Monday, January 19, 2026
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Pakistan’s FM Due in Tehran on Monday: Spokesman

Khawaja Muhammad Asif

In a Sunday statement, Iran’s Foreign Ministry Spokesman Bahram Qassemi said Pakistani FM Khawaja Muhammad Asif will meet with high-ranking Iranian officials during his one-day visit.

Bilateral, regional, and international issues will be high on the agenda of talks between Iranian and Pakistani sides, he added.

Muhammad Asif, who will head a high-ranking political and economic delegation, is planned to meet with President Hassan Rouhani, Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, and Vice-President for Economic Affairs Mohammad Nahavandian, Qassemi noted.

Iranian Film Bags Two Awards at Venice Festival

‘No Date, No Signature’ which won Best Director and Best Supporting Actor awards at the 35th Fajr Film Festival, managed to once again draw the attentions of festival juries to the top-notch performance of Navid Mohammadzadeh and Vahid Jalilvand’s outstanding achievement as the director of the film.

The drama narrates the story of a forensic pathologist Dr. Kaveh Nariman (played by Amir Aghaei), a principled and virtuous man, who has an accident with a motorcyclist (Mohammadzadeh) and his family, and injures his 8-year-old son. He pays compensation to the man and offers to take the child to a clinic nearby. The next morning, he finds out that the same little boy has been brought in for an autopsy. Dr. Nariman faces a dilemma now: is he responsible for the child’s death due to the accident or he died of food poisoning according to other doctors’ diagnostic?

Variety has reviewed ‘No Date, No Signature’ as “a handsomely made, exceptionally well-played drama that largely works despite a few significant plot holes.”

The review praises Navid Mohammadzadeh’s performance, saying “all four main actors are in top form, but it’s Mohammadzadeh who steals the show in his scene at the poultry plant, when his desperate monologue takes on an epic, Shakespearean quality as he throws all his physical force into a verbal storm of pained outrage.”

Iranian Film Bags Two Awards at Venice FestivalWhile dedicating his award to the Iranian people during the closing ceremony Saturday night, Mohammadzadeh said “I am proud to be an Iranian, and I am delighted that Rakhshan Bani Etemad as one of the best filmmakers in Iran’s cinema history is among the jury panels of this year’s edition of Venice film festival.”

The festival’s top prize known as Golden Lion went to Guillermo Del Toro’s ‘The Shape of Water’.

The 74th Venice International Film Festival was held from 30 August to 9 September 2017 in Venice, Italy.

Iranian, Turkish Presidents Hold Talks in Astana

Iranian, Turkish Presidents Hold Talks in Astana

Facilitating banking transactions is an important platform for developing ties and cooperation between both countries,” said Rouhani after a meeting with Erdogan in Kazakhstan’s capital  Astana on Saturday ahead of a summit of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation.

Both leaders also stressed the importance of delivering aid to the people of Myanmar, where security forces have been attacking the Rohingya Muslims and torching their villages since October 2016 in a bid to push them out of the western state of Rakhine.

Rouhani noted that Iran would be sending humanitarian aid to those affected in the crackdown, and called for an end to the violence against the Rohingya Muslims.

In his turn, Erdogan also stressed that the government in Myanmar must be pressured into halting its atrocities.

Iranian, Turkish Presidents Hold Talks in Astana

Rohingya Muslims fleeing violence and persecution in their home country of Myanmar continue to arrive in Bangladesh. Refugees are waiting for hand-out from aid agencies since they lack food, clean water and shelter. Locals say many of the Rohingya refugees are also sick and wounded. Thousands of the displaced people have been stranded or left without enough food for weeks.

Myanmar’s leader Aung San Suu Kyi is under fire by the international community and rights groups for allowing the government troops and the Buddhist mobs to further impose a violent clampdown on the desperate minority.

Suu Kyi, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991, is also heavily criticized by a number of her fellow Nobel laureates, including Malala Yousafzai and Desmond Tutu, for allowing such atrocities against the Rohingya.

Iran to Send Man into Space by Next 8 Years

Iran to Send Man into Space by Next 8 Years

Iran sent two monkeys into the space back in 2013. The first monkey (Aftab or Sun) was sent in January to an altitude of about 120km (75 miles) in a Pishgam rocket for a sub-orbital flight before returning intact to the Earth. The second monkey (Fargam or Auspicious) was sent in December as part of a programme aimed for manned space flight.

Now, head of the Aviation Research Centre at Iran’s Ministry of Science, Research and Technology, Fat’hollah Ami, says Iran’s space programme is going on smoothly and efforts are underway to send a manned spaceship into space within the next eight years.

He said the Aviation Research Centre is now focused on its main goal to send man into the space by the next eight years. “We have had serious negotiations with Russian space centres and they are expected to give us their final reply,” he said.

According to a Farsi report by the Arya News Agency, he elaborated on the aviation achievements of the Islamic Republic of Iran over the past years and said following their great achievement by launching the largest orbital carrier rocket into space, the Iranian researchers are now trying to launch new multistage orbital rockets.

“At present, 10 high-skilled Iranian pilots are taking special training courses. At the end of the day, we will pick up two of them for long-range flights into the space,” he said.

Iranian Space Monkeys Give Birth to Baby

Iranian Space Monkeys Give Birth to BabyThe two monkeys which were separately sent into the space and returned in perfect health to Earth by Iranian spaceships have given birth to a baby monkey last week.

In an address to a technology conference in northern Iran, Ami said ‘Aftab’ and ‘Fargam’ have given birth to a monkey baby.

He added the monkey baby was born last week, adding the researchers are now studying the effects of space travel on the new-born baby.

‘US Breach of Commitments to Make Iran Produce Nuclear Fuel’

‘US Breach of Commitments to Make Iran Produce Nuclear Fuel’

Iranian legislator Mohammad Javad Kolivand has, in a Farsi interview with ICANA, termed the Iran nuclear deal an international agreement, saying signatories to the deal are expected to make good on their commitments under the accord.

“Still, some of the obligations [stipulated] in the nuclear deal have not been fulfilled,” said Kolivand, who chairs the Parliament’s Councils’ Commission.

“[Improvement in] insurance and transport, [a rise in] production of gaseous condensates, and an increase in oil exports are among the developments which occurred following the conclusion of the Iran nuclear deal, but still we are seeing the US and some European countries breaching their commitments and causing obstruction in other sectors,” said the lawmaker.

He said among the measures the P5+1 countries had undertaken to adopt were to lift sanctions and not to impose new bans.

However, he added, the promises have been breached.

The legislator underlined that the implementation of the nuclear deal took Iran to a new phase on the international stage and at the same time revealed Washington’s reneging on its commitments under the agreement.

He said the US keeps preventing the establishment of relations between Iranian and international banks and procurement of raw materials for factories.

“All these are breaches of promises on the part of the US, and the [Iranian] Parliament has [passed] legislation which stipulates that a nuclear fuel production plant should be constructed if parties to the nuclear agreement impose new sanctions on Iran or renew past sanctions.”

Therefore, he noted, it is required that the legislation go into force to deal with the United States’ breach of promises.

He reiterated that Iran is not seeking to scuttle the nuclear deal and will fulfil its duties within the framework of the agreement.

“If the US wants the agreement annulled, then American statesmen should be waiting for the deal to be scrapped. As already proven, they have always scuppered international accords.”

Iran’s Beauties in Photos: Sistan and Baluchestan Province

 

The province comprises two sections, Sistan in the north and Baluchestan in the south. The combined Sistan and Baluchestan province today accounts for one of the driest regions of Iran with a slight increase in rainfall from east to west, and an obvious rise in humidity in the coastal regions.

However, its enormous area has given the province a great diversity of climate and vegetation, which needs further investment to become a major tourist destination.

Despite all the deprivation and dryness, Sistan and Baluchestan province has kept its intact and beautiful nature. Here are Tasnim’s photos of the southeastern province:

Muslim Leaders to Discuss Myanmar Genocide in Astana: Iran President

Speaking to reporters in Tehran on Saturday before his departure for the Kazakh capital of Astana, Rouhani said on the sidelines of the First OIC Summit on Science and Technology, the heads of state will examine conditions of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar.

“Today, a major human tragedy and ethnic and ideological cleansing is taking place in Myanmar and hundreds of thousands of Muslims have been displaced in this region,” he said, adding that the Muslim world cannot remain silent on the measures taken by the Myanmar government.

He further emphasized that international organizations should impose pressure on the Myanmar government and army to prevent the oppression of the Rohingya Muslims.

Heading a high-ranking delegation, President Rouhani left Tehran for Astana to take part in the First OIC Summit on Science and Technology due to open in the Kazakh capital on Sunday.

Rouhani is slated to deliver a speech at the OIC summit and meet with some heads of state of the Muslim countries during his two-day visit to Kazakhstan.

The Rohingya have long faced severe discrimination and were the targets of violence in 2012 that killed hundreds and drove about 140,000 people from their homes to camps for the internally displaced.

Over the past days, intensifying clashes between security forces and insurgents in western Myanmar have sent about 270,000 terrified civilians scrambling toward the Bangladesh border in a desperate search for refuge.

A United Nations report in February said the military crackdown on the Rohingya had led to gang rape, the killing of hundreds of civilians and the forced displacement of people.

