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UAE Slams Qatar for Restoring Ties with Iran

The UAE State Minister for Foreign Affairs, Anwar Gargash, has posted a number of messages in his Twitter account blaming Qatar for its decision to restore ties with Iran.

According to a Farsi report by the Fars News Agency, Qatar is under pressure by Saudi Arabia and a number of other Arab states including the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt for its ties with Iran. The coalition headed by Saudi Arabia has already cut its ties with Qatar and put the country under blockade with the aim of exerting economic pressures on it.

“Qatar is offering confusing justifications to restore its ties with Iran,” Gargash wrote, adding that no sovereign state is ashamed of its independent decision.

Gargash described Qatar’s decision to restore diplomatic ties with Iran as childish and wayward and said its justifications are not convincing.

The hard-line UAE diplomat went on saying that Doha’s reference to trade ties to justify its decision to send back its ambassador to Tehran intentionally neglects Iran’s main economic interests in the region, namely the gas fields shared by Qatar and the Islamic Republic.

This is the UAE’s second reaction to Qatar’s decision to restore full diplomatic ties with Iran within 24 hours. Earlier, Gargash posted a message on twitter saying Qatar has put itself in deeper troubles by such a decision. “With such a bad crisis management, Qatar will lose more opportunities and weaken its own sovereignty,” he added.

According to Gargash, by adopting the policy of escaping forward, Qatar has only deepened the current crisis and weakened mediatory efforts. “We didn’t see the expected prudence in Qatari officials,” he noted.

He said it is better for Qatar to put more efforts into tackling the current crises, “but with its latest decisions about relation with Yemen and Iran, it has actually deteriorated the crises.”

On Wednesday, Qatari government decided to send back its ambassador to Tehran. According to a statement published by the Qatari Foreign Ministry, Doha intends to deepen its bilateral relations with Iran over 20 months after it recalled its ambassador from Tehran following Saudi Arabia’s severance of ties with Iran.

Iran’s Freestyle Wrestler Yazdani Bags Historic Gold Medal

Yazdani had earlier eliminated opponents from Kazakhstan, Moldova, and Azerbaijan to reach the semi-final match on Friday. He then overcame Vladislav Valief of Russia 4-to-nothing to book his spot in the final.

The 22-year-old only needed 2 minutes and 24 seconds to defeat Boris Makoev from Slovakia 10-0 in the 86kg final match and secure Iran’s first gold.

“I am not satisfied with my performance in the first two matches because I was sick. Afterward, I did a better performance and I am happy I made the Iranian people happy,” Yazdani said.

Vladislav Valiev from Russia and J’den Cox from the US claimed the bronze medal.

Iran Condemns Terrorist Attack on Kabul Mosque

afghanistan
Police try to rescue a child at the site of the suicide attack claimed by ISIL [Omar Sobhani/Reuters]

bahram qassemiIn a Friday statement, Foreign Ministry Spokesman Bahram Qassemi strongly condemned the terrorist attack on Imam Zaman mosque in Kabul, and condoled with the Afghan government, people and families of the victims of the cowardly and inhumane attack.

“Fuelling religious divisions and disrupting the unity of the patient Afghan nation are undoubtedly among the objectives pursued by the terrorists who commit such crimes,” he noted, stressing that these terrorists are getting weaker every day.

“It is necessary that the Afghan government and people disappoint them (terrorists) and their supporters like always through rapport and vigilance,” the spokesman stressed.

A suicide bombing followed by gunfire as Shiite Muslims gathered for Friday prayers at a mosque in the Afghan capital has killed at least 20 people and wounded dozens of others with the ISIS group claiming responsibility.

After the blast at the Imam Zaman mosque, in the Qala-Najara neighbourhood in north Kabul, gunmen stormed in and began shooting.

Over 1,400 Planes Crossing Iran’s Sky Every Day: Official

“Today, Iran has been chosen [by airliners] as the safest air corridor in the Middle East,” Brigadier General Farzad Esmaili, the commander of Iran’s Air Defense Force, was quoted as saying by the domestic media.

The official added that over 700,000 international flights carrying a collective of above 50 million passengers had used Iran’s skies over the past Iranian calendar that started 21 March 2016.

Official figures show around 450 planes crossed Iran’s skies every day in 2014. However, the insurgency that Daesh militants waged in Iraq as well as the conflict in Ukraine pushed the number up to as high as 900 planes per day the next year, marking an increase of 100 percent.

The diplomatic crisis between Qatar and Saudi Arabia and its allies forced the tiny Persian Gulf state to use Iran’s airspace for its international flights.

Accordingly, officials said this introduced an increase of 20 percent in Iran’s air traffic.

The rise in Qatar’s use of Iran’s airspace has also provided the Islamic Republic with extra air transportation fee revenues. To the same effect, the domestic media said Iran was entitled to at least $13 million per month in air traffic fees.

In June, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Kuwait, Bahrain, and the UAE closed their airspace to the Qatari planes after they cut diplomatic ties with the country, accusing the latter of supporting terrorism.

Iran to Finish Construction of New Nuclear Plant by 2025

Behrouz Kamalvandi, the spokesman of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI), told the domestic media that a second plant would be made operational two years later than the first one.

Kamalvandi emphasized that the projects could generate a collective of 2,100 megawatts – 1,050 megawatts each – once fully operational.

