Tuesday, December 30, 2025
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20 new satellites under development in Iran: Official

Iran Satellite

Speaking on Wednesday, during a visit to the 2025 INOTEX Exhibition at the Iran International Innovation Zone, ISA chief Hassan Salarieh said the development of these satellites—including the key “Shahid Soleimani” satellite constellation—is being carried out by consortia made up of state institutions and private firms.

In a move to support Iran’s space-based economy and advance remote sensing capabilities, Salarieh announced a guaranteed purchase program for satellite imagery produced by domestically built satellites. The initiative is being led by private companies with ISA backing.

“The private sector’s role in our space industry has expanded rapidly over the past three years,” Salarieh noted.

“While space missions were once exclusively handled by government agencies, today private companies are delivering a substantial share of our operational projects.”

Salarieh added the Iranian Space Agency is using INOTEX 2025 as a platform to promote private sector capabilities and encourage new partnerships. The space-focused pavilions at the exhibition are offering visitors a firsthand look at satellite technologies, data solutions, and other innovations developed by Iranian knowledge-based firms.

He stressed the urgency of accelerating space missions in order to maintain Iran’s position in the competitive global space landscape. “Private sector participation is not just beneficial—it’s a national necessity,” Salarieh said, referring to Iran’s Comprehensive Space Development Document.

The 13th edition of INOTEX, which runs through May 2 at Pardis Technology Park, has attracted more than 500 startups, innovation centers, and investors from Iran and abroad. This year’s exhibition features a wide range of events, including the “INOTEX Pitch” startup competition, keynote speeches, mentoring sessions, and a showcase of advanced technologies.

Artificial intelligence has taken a central role in the 2025 event, with several booths dedicated to AI-based solutions. Startups are presenting applications in medical AI, robotics, natural language processing, machine vision, and big data.

India closes airspace to Pakistan airlines as tensions between nuclear-armed neighbours rise

The ban will last from April 30 to May 23, the Indian government said in a notice.

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif told U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio in a phone call on Wednesday evening that he “categorically rejected Indian attempts to link Pakistan to the incident,” Sharif’s office said in a statement.

He called for a transparent, credible and neutral investigation and urged the U.S. to impress upon India to “dial down the rhetoric and act responsibly,” it added.

The impact of the ban on Pakistan’s airline industry is likely to be smaller than on India’s since only Pakistan International Airlines operates routes to Kuala Lumpur using Indian airspace.

Last week, Pakistan closed its airspace to Indian-owned or operated airlines, suspending all trade including through third countries and halting special South Asian visas issued to Indian nationals.

PIA, the national carrier, said on Tuesday it had decided to avoid Indian airspace in the wake of rising bilateral tensions.

Pakistan said on Wednesday it has “credible intelligence” that India intends to launch military action soon, as tensions between the nuclear-armed neighbours escalate following the deadly attack on tourists.

India has identified the three attackers, including two Pakistani nationals, as “terrorists” waging a violent revolt in Muslim-majority Kashmir. Islamabad has denied any role and called for a neutral investigation.

Since the attack, the nations have unleashed a raft of measures against each other, including suspending the Indus Water Treaty.

Iranian wrestling giant Yazdani’s absence at 2025 World Championships noted by UWW

Hassan Yazdani

Yazdani, 86 kg, Iran’s national team captain and Olympic and World Champion, is currently recovering from shoulder surgery.

Alireza Dabir, head of Iran’s Wrestling Federation, confirmed that the 30-year-old will not risk competing in Zagreb to avoid re-injury.

UWW highlighted Yazdani’s legacy in a social media post, noting this marks his first absence from the World Championships since 2015.

The “Persian Lion” has won three gold, three silver, and one bronze medal at past World Championships, along with one Olympic gold (2016) and two silvers (2020, 2024).

“Yazdani, who underwent his second shoulder surgery in the last 12 months following his heroic silver medal performance at the Paris Olympics, confirmed that he recently traveled to France for a second opinion on his shoulder,” UWW pointed out.

Yazdani was quoted as saying, “My doctor is very satisfied with my progress, but I don’t want to take the risk of re-injury, so I’ll be back in 2026.”

Yazdani also signed off on his plans to move up in weight upon his return—floating the possibility of a move to 92kg or even 97kg, UWW reported.

Pentagon chief warns Iran of “consequences” over Houthis support

Pete Hegseth and Donald Trump

“Message to IRAN: We see your LETHAL support to The Houthis. We know exactly what you are doing. You know very well what the U.S. Military is capable of — and you were warned. You will pay the CONSEQUENCE at the time and place of our choosing,” the defense secretary said in a post on the social platform X late Wednesday.

Hegseth’s Wednesday comments are similar to words from President Donald Trump last month in which he demanded that Tehran stop giving weapons to the Houthis in Yemen.

Reports are coming in that while Iran has lessened its intensity on Military Equipment and General Support to the Houthis, they are still sending large levels of Supplies. Iran must stop the sending of these Supplies IMMEDIATELY. Let the Houthis fight it out themselves,” Trump said in a Truth Social post at the time.

“Either way they lose, but this way they lose quickly. Tremendous damage has been inflicted upon the Houthi barbarians, and watch how it will get progressively worse — It’s not even a fair fight, and never will be. They will be completely annihilated,” he added.

Iran’s officials have stressed that Tehran does not need proxies in the region and that Yemen’s Houthis act on their own motivations.

US seeking to eliminate security office coordinating with Palestinian Authority: Report

US General Mike Fenzel, who has held the position since 2021, was told last week that his position is going to be cut, with an announcement due in the coming weeks, The Times of Israel reported on Wednesday.

Axios reported earlier that US Secretary of State Marco Rubio was weighing axing the position, but has yet to make a decision, although Fenzel told colleagues he believes his position will be eliminated.

The US Security Coordinator’s (USSC) office is a little-known post, but it is the most public centrepiece of the US’s defence engagement with the Palestinian Authority’s (PA) security services.

The position was created in 2005 to train PA security forces and foster coordination with Israel. The Jerusalem office is tied to the US State Department, but its chief is a US general.

Questions about the USSC’s fate have swirled publicly since 22 April, when Rubio unveiled a list of offices that will be part of his reorganisation of the State Department. The USSC was not listed among the departments and Bureaus.

The USSC coordinates arms supplies and training to the Palestinian security services. It is also a channel of communication between Israel and the PA when ties between them are tense or downgraded.

The Central Intelligence Agency also plays a role in providing support to the PA’s security services clandestinely, officials say.

The Times of Israel reported that the Trump administration is not considering eliminating the position as a matter of policy, but as part of a wider cost-saving drive.

Regardless, if the USSC is eliminated, it would signal a swift downgrade in the administration’s priorities. The Joe Biden administration put a renewed focus on the USSC as part of its post-war planning for the Gaza Strip.

Middle East Eye reported in June 2024 that former senior US officials circulated a plan for US Central Command to become more involved in coordinating with the PA’s security services as part of post-war Gaza planning. A slew of the Biden administration’s plans for post-war Gaza never materialised.

After a brief ceasefire announced in January, Israel resumed its war on Gaza in March with Trump’s support.

The PA did pitch itself to Steve Witkoff, Trump’s Middle East envoy, as a security force that could combat Hamas in Gaza during a meeting in Riyadh, MEE revealed previously.

But the next month, Trump unveiled his plan for the US to take over the Gaza Strip and turn it into a “Middle East Riviera.” He has backed off that plan for now, but has not mentioned the PA.

Meanwhile, the UAE has been lobbying the Trump administration against an Arab League plan that would entail an enhanced and Egyptian-trained PA providing security in the post-war Gaza Strip.

If the USSC position is eliminated, it would further reduce the US’s footprint of senior officials with the PA. Hans Wechsel, who headed the State Department’s Office for Palestinian Affairs, resigned from his post in March. The Trump administration has yet to fill that position.

Inside Israel’s government, voices have grown louder for Israel to officially annex the occupied West Bank, which the Office of Palestinian Affairs and USSC mainly oversees.

Iran’s int’l striker Taremi wears black wristband in tribute to victims of port explosion

Taremi, who came on as a substitute for Lautaro Martínez at halftime in the match again Barcelona, entered the pitch with the symbolic black band in honor of those who lost their lives in the port accident.

The Saturday blast at Shahid Rajaei Port, one of Iran’s largest shipping hubs, has claimed 70 lives and left hundreds others injured, though official details on the cause of the incident remain unclear.

Barcelona and Inter Milan played out a pulsating 3-3 draw in Wednesday’s Champions League semi-final first leg.

US and Ukraine ink minerals deal

The US and Ukraine have been trying to hammer out the natural resources agreement since US President Donald Trump returned to the White House in January.

The deal comes after weeks of intense negotiations that at times turned bitter and temporarily derailed Washington’s aid to Ukraine.

The US Treasury Department on Wednesday announced that both countries signed the agreement. “As the President has said, the United States is committed to helping facilitate the end of this cruel and senseless war,” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a statement.

“This agreement signals clearly to Russia that the Trump Administration is committed to a peace process centered on a free, sovereign, and prosperous Ukraine over the long term,” Bessent said, adding, “And to be clear, no state or person who financed or supplied the Russian war machine will be allowed to benefit from the reconstruction of Ukraine.”

Ukraine’s Economy Minister Yulia Svyrydenko was in Washington to sign on behalf of the Ukrainian government.

Among the terms of the agreement are “full ownership and control” staying with Ukraine, she posted to X on Wednesday.

“All resources on our territory and in territorial waters belong to Ukraine,” she said, adding: “It is the Ukrainian state that determines what and where to extract. Subsoil remains under Ukrainian ownership — this is clearly established in the Agreement.”

The signing comes hours after a last-minute disagreement over which documents to sign Wednesday threatened to derail the deal.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky was expected to strike the deal during his trip to Washington in February – but the agreement was left unsigned when that visit was cut short following the contentious Oval Office meeting.

Among the key sticking point of the negotiations was the question of security guarantees – and whether the US would provide them as part of the deal. Trump initially refused that, saying he wants Ukraine to sign the agreement first and talk about guarantees later.

At that time, Zelensky described the draft agreement as asking him to “sell” his country. Ukrainian officials have since indicated they believed that US investment and the presence of American companies in Ukraine will make the US more interested in Ukraine’s security.

Shortly after the doomed White House visit, Trump ordered US aid to Ukraine to be suspended. While the assistance has since been restored, the episode became a major wakeup call for Ukraine’s European allies, who have pledged to step up their help to the country.

Trump has largely billed the agreement as Ukraine “paying back” for the aid the US has provided to Ukraine since Russia launched its unprovoked full-scale invasion of the country in February 2022.

Speaking to Fox News Wednesday, Bessent said the deal is “a signal to the American people, that we have a chance to participate, get some of the funding and the weapons, compensation for those.”

The details of the agreement have not been made public. However, Ukraine’s Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal said on Sunday that the deal “will not include assistance provided before its signing.”

Speaking on Wednesday, Shmyhal described the deal as “a strategic agreement on the establishment of an investment partnership fund.”

“It is truly an equal and beneficial international agreement on joint investments in the development and recovery of Ukraine between the US and Ukrainian governments,” he added.

Under the deal, the US and Ukraine will create a joint investment fund in Ukraine with an equal contributions from both and equal distribution of management shares between them, Shmyhal said.

“The American side may also count new, I emphasize new, military aid to Ukraine as a contribution to this fund,” Shmyhal said.

Kyiv’s allies have long eyed the country’s mineral riches. Ukraine has deposits of 22 of the 50 materials classed as critical by the US Geological Survey.

These include rare earth minerals and other materials that are critical to the production of electronics, clean energy technologies and some weapon systems.

The global production of rare earth minerals and other strategically important materials has long been dominated by China, leaving Western countries desperate for other alternative sources – including Ukraine.

A memorandum of understanding prepared under the Biden administration last year said the US would promote investment opportunities in Ukraine’s mining projects to American companies in exchange for Kyiv creating economic incentives and implementing good business and environmental practices.

Ukraine already has a similar agreement with the European Union, signed in 2021.

Wildfires rage near Jerusalem, forcing evacuations and road closures

Tel Aviv is seeking international assistance to fight the fires, as the defense minister says Israel is “in a time of national emergency.”

“This is perhaps the largest fire ever in the country,” Jerusalem District Fire Department Commander Shmulik Friedman told reporters on Wednesday afternoon.

He warned that winds in excess of 60 miles an hour are expected “in the near future,” dramatically increasing the risk of the fires.

The fire forced authorities to close Route 1, the major road connecting Tel Aviv and Jerusalem on Wednesday – Israel’s Memorial Day.

Videos from social media show people walking along the highway with thick smoke filling the air.

Hours later, emergency workers ran amongst long lines of abandoned cars on the highway, looking for anyone who may still be in their cars, according to a video from United Hatzalah, an emergency response organization.

“We don’t know at this time what caused the fire. We don’t have even a bit of a clue. We are still not dealing with it,” Friedman stated, adding, “We are far from control.”

The fire is active on multiple fronts, authorities announced, with one area concentrated around the town of Neve Shalom, located about 15 miles west of Jerusalem. In one clip, the flames can be seen next to the road along a packed section of highway.

Israel’s Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar held a marathon of talks with other countries to bring in firefighting aircraft, according to his office, particularly nearby countries in Europe. Three aircraft from Italy and Macedonia will arrive “as soon as possible,” the National Security Council said in a statement.

At least ten communities in the area have been evacuated, authorities added.

“We are in a time of national emergency, and all available forces must be mobilized to save lives and bring the fires under control,” stated Defense Minister Israel Katz Wednesday.

There are about 120 teams fighting the fire, Israel’s Fire and Rescue Services announced, as well as 12 firefighting aircraft and helicopters.

More than a dozen people have arrived at two separate hospitals as a result of the fire, according to Shamir Medical Center and Kaplan Medical Center.

Meanwhile, Hadassah Medical Center on the outskirts of Jerusalem asked the public not to come to the hospital “unless absolutely necessary.” The hospital has begun evacuating patients who do not need to be hospitalized, even as it prepares to accept new patients who may have suffered injuries in the fires.

The fire is in approximately the same location as a similar blaze last week.

Iran’s security chief: Nukes have no place in Iran’s defensive doctrine

Iran nuclear programe

Addresding the BRICS security mreeting in Brazil, Ali Akbar
Ahmadian cited the UN oversight bodies’ reports as proof that Iran’s nuclear activities have never deviated from the peaceful path.

He reaffirmed Iran’s determination to use nuclear energy for civilian purposes, saying the Islamic Republic will not relinquish its inalienable right to the technology.

Speaking about the Palestinian issue, Ahmadian said, “As for Palestine, we are witnessing the reproduction of the dangerous discourse known as Peace through Strength and Coercion Diplomacy”.

Elsewhere, Ahmadian spoke about US threats against the BRICS grouping which includes countries like Iran, China and Russia.

He said such threats show the huge potential of BRICS for creating a powerful economic, political and cultural bloc.

Ahmadian noted that Tehran proposes the formation of a Supply Chain Security Committee
focused on key measures such as transport insurance, establishing an anti-sanction corridor, and launching a support fund to counteract foreign
sanctions.

This, he said, aims to strengthen the resilience and security of supply chains against external pressures and to ensure smoother trade and logistics operations in the face of Western sanctions.

Iranian gynecologist wins WIPO medal 

Hosseini has succeeded in using stem cells to control HPV and heal cervical wounds.

Meanwhile,this humanitarian invention has received a Grade A standard and innovation certificate from the secretary general of the International Federation of Inventors’ Associations, IFIA, and the special Gold Plus medal from the Swiss jury in Geneva.

The WIPO prize is the most prestigious medal for global inventions. Actually, they call it the Nobel Prize for inventions and the event is held under the auspices of the UN in Geneva. WIPO is a specialized agency of the UN serving innovators worldwide. The organization also ensures that innovators’ ideas are safely brought to market and improve quality of life everywhere.

Meantime, IFIA awards the WIPO medal to the best invention of that year.

Ms. Hosseini’s achievement comes as she has already won a gold medal in September 2024 from Silicon Valley, USA, in the field of HPV medicine.