Iran Can Play Key Role in Ending Massacre of Myanmar Muslims: MP

Iran Can Play Key Role in Ending Massacre of Myanmar Muslims: MP

Jalil Rahimi Jahan-Abadi called on Islamic states to express their opposition to the mass killing of Muslims in Myanmar by the extremist Buddhists by lodging complaints with the Human Rights Council and the United Nations.

The lawmaker said the Islamic Republic of Iran should play a key role in putting an end to the crimes against Muslims in Myanmar, urging the foreign ministry to inform the world in the General Assembly of the United Nations about the massacre in Myanmar and help put an end to the crimes by lodging a complaint with the UN.

He also called on the foreign ministry to hold talks with Islamic states across the world to make a coalition against the massacre in Myanmar.

 

Independent Media Should Shed Lights on Buddhists’ Crimes

“Meanwhile, all Islamic and independent media should shed light on the Buddhists’ crimes against Rohingya Muslims,” he said in a Farsi interview with ICANA.

Rahimi Jahan-Abadi, who is also the head of the International Affairs Committee of the Iranian Parliament’s Judicial and Legal Commission, noted that Iran is not a member of International Criminal Court, so it cannot lodge a complaint.

“But we can brief the Human Rights Council as well as the United Nations Security Council on the crimes of Myanmar Buddhists against Muslims which are threatening the international peace and security,” he said.

The lawmaker stressed that the crimes committed by the Buddhists against the Myanmar Muslims stand in stark violation of international law including human rights and the principles of International Criminal Court.

He called on the UNSC to vehemently condemn the massacre underway by the Myanmar Buddhists against the Rohingya Muslims.

 

World to Pay Heavy Price for Remaining Silent towards Muslims Massacre

Rahimi Jahan-Abadi emphasized that the international community will have to pay a heavy price if it remains silent towards the massacre of Muslims in Myanmar and added the least price that the world has to pay is the creation of ISIS in Eastern Asia.

“The massacre of Muslims will pave the way for the extremist groups with ISIS ideology in the East Asia and this will inflict a heavy blow to the eastern hemisphere of the world,” he noted.

Int’l Street Theatre Festival Opens in Iran’s Marivan

The secretary of the 12th Marivan International Street Theatre Festival, Fateh Badparva says the event plays host to foreign groups form six countries.

According to a Farsi report by the Mehr News Agency, among the foreign plays to be performed by the six groups in this edition of the fest are ‘Deux Secondes’ (Two Seconds) from France written and directed by Amandine Barillon and ‘The Seagull’ from Ukraine written by well-known Russian playwright and short story writer, Anton Chekhov, directed by Laroslav Fedoryshyn.

Badparva listed other foreign plays to be staged in the fest as ‘Instead of Fish’ from Iraq written and directed by Hunar Taher, ‘The Crazy Clown’ from Spain directed by Wilson Hernando Novoa Gallego, ‘Lord of the Clean’ from Brazil written and directed by Héctor López Girondo and ‘The Garden of Dreams’ from Azerbaijan written and directed by Parviz Bashardust and Imam Hasanov, respectively.

In addition to domestic media, 20 foreign news agency have voiced willingness to cover the event.

The festival was inaugurated with a carnival, and will be open to visitors until September 13 in Marivan Country in Kurdistan Province, western Iran.

At the 2006 census, the population of Marivan was 91,664, in 22,440 families.

Iran Welcomes Joint Ventures with Germany: Health Minister

Iran Welcomes Joint Ventures with Germany: Health Minister

Minister of Health and Medical Education Seyyed Hassan Qazizadeh Hashemi said top officials of Iran and Germany have shown great willingness to foster relations in all fields.

Speaking in a meeting with the officials of Germany’s Federal Ministry of Health, he added the Western European country has always been a familiar and long-standing partner of Iran, expressing the hope that the two sides could also form an effective partnership in the field of health.

According to a Farsi report by the Arya News Agency, Qazizadeh Hashemi said, “I am confident that our German friends are familiar with Iran’s relative capabilities in the fields of medical sciences and services as well as health network.”

“Medical sciences in Iran are merged with the country’s system for providing health services, meaning that our higher education has become a part of the Ministry of Health. Each year, a total of 200,000 students study medicine in Iranian medical faculties.”

The minister added the two countries have close cooperation in the fields of producing foodstuff and medicines as well as providing hospital services, particularly in medical equipment industry.

This is because the history of cooperation between Iranian and German companies dates back to half a century ago, he said.

Qazizadeh Hashemi said what took place following the going into effect of the nuclear deal between Tehran and world powers can prepare the ground for increased relations between Iranian and German companies during President Rouhani’s second term in office.

He also noted the Islamic Republic welcomes joint investments and ventures with Germany to develop modern technologies and create job opportunities as well as market in Iran’s health sector.