Last September, Iran said it had started a 10-year project to construct a new nuclear power plant with Russia’s help.

The Islamic Republic already runs one Russian-built nuclear reactor at Bushehr, which is the country’s first nuclear energy project.

Russia signed a deal with Iran in 2014 to build up to eight more reactors in the country.

Kamalvandi further added that the construction of nuclear power plants required an investment of at least $5 billion. The figure, he said, is at least three times higher than that required for the construction of regular plants.

The official further said that Iran burns at least two million barrels of oil each year to produce enough electricity to answer its energy needs. This, he added, would cost at least $100 million if each barrel of oil is sold at $50.

Using the nuclear technology, Kamalvandi stressed, would both preserve national resources and would also help prevent the annual release of around 7 million tonnes of pollutants into the environment.

Elsewhere in his remarks, Kamalvandi said the operations to re-design Arak heavy water reactor is proceeding according to the schedule, adding that the project would finish before 2022.

He added that the re-designing of Arak reactor – whose name he said he been changed to Khandab heavy water reactor – had already entered the second phase.

Kamalvandi emphasized that Iran in cooperation with Russia and under the supervision of China and the US were involved in the project.

He said Chinese experts had endorsed Iran’s contribution to Khandab project – what he said marked a significant technical achievement for the Islamic Republic.

Iranian Envoy Raps US Pressure on IAEA

Iran’s permanent mission to the IAEA issued the warning in a statement on Thursday, a day after US President Donald Trump dispatched US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley to Vienna to press the UN nuclear chief on their reading of Iran’s compliance.

The statement said the objectives and the results of Haley’s trip to Vienna “contradict” the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) and Resolution 2231, which the UN Security Council has adopted to endorse the nuclear agreement between Iran and the Group 5+1 (Russia, China, the US, Britain, France and Germany).

Iran is fully aware of its obligations under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), the Additional Protocol and the JCPOA, and remains committed to their terms, the statement added.

However, Iran will not allow a specific country to take advantage of the rules for its own political objectives, it noted.

The statement also said that Iran expects the IAEA secretary general and its inspectors to perform their tasks regarding the JCPOA with professionalism and honesty.

Prior to her trip to Vienna, Haley claimed that the visit was a fact-finding mission and part of Trump’s review of the nuclear deal with Tehran.

In a letter dated August 19 but released on August 23, Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif warned about US adherence to the nuclear deal.

Zarif also noted that Haley’s visit to the IAEA undermined “the independence and credibility” of the inspectors.

The trip is aimed at destroying the nuclear deal by raising doubts about the accord’s stability and sustainability, Zarif wrote.

“The publicly stated purpose of this visit raises several serious concerns over further violations of the letter and spirit of” the nuclear deal by the US, Zarif added.

Iran Vows to Legally Pursue Apple’s Removal of Iranian Apps

Iran Vows to Legally Pursue Apple’s Removal of Iranian Apps

Mohammad-Javad Azari Jahromi, the 36-year-old Iranian Minister of Communications and Information Technology, has reacted to the omission of Iranian applications from the App Store by the Apple Inc.

“Apple holds 11% of Iran’s mobile phone market. Today, respecting the rights of consumers is a principle which Apple has violated. We’ll pursue the removal of [Iranian] apps,” said Azari Jahromi on his Twitter page.

According to official reports by Apple and information provided by some domestic sources, the company has shut down some of the popular applications developed by Iranians on App Store due to the US sanctions.

In a message to Iranian developers whose apps were affected by the ban, Apple said, “Under the US sanctions regulations, the App Store cannot host, distribute or do business with apps or developers connected to certain US embargoed countries.”

In reaction to Apple’s message, Azari Jahromi said the company’s response is not precise. He said some of the deleted apps were not associated with financial transactions, and some were registered in countries other than Iran due to sanctions.

The applications removed from App Store include the popular ride-hailing application Snapp as well as online shopping services Digikala and Takhfifian, among others.

Iranians Welcome Campaign to Support Domestic Food Industry

Iranians Welcome Campaign to Support Domestic Food Industry

As Iran’s food industry is suffering from the mass effects of contraband goods, new campaigns created with the main theme of supporting domestic products can play a key role in promoting job creation and economic production in Iran’s food industry and help the industry leave behind its current recession.

According to a Farsi report by the Shahrvand daily newspaper, one of the main sectors in the food industry which is now working based on international standards is chewing gum production.

Today, the sector has managed to create a campaign to get in direct touch with the people. The campaign helps anyone in the society to get familiar with the production process of chewing gum. This has created a positive feeling in the people, prompting them to buy new chewing gum types produced by domestic producers.

The campaign which has been underway for at least two weeks has been warmly welcomed by the people. Meanwhile, some chewing gum companies have presented their new products to some celebrities like Iranian famous traditional singer, Homayoun Shajarian, and popular TV puppet character, Jenab Khan.

It is noteworthy that smuggled chewing gum types which are usually offered with low prices can threaten the people’s health. Meanwhile, they also threaten the existence of Iranian-made chewing gums, leaving many working in the industry jobless.

Iran’s chewing gum market, one of the leading markets in the Middle East, is currently filled with products imported from other countries.

Minorities Free to Perform Religious Rites in Iran: Christian MP

Minorities Free to Perform Religious Rites in Iran- Christian MP

In a Farsi interview with ICANA, Yