorities have set up a 10-nautical-mile cordon around Sanchi.

China, South Korea, Iran and the US have sent ships and planes to search for Sanchi’s 32-crew members. None of the missing crew has been found except for one.

Searchers have found the body of one of the missing sailors in the East China Sea, CEO of Ports and Maritime Organization of Iran Mohammad Rastad said on Monday.

A post-mortem will be conducted in Shanghai to determine the identity of the deceased individual, he added.

Sanchi spewed its £44million cargo into the East China Sea after it collided with the CF Crystal about 160 nautical miles off the coast of Shanghai on Saturday.

Thick plumes of thick dark smoke could still be seen billowing into the sky above the towering inferno.

The tanker was sailing from Iran to South Korea, carrying 136,000 tons of condensate, an ultra-light crude oil, which is the equivalent to just fewer than one million barrels.

The CF Crystal had been damaged but “without jeopardizing the safety of the ship” and all of its 21 Chinese crew had been rescued, according to China’s transport ministry.

The freighter was carrying 64,000 tons of grain from the United States to China’s southern province of Guangdong when it crashed, the ministry said.

Iran FM’s Talks in Brussels to Focus on JCPOA, Not Riots

Speaking at a news conference on Monday, Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Qassemi said Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif is due in Brussels later this week for talks with the EU’s foreign policy chief, Federica Mogherini, as well as his British, German and French counterparts.

“This meeting will be held at the invitation of Ms. Mogherini, and is only meant to review the process of implementing the JCPOA,” said Qassemi, using an acronym for the nuclear deal officially called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.

He was reacting to a foreign media fanfare created over Mogherini’s invitation, which claim that the EU had convened the meeting to address the riots in Iran.

“This meeting has been associated with Iran’s domestic affairs with vicious intentions,” Qassemi said. The session would possibly take place at Mogherini’s office on Thursday or Friday or earlier, he added.

Earlier in the day, Zarif, himself, commented on the claims in media reports, saying, “Some media outlets, especially Israeli ones, tried to fabricate news in this regard. Such news fabrication is baseless and unfounded.”

Last week, Iran witnessed peaceful protests against recent price hikes and the overall economic condition of the country. However, limited numbers of violent individuals, some of them armed, sought to turn the peaceful protests into street riots.

Some foreign media outlets, meanwhile, tried to depict the entire situation as an uprising targeting Iran’s Islamic establishment.

Mindful of how the violent individuals sought to hijack the peaceful rallies, however, the original protesters soon heeded calls by authorities to leave the streets, paving the way for law enforcement officials to deal with the vandals and armed elements.

Snub at UNSC for US

On Friday, the UN Security Council (UNSC) gave into a US push for a meeting on the events inside Iran. The session, though, did not go as planned as the Council’s veto wielders and Washington’s own allies used the debate to criticize the White House for involving the body in Iran’s domestic affairs.

At the meeting, several UNSC members defended the JCPOA and warned the US against attempts to exploit the recent developments inside Iran to undermine the 2015 nuclear accord.

Qassemi touched on the US’s failure to bring UNSC members onboard against Iran at Friday’s session, describing it as yet another defeat for Washington in its regional and foreign policy.

The developments at the council showed a “new era” has dawned, and that the Security Council, along with the entire international community, does not follow in Washington’s footsteps.

Qassemi further said Washington’s potential departure from the Iran deal or any irrational attitude on its part would be met with Tehran’s proportionate and strong reaction, “which will bring regret to the US administration.”

Exhibition of Tony Cragg’s Artworks Underway in Tehran

The exhibit is regarded as a special event because, on the one hand, Cragg is a world-famous artist and his presence at the Tehran exhibition has received extensive international coverage, and on the other, a whole range of his works of art, including 60 sculptures and 140 sketches on paper are on show at the event. A quick search on the Internet shows the items on show form one of the most complete collections of Cragg’s works of art. Displaying the artistic works in Tehran shows the good taste of the organizers.

According to a Farsi report by Honar Online, the exhibition opened on 24 October, 2017 and will run through 12 January, 2018.

Cragg, who is in Tehran for the event, told a press conference earlier that he was pleased to be in Iran, expressing the hope that he will have a friendly and fruitful cooperation with the TMoCA.

He said the oldest of the works on show belongs to 1970 and the latest one to early 2017. However, he said he did not intend to put on display a review of his life-time works.

“Rather, what matters to me is to display my works in a country whose people know nothing about my art,” he added.

The exhibition “Tony Cragg: Roots & Stones” gives an extensive insight into the sculptural and graphic works of the artist living in Wuppertal. Cragg was the first British artist invited to Iran for holding an exhibition of his works. The exhibition makes a connection between the West and Iran beyond diplomatic difficulties.

One of the reasons behind Cragg’s fame is the big size of his sculptures. At the same time, what distinguishes his works from those of other sculptors is his focus on nature and humans. Although his statues may not depict humans as old statues do, his works could have been inspired by part of a human’s body.

Born in 1949, Tony Cragg’s early work involved site-specific installations of found objects and discarded materials. From the mid-1970s through to the early 1980s, he presented assemblages in primary structures (as in his first mature piece, the 1975 Stack) as well as in colourful, representational reliefs on the floors and walls of gallery spaces (as in Red Indian of 1982-3). Cragg constructed these early works by systematically arranging individual fragments of mixed materials, often according to their artificial colours and profiles, so as to form larger images.

Cragg was selected to represent Britain at the 43rd Venice Biennale in 1988, and won the Turner Prize in the same year. In 2001 he received the now discontinued Shakespeare Prize of the Alfred Toepfer Foundation of Hamburg. He was made a CBE for services to art in the 2002 New Year Honours List, and also won the Piepenbrock Prize for Sculpture in that year. In 2007, he received the Praemium Imperiale for sculpture of the Imperial House of Japan for the Japan Art Association.

Here are Honar Online’s photos of these artworks:

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 8

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on November 18

Several papers today covered a decision by Tehran’s City Council to oblige the municipality to build special places for people’s protest gatherings. The councillors say the decision has been made in line with the Article 27 of Iran’s Constitution which says public gatherings and demonstrations are allowed as long as the participants do not carry arms and do not violate the fundamental principles of Islam.

Also a top story today was a ship collision in eastern China, after which 30 Iranian crew members of an oil tanker have gone missing.

Reports about the restrictions on Telegram messaging app, which were temporarily imposed amid the recent protests, also received great coverage. The Parliament says it can be unblocked only if it makes certain promises to the Iranian government.

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

 

Aftab-e Yazd:

1- Education Ministry’s Odd Decision: Primary Schools Banned from Teaching English

2- Pyongyang Gives Greenlight for Talks with South Korea

3- Central Bank Opposed to Receiving Tax from Deposit Interest Paid to Account Holders

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 8


 

Arman-e Emrooz:

1- Tehran City Council Urges Municipality to Build Place for Protest Gatherings

2- Renowned Iranian Actor: Ordinary People Are Not Seditionists

3- 30 Iranian Crew Members Missing in Chinese Waters; Gov’t Pursuing Their Fate

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 8


 

Ebtekar:

1- Telegram Won’t Be Unblocked Unless It Fulfills Commitments

2- 30 Sailors, $60 Million of Iranian People’s Assets Burn in China

3- Sports Diplomacy, Turning Point in Korean Peninsula Crisis

4- Curious Case of Departure Taxes

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 8


 

Etemad:

1- IRIB Needs to Form Crisis Room

2- Place for Protest

  • Tehran City Council Takes Effective Step to Implement Article 27 of Constitution

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 8


 

Ettela’at:

1- Gov’t to Fund Export-Oriented Projects that Create Jobs

2- Saudi People Protest Economic Woes in Front of Riyadh Palace

3- Tehran Mayor’s Steps to Renovate Old Structures of Capital

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 8


 

Iran:

1- Rouhani Orders Three Cabinet Members to Remove Obstacles to Direct Export of Goods

2- Rouhani’s Aide on Citizens’ Rights Affairs: People Demanding Their Rights

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 8


 

Javan:

1- Iranian Flag in Hands of Bakhtiari Tribesmen in Fifth Day of Protests

2- Egypt, Saudi Arabia Selling Quds in Silence

3- Netanyahu’s Dream of Reviving Riots in English Style

4- 30 Iranians Missing in Chinese Waters; Fates Unclear

5- Pakistan: Alliance with US Over; Escalation of Tension with Washington

6- “Trumpet” Producer: We Make Cartoons of Trump’s Goofs

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 8


 

Jomhouri Eslami:

1- Parliamentary Commission Opposed to Increase in Increase of Fuel Prices

2- Intelligence Minister Tells Secrets behind Recent Unrest

3- 247,000 Yemeni Kids Die of Hunger, Drought Caused by Saudi Siege

4- Israelis Hold Protest Rally against Netanyahu’s Corruption for Sixth Week

5- Parliament Not OK with Filtering Telegram: MP

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 8


 

Kayhan:

1- Reformists Escaping Forward by Changing Questions

  • Those Who Made People Dissatisfied Pretending to Be Saviours

2- Three Top Officials to Address Depositors Problems

  • Rouhani’s Economic Deputy, Parliament’s Vice-Speaker, Deputy Judiciary Chief

3- Anti-Saudi Protests in Riyadh against Bin Salman’s Austerity Measures

4- Millions of Revolutionary People in World behind Ayatollah Khamenei

5- Top Clerics Urge Gov’t Not to Address People’s Woes Only in Words

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 8


 

Khorasan:

1- Trump Defends His Mental Health: I’m Not Stupid

2- Details of Parliament’s Closed Session on Recent Riots

3- Parliamentary Commission to Make Decision on Iran’s Spiritual Capital

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 8


 

Shargh:

1- Masoud Shojaei: They Forced Me to Play against Israelis

2- Cash Subsidies of Fewer People to Be Cut: Parliamentary Commission

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 8


 

Vatan-e Emrooz:

1- IRGC Finishes Providing Temporary Accommodation for 1982 Quake-Hit Villages

2- Fifth Day of Nationwide Rallies to Condemn Rioters

3- Parliament: Telegram Must Make Pledges to Be Unblocked

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 8

 

Zarif to Be Invited to Europe for Talks on Iran Protests

Together with the EU’s Foreign Policy Chief Federica Mogherini, we agreed to invite the Iranian foreign minister, if possible next week,” said Germany’s Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel during a televised broadcast on ZDF.

While noting that Germany supports freedom of demonstration, Gabriel stressed that Berlin will not follow the lead of US President Donald Trump, who vowed to support protesters in Iran.

Germany and France have “warned against attempts at instrumentalizing the domestic conflicts in Iran,” he added.

On Friday, the UN Security Council finally gave into a US push for a meeting on the latest events inside Iran which resulted in the council’s veto wielders and Washington’s own allies using the debate to criticize the White House for involving the council in Iran’s domestic affairs.

Last week, some Iranian towns and cities were hit by scattered riots, which followed a series of peaceful demonstrations over economic issues.

However, Iranian law enforcement forces, backed by locals, intervened in time and ended the violence, which saw vandals and armed elements launch attacks on public property, mosques and police stations. Over a dozen people died amid the violence.

Iran frees 70 people charged with inciting unrest

Meanwhile, Tehran Prosecutor Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi has announced that 70 people charged with inciting unrest have been freed on bail.

He added that more people will be freed over the next few days, but the main plotters of the riots will be dealt with severely.

Earlier in the day, an Iranian police spokesman announced that the main plotters of recent riots in some towns and cities have been identified and arrested.

Special Places to Be Built for Protest Gatherings in Tehran

During its Sunday meeting, the city council members made the decision to promote peaceful protest gatherings in Tehran.

According to a Farsi report by the Khabar Online news website, the proponents of the plan underlined the necessity of implementing the Article 27 of Iran’s Constitution which says public gatherings and demonstrations are allowed as long as the participants do not carry arms and do not violate the fundamental principles of Islam.

On the other side, the opponents of the plan maintained that the plan is politically motivated and the city council should not get involved in security issues.

Over a week ago, a number of peaceful protests over economic problems broke out in several Iranian cities, but the gatherings turned violent when groups of participants, some of them armed, vandalized public property and launched attacks on police stations and government buildings. At least 21 people including security forces lost their lives during the riots.

Following the violent protests, Iranian officials unanimously recognized the people’s right to express their protest over economic woes but stressed the protests need to be voiced within law.

Now, with the new approval of Tehran’s City Council, the proponents say, the council provides people with an opportunity to retain their freedom for public gatherings within the constitution. Meanwhile, they argue that the new plan will prevent foreigners and rioters to mislead peaceful public protests.

Impossible to Send Missiles from Iran to Yemen: IRGC

Chief-Commander of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) Major General Mohammad-Ali Jafari has reacted to remarks by US and Saudi officials that Tehran has been interfering in Yemen and has sent missiles to the country.

“The Americans and the rulers that are their cronies have, so far, told many lies about the Islamic Republic and levelled many accusations against Iran,” said the commander in a Farsi interview with the Young Journalists Club (YJC).

“How would it be possible to send weapons, namely missiles, to a country which is under complete blockade and it is not even possible to send medicines and food aid to that country?” the top commander noted.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran is not able, whatsoever, to send missiles to Yemen, and US authorities know that the missiles fired were Yemeni-made missiles which had been renovated and their range increased,” said General Jafari.

Dialogue Key to Attaining Optimal Security in Mideast: Iran

Addressing the Second Tehran Security Conference on Monday, Zarif said, “As to the ways and means to attain the optimal security situation, we should first and foremost rely on dialogue and confidence-building measures.”

“It is obvious that at all levels in our region we are facing a dialogue deficit. Aspects of this problem are visible at all levels in the region: between the ruling and the ruled at the national level, between governments at the official inter-regional level and between peoples at the unofficial inter-regional level,” he added.

He also noted that dialogues in the Middle East “should first and foremost seek to promote mutual understanding and knowing each other in general before seeking to address any particular issue or reaching any particular agreement.”

Here is the full text of his English speech:

 

In the Name of God, the Compassionate the Merciful

Distinguished Participants,

Ladies and Gentlemen,

I welcome you to the Islamic Republic of Iran to participate in the Second Tehran Security Conference. I hope that you will have a constructive and meaningful discussions and exchange of views in this Conference. I also hope that those who have arrived from outside Iran can have a pleasant stay in Tehran.

The Second Tehran Security Conference is held at a time when West Asia is going through one of its most difficult times. Violent extremism, which embroiled our region in one of its most tumultuous periods of its history, is on decline. Daesh, as the most petrifying representative of this scourge, is militarily suppressed, its self-proclaimed and false Caliphate destroyed and the territory under its control, occupied through boundless violence and terror, liberated. In the past six years, the peoples and governments of Iraq and Syria heroically resisted the violent extremist groups, especially Daesh, and achieved major victories. We are pleased that we could stand by these two friendly and brotherly nations in this historic fight.

In this period of time between the collapse of Daesh and the formation of an optimal security environment in the region, we and other regional actors are facing three major challenges, namely, first, ability to correctly grasp the current realities on the ground, second, arriving at a common understanding about the optimal condition for the region and third, ways and means to reach this optimal condition:

  • Current realities
  1. Despite crippling defeats inflicted upon Daesh and other terrorist groups in the past one to two years, and the collapse the false caliphate project and the destruction of the military – administrative apparatus of Daesh, their terror system is, however, still at work. Due to their extensive networks in different countries, including in West and Central Asia, especially in Afghanistan, and in North Africa, they have still a regional and global reach and, therefore, should still be considered a serious threat. Thus, the continued fight against the traces of this dangerous ideology in Syria and Iraq, precluding the spreading of extremism into new areas, eradicating its ideological roots and the cutting of its financial resources should still be a priority.
  2. Respect for national frontiers and the nation-state system, undermined by the terrorist groups and takfiri ideologies, should be restored as a matter of priority. Perpetuation of disregard for the nation-state system would certainly stoke the centrifugal tendencies in political units of several states and will result in nothing but more tension and instability.
  3. Preserving national coherence and territorial integrity of the countries in the region is imperative. Ethnic restiveness in Syria and Iraq, implicated with secessionist inclination, constitutes a threat for the region and the whole world. That should be prudently dealt with by national and local authorities through dialogue and on the basis of mutual respect, national sovereignty, territorial integrity and national constitutions, and turned into cooperation and convergence.
  4. The reconstruction of Iraq and Syria is one of the major issues that the international community should take up at this period. The speedy launching of this important process will have a major impact on the political stabilization of the whole region and the total defeat of extremism. It should be undertaken with a view to helping people and establishing peace and be devoid of any effort to advance political and factional agenda.
  5. The continuance of aggression against the oppressed people of Yemen, including indiscriminate aerial raids and extensive war crimes against civilians, is another major source of tension in the region. Following 33 months of senseless bombing campaign, aggressors should have realized by now that this crisis has no military solution and the parties to it have no way out other than engaging in dialogue to reach a national consensus to resolve the crisis.
  6. The US policies and its intervention in the region have been the major challenge that has fueled current crises and made them more complicated. The US continues to ignore the concrete realities in the region, and persists in its destabilizing and destructive policies such as maintaining its illegal military presence in Syria.
  7. The occupation of Palestine remains the most critical issue facing the region and the whole world. All regional issues are influenced directly or indirectly by this major threat to the entire region and the cruelty imposed on the Palestinian people for the past 70 years. Through the recognition of Al-Quds as the capital of the illegitimate Zionist regime, the US once more reasserted its open enmity against the Muslims and Islamic countries, and thereby provided another opportunity to extremism and terrorism to regrow.

 

  • Optimal Security Condition for the Region

Security issues and tensions should be dealt with and discussed while having a vision in mind and endeavoring towards creating an optimal security condition in the region. To this end, two ideas, namely “strong region” and “security networking” could be a basis for a new paradigm in West Asia.

  1. Strong Region

Efforts made towards creating “strong region” instead of seeking hegemony and trying to exclude other actors is rooted in the Islamic Republic of Iran’s strategic vision for our region. It emanates from the recognition of the imperative of respect for the interest of all stakeholders in the Persian Gulf region and the application of the win-win rule to our region. On this basis, ensuring the interest of each country depends on safeguarding the interests of all and every country in the region. Any domineering effort by any country in the region, aimed at excluding competitors and becoming the hegemon is not only inappropriate but it is essentially impossible too. Three decades of accumulated experience following the end of the Cold War and the strategic conditions in the transition to post-Western world have proven that aiming to achieve hegemonic status at the global or regional levels is not only fruitless but also dangerous. Although competitions among nations for socio-economic development and towards a higher level of welfare and peace of mind for their citizens is not inappropriate, efforts to attain ascendancy and hegemony are inherently destabilizing from a geopolitical and geostrategic perspective and create fundamental impediments for national development. Such rivalries create a vicious circle that will allow no country to win. Other regions have been able to reach peace and development only after they left behind destructive and domination-seeking rivalries and showed genuine tendency for cooperation. Countries in our region are destined to coexist by the rule of geography. While at the same time, shared history, culture and religion make such cooperation and coexistence not only imperative but also pleasant and rewarding. Our power and capability depend on our efforts to strengthen our regional community of nations. Any attempt by any of us to gain security and ascendance at the expense of others would enfeeble all of us.

Arms race is an example and outcome of such destructive rivalry. The military expenditure by our neighbors in the Persian Gulf region as a percentage of GDP is the highest in the world. Last year the military expenditures of GCC members amounted to a total of 116 billion dollars, which not only created more tension and fueled more distrust, but also wasted peoples’ vital resources, syphoning them into the coffers of lethal arms manufacturers. At the time when our region faces a full spectrum of such acute problems as terrorism, extremism, environmental crises like dust storms and drought, migration and the failure of governments to deliver, destructive arms race and tension among neighbors impose further cost on peoples in the region and exacerbate problems.

No country can secure itself at the cost of endangering its neighbors’ security. Such an idea is nothing other than a dangerous delusion in our current inter-connected world. Our experience in this region in the past four decades has proven that any such attempt first and foremost haunt those who seek to bring wars and bloodshed on their neighbors. The experience with Saddam, the Taliban and Daesh, among those still fresh in our minds, are undeniable facts.

 

  1. Security Networking

Given the current inter-connected world and the special condition of our Persian Gulf region, which has experienced the most bitter and destructive crises in the past four decades, engaging in bloc-formations and alliances have proven to be inefficient, as each power bloc forewarns a forthcoming crisis and aggression. On the other hand, differences in size, population and economic and military strength creates permanent concerns and reliance on foreign powers, resulting in the illusion of buying security that leads only to insecurity and the increase in distrust. At the same time, attempts aimed to create collective security regime is unrealistic and leads to failure.

It seems that security networking, based on synergy and inclusion, is the only way out of this dangerous vicious circle. In this security networking, all big and small regional States participate on the basis of the purposes and principles of the UN Charter, including sovereign equality of States, refrainment from the threat or use of force, peaceful resolution of conflicts, respect for territorial integrity of States, non-intervention in the domestic affairs of States and respect for self-determination of States by their own peoples.

Security networking doesn’t necessarily mean setting aside differences or overlooking historic problems. It is merely a means for managing them while precluding enmities as well as inefficient and destabilizing alliances. In this framework, the regional States, be they large or small, predicate themselves on security networking to cooperate with a view to creating a lasting arrangement for securing the region while rejecting any sort of hegemony by regional and supra–regional powers. Such an approach leads to the promotion of cooperation among the regional States and the creation of opportunities for all towards strengthening one’s security and stability as a supplement for the security and stability of its neighbors’. Based on this approach, in the current inter-connected world, the security of one country or a group of countries cannot be ensured without the security of others.

Within this conceptual and operational framework, hegemonic tendencies, unilateralism, confrontation and exclusion that lie in part at the root of the current difficulties in international relations, will lose any appeal. This framework also helps replace the inefficient and destabilizing doctrine of balance of power or reliance on military power blocs and dangerous and costly arms race with security networking, which is based on participation and the promotion of cooperation in the areas of common interests as well as dialogue on areas of difference of interest and opinion.

 

  • Ways and Means to attain optimal security situation
  1. Dialogue

As to the ways and means to attain the optimal security situation, we should first and foremost rely on dialogue and confidence-building measures. It is obvious that at all levels in our region we are facing a dialogue deficit. Aspects of this problem are visible at all levels in the region: between the ruling and the ruled at the national level, between governments at the official inter-regional level and between peoples at the unofficial inter-regional level.

Given the tremendous problems existing at the national and regional levels, our governments are in need of assuring dialogues now more than any time in the past. These dialogues should first and foremost seek to promote mutual understanding and knowing each other in general before seeking to address any particular issue or reaching any particular agreement. They should aim to make clear to the parties that we all have, more or less, similar concerns, fears, aspirations and hopes. We are not only destined to live together by the rule of geography but also based on common history, culture and religion on the one hand and common opportunities and challenges on the other, we could benefit from dialogue and positive interaction towards advancing the interests of our peoples. Such dialogues must replace rhetoric, slogans, rants and useless propaganda statements that we fire at each other through our media.

 

  1. Confidence Building Measures

In the past several years, tensions, aggressions and numerous wars in the region as well as destructive activities of terrorist groups have led to what I can describe as mutual-trust crisis among the regional States. Dialogue as I described earlier is one of the most important instruments for removing mistrust. Nonetheless, in addition to face-to-face dialogue, we need in some cases to adopt certain measures to decrease the level of concerns. Such measures are sometimes imperative for preventing tensions from rising, excluding or decreasing tension-creating factors and, more importantly, preventing clashes due to accidents or miscalculations. This way, we should be able to increase the predictability of regional actors’ behaviors and, accordingly, decrease the concern over any possible surprising actions by any regional actor.

Exchange of information in all areas tops all confidence-building measures. The main purpose of exchange of information is to inform counterparts about the objectives and aims and preclude misunderstandings and misconceptions. These measures may include, though not limited to, avoiding to make provocative statements or take provocative actions, exchange of officials, servicemen or civilians, for several weeks or months to confer with counterparts, undertaking confidence-building measure in border areas, where there is tension or concern over the movements of extremists, and finally, jot lines, making direct contact between high-ranking officials of States with tense relationship possible.

In the field of people-to-people contact, we may look into joint cooperation in a multitude of fields including promoting tourism and particularly Halal tourism, student exchanges, research trips, organizing sport competitions, encouraging businessmen to meet and engage with counterparts, encouraging artists to be in touch with one another and stage performances in different regional states, exchange of movies and TV series, thus enabling peoples to get acquainted with each other’s way of life, reviewing school textbooks aimed at excluding negativity and including positive contents about neighbors.

Cooperation in the areas of common interest and concern such as dealing with natural disasters, fighting sectarianism and extremism, empowering the youth and women to participate in different fields of social life are more confidence-building measures in which regional states could engage. All these measures could be followed up through the establishment of joint committees and task forces.

Ladies and Gentlemen,

The principle of “the constructive interaction with the world”, based on rationality and moderation, which involves constructive dialogue, participation and cooperation on the basis of common interests and mutual respect as well as win-win pattern in the interaction with others has formed the foundation of President Rouhani’s foreign policy. The nuclear deal is a product of this foreign policy. Its full implementation has so far played a major role in decreasing tension and promoting peace and stability in our region. The adherence by all to this important agreement would further help all of us move in the right direction.

As the first step towards the new paradigm of security networking in a strong and stable region, the Islamic Republic of Iran proposed to create a “Regional Dialogue Forum” in the Persian Gulf right after the conclusion of the JCPOA. This forum can be used as an instrument for helping organize and advance dialogue at all formal and informal levels in the Persian Gulf region, and while encouraging inter-governmental and formal dialogue, it could also promote dialogue between scholars and thinkers in the civil society. In the same framework, regional States can conduct preliminary consultations on how to implement confidence-building measures.

I hope that the discussions in the Second Tehran Security Conference can contribute to collective thinking and action for creating and advancing a new conceptual paradigm for security in this sensitive and volatile region. I wish you all success in the discussions that you will have throughout the day.

Iran Calls for Promotion of Banking Ties with Chile

During the Sunday meeting in Tehran, Zarif hailed the reinforcement of political ties between Iran and Chile and the collaborations between the two countries’ private sectors, which are aimed at promotion of bilateral business relations.

He also underlined the necessity of enhancing parliamentary ties and popular relations among the two nations, urging that new ways should be found to develop mutual cooperation between Tehran and Santiago in various fields, particularly in the banking sector, during the new era of ties.

Chile’s Ignacio Llanos, in turn, handed over a copy of his credentials to Zarif as his country’s first-ever envoy to Iran since the 1979 Revolution.

Chilean President Michelle Bachelet appointed Llanos as the new ambassador to Tehran a couple of months ago.

Back in 2016, Chile reopened its embassy in Tehran after more than 35 years of problematized diplomatic ties and later dispatched a chargé d’affaires to Iran in complete silence.

Iran severed its diplomatic ties with Chile on August 18, 1980, protesting Chilean General Augusto Pinochet regime’s repressive internal policies and giving the Chilean chargé d’affaires in Tehran 15 days to close the embassy and leave the country.

Iran and Chile resumed relations on December 2, 1991 with Iran opening its embassy in Santiago, only to close it again in 1999 citing financial problems. The Iranian embassy in Santiago was finally reopened in 2007 at full ambassador level.