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Iran reports double-digit growth in international flights

Iran Airport

Mohammad Amirani, Deputy Minister of Roads and Urban Development and CEO of the Iran Airports and Air Navigation Company, announced that air passenger traffic in the country rose by 6% in 1403 (March 2024–March 2025), reaching a record 40.75 million passengers across the nation’s airports, excluding Imam Khomeini International Airport.

International passenger transport grew by 21% compared to the previous year, with 3.91 million travelers on foreign, Hajj, and religious pilgrimage flights.

There were 33,078 international flight operations at Iranian airports during the same period. Meanwhile, domestic flights saw a 5% increase, carrying over 36.8 million passengers.

Aircraft movements rose 8% overall, and air cargo traffic also climbed, with 391,889 tons of goods and a 4% growth in postal shipments handled by airports nationwide.

Among Iran’s airports, Tehran’s Mehrabad Airport was the busiest, managing 115,773 takeoffs and landings and processing over 13.75 million passengers. Mashhad’s Shahid Hasheminejad Airport followed, with 63,245 aircraft movements and over 8.42 million passengers handled.

India cuts water flow to Pakistan: PTI

The two nuclear powers have been teetering on the brink of war since a deadly terrorist attack in India’s Jammu and Kashmir on April 22 claimed the lives of 26 people, mainly tourists. New Delhi has accused Islamabad of aiding and abetting cross-border militant incursions and suspended the key water-sharing Indus Waters Treaty shortly thereafter. Islamabad denied the allegations.

On Sunday, India’s largest news agency, the PTI, quoted the unnamed source “familiar with the matter” as saying that the country had blocked the flow of water through the Baglihar Dam on the Chenab River, and is planning to do the same at the Kishanganga Dam on the Jhelum River in the north of India-administered Jammu and Kashmir region.

Signed in 1960 under the auspices of the World Bank, the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) governs the sharing of the Indus River system between the two regional archrivals that have fought four wars, as well as multiple border skirmishes since they gained independence from Britain in 1947.

Until recently, the agreement had endured, even in times of war. However, last Wednesday, Indian Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri announced that the treaty would be suspended “until Pakistan credibly and irrevocably abjures its support for cross-border terrorism.”

One of the world’s most water-stressed countries, Pakistan is heavily reliant on the Indus for agriculture, drinking water, and energy generation. According to some estimates, over 80% of the country’s agricultural land would be affected should India cut off water supplies to its neighbor, with staples like wheat, rice, and cotton particularly at risk.

In the wake of the terrorist attack in the Baisaran Valley, India expelled Pakistani diplomats and closed its land border, as well as its airspace to Pakistani aircraft. Islamabad, which has vehemently denied any involvement in the deadly incident, responded in kind.

Iran showcases new ballistic missile

Iran Missile

Unveiled on Sunday, Qassem Basir has been developed as an upgraded version of the Martyr Haj Qassem ballistic missile.

According to military officials, the missile has undergone significant modifications to its warhead design, enabling it to maneuver more effectively and evade missile defense systems.

Qassem Basir is equipped with a thermal imaging guidance system, enhancing its precision and making it resistant to electronic warfare.

Defense Minister Brigadier General Aziz Nasirzadeh said that the new missile was successfully launched from over 1,200 kilometers away, striking its designated target precisely, without deviation or reliance on GPS navigation.

Nasirzadeh emphasized that the missile has been enhanced both in terms of guidance and maneuverability, allowing it to bypass layered defense systems.

He noted that during testing, intense electronic interference was applied against the missile, yet it remained unaffected.

Elsewhere in his remarks, the defense minister criticized Washington for sending contradictory signals—expressing openness to negotiations on one hand while threatening military action on the other.

Nasirzadeh pointed out that Iran has never initiated a war and will not start one in the future. However, he warned that the country would respond decisively if attacked.

In the event of military aggression by the United States or Israel, the minister stated that Iran would target their interests, bases, and personnel wherever deemed necessary.

Additionally, the defense minister announced the successful testing of a new ballistic missile, developed based on experience from True Promise operations 1 and 2—massive missile strikes launched by the Iranian Armed Forces against the Israeli regime last year.

Iran has said that its military capabilities, including its missile program, are non-negotiable.

Israel calling up thousands of reservists to expand Gaza war

Israeli Army

He made the announcement on Sunday after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu promised to continue the war despite growing calls from inside Israel for a deal that would bring home Israeli captives held in Gaza and end the war, which has killed more than 52,500 Palestinians.

“This week, we are sending tens of thousands of draft orders to our reserve personnel to intensify and expand our action in Gaza. We are increasing the pressure to return our people [held captive in Gaza] and defeat Hamas,” Zamir said, adding that the Israeli military would “operate in additional areas and destroy all of [Hamas’s] infrastructure above and below ground”.

The military chief made the announcement during a visit to the Atlit naval base on Israel’s northern Mediterranean coast.

The announcement came before a Netanyahu-chaired security cabinet meeting to discuss an expansion of the war in Gaza, which began in October 2023 and has decimated the Palestinian enclave.

A growing movement within Israel has called for an end to the war, and an increasing number of reservists are ignoring call-ups.

Two government officials told the Reuters news agency that the cabinet would also discuss the possible resumption of aid to Gaza as humanitarian groups warn of increased starvation in the territory since Israel imposed a total blockade on March 2.

Israel continues to face widespread global outrage over the conduct of its war in Gaza, which has shattered the territory’s infrastructure as well as its healthcare system and displaced the vast majority of its 2.3 million residents at least once since the war began.

Far-right Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, in an interview with Israeli Army Radio, said he wanted to see a “powerful” expansion of the war but did not disclose details as to what new plans might entail.

“We need to increase the intensity and continue until we achieve total victory. We must win a total victory,” he added.

He demanded that Israel bomb “the food and electricity supplies” in Gaza.

Leading humanitarian groups, including the Red Cross, have warned that the humanitarian response in Gaza is on the verge of “total collapse” and Palestinians face a “daily struggle to survive” amid bombardment and the crippling blockade.

United Nations agencies have said truck convoys carrying aid are building up at the border and have not been allowed into the enclave, where a famine is looming.

Israeli officials claim an expanded military offensive would pressure Hamas into releasing the 59 remaining captives, but critics argue it further endangers their lives. Israel ending the fragile ceasefire, which saw Palestinian prisoners exchanged for Israeli captives, on March 18 has not led to any more releases.

The reserve call-ups are going out as Netanyahu promised to respond to Yemen’s Houthis after the rebels fired a missile that struck a road at Israel’s Ben Gurion International Airport, wounding six people and prompting several major airlines to suspend flights.

Netanyahu stated the response will take place “at a time and place of our choosing”.

The Houthis have stressed their fighters carried out the assault “in support of the oppressed Palestinian people” and to counter Israel’s “crime of genocide” in Gaza.

US pushes for ‘total dismantlement’ of Iran’s nuclear program

Trump

The president was asked by Kristen Welker on NBC’s Meet the Press on Sunday whether he was aiming to limit or completely abolish Iran’s nuclear program.

“Total dismantlement. Yes, that is all I would accept,” Trump said.

He questioned the necessity of the Islamic Republic having nuclear technology for electricity generation.

“They have so much oil – why do they need it? … Civilian [nuclear] energy often leads to military wars. And we don’t want them to have a nuclear weapon. It’s a very simple deal,” he stated.

“I just don’t want them to have a nuclear weapon because the world will be destroyed,” Trump added.

He made his remarks after Omani Foreign Minister Badr Al-Busaidi announced that the fourth round of indirect, mediated US-Iran talks, planned for Saturday, had been postponed indefinitely “for logistical reasons.”

Trump withdrew the US from the 2015 UN-backed deal on Iran’s nuclear program during his first term in office, accusing the Islamic Republic of secretly violating the agreement. Tehran has denied any wrongdoing but has since rolled back its own commitments under the agreement and increased its stockpile of enriched uranium.

Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi warned last month that the country would resist any “pressure and threat” from the US.

Gaza death toll surpasses 52,500 as Israel continues its genocidal war

Gaza War

A ministry statement said that 40 people were killed in Israeli attacks in the enclave in the last 24 hours, while 125 others were injured, taking the number of injuries to 118,491 in the Israeli onslaught.

“Many victims are still trapped under the rubble and on the roads as rescuers are unable to reach them,” it added.

The Israeli army resumed its assaults on the Gaza Strip on March 18 and has since killed 2,436 people and injured 6,450 others, shattering a ceasefire and prisoner exchange agreement that took hold in January.

Last November, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

Israel also faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice for its war on the enclave.

Final death toll from Iran port explosion revised to 57

Previously reported at 70 fatalities, the number was corrected following forensic examinations and family reports. According to the statement, remains recovered from various areas near the blast site—initially believed to belong to multiple individuals—were confirmed to be parts of single bodies that had been severely fragmented.

As a result, the final count stands at 57 victims, including 46 identified bodies and 11 individuals still missing.

Over 1,000 others were also wounded in the immense explosion that rocked the container port, which is located in Bandar Abbas and handles 80 million tons of goods a year.

Iran’s Leader: No benefit for Islamic Ummah greater than unity

In a speech in Tehran on Sunday, Ayatollah Khamenei touched on the annual congregation of Hajj, which brings together and unites Muslims from different parts of the world irrespective of their race, color, and culture.

“The Hajj gathering is for the benefit of humanity and there is no benefit for the Islamic Ummah greater than unity,” he told officials and organizers of the Islamic pilgrimage to Mecca, which able Muslims must make at least once in their lifetime.

“If the Islamic Ummah were united, the issues of Palestine and Gaza would not happen and Yemen would not be pressured like this,” the Leader added.

Gaza is the target of a brutal campaign of aggression by Israel which has killed nearly 53,000 people in the besieged Palestinian territory since October 2023 and left it in total ruin.

US, UK and Israeli warplanes have been launching deadly attacks against Yemen since March 15, when US President Donald Trump intensified the campaign that was started by the former administration last year to stop the Arab country’s operations against Israel in solidarity with Gazans.

Ayatollah Khamenei said division and discord paves the way for “the colonialists, the US, the Zionist regime, and other expansionists to impose their interests and ambitions” on other nations.

“With the unity of the Ummah, security, progress, and synergy among Islamic countries and their assistance to each other become possible,” the Leader said, adding the opportunity of Hajj should be viewed in this light.

Ayatollah Khamenei highlighted the political aspect which underpins the role of Hajj, saying that “contrary to the efforts, words, and actions of some who tarnish it, the essence of Hajj is political, its form is political, and its composition is political”.

“Hajj perhaps is the only obligation whose outward form and appearance and its composition are 100 percent political,” the Leader said.

“Gathering people in one place, at one time, every year – everyone who can – the very essence of this gathering together is political.”

Far from being an ordinary pilgrimage and a sightseeing trip, the journey for Hajj is “participation in a very important practice that God Almighty has ordained for the management of humanity – not just the management of believers and Muslims, but for the management of humanity”, the Leader said.

“Hajj is for the administration of humanity. The true Hajj is a service to humanity – not just to yourself, your country and the Islamic Ummah; it is a service to humanity,” he added.

Ayatollah Khamenei touched on the prominent role and duty of Islamic governments, especially Saudi Arabia as the host of millions of pilgrims, in explaining the goals of Hajj.

State officials, scholars and intellectuals, writers, and influences also have an obligation to spell out the truths of Hajj to the people, the Leader added.

Iran unveils three cutting-edge MedTech innovations at INOTEX 2025

Developed by local knowledge-based firms, the innovations highlight Iran’s growing role in high-tech healthcare solutions, the Communication and Information Center of the Iranian Vice Presidency for Science, Technology, and Knowledge-Based Economy reported.

Developed by Mad Zist Fanavar Beynolmelal, this non-compliant balloon catheter is designed for precise angioplasty procedures. Established in 2018, the company has contributed to the advancement of interventional cardiology tools, including specialized angioplasty kits and diagnostic devices.

Produced by Sabz Karoo Biotech, this locally manufactured biopolymer serves multiple industries including food, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, and medical devices. The product’s unveiling marks a significant step toward reducing dependency on imports in critical bio-industrial sectors.

Aras Mixed Reality Technologies introduced an advanced cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) simulator, integrating AI and extended reality (XR). This device is used for training and assessing Basic and Advanced Life Support (BLS/ACLS) skills and accident scene management. It’s designed for medical education, public health training, and emergency response preparedness both domestically and internationally.

Iran’s Meymand welcomes tourists for annual rosewater festival

The centuries-old rosewater festival, officially registered as a national tourism event, begins in late April and continues through early June.

During this time, visitors flock to Meymand to stroll through blooming rose gardens and witness the age-old process of extracting fragrant rosewater and herbal distillates.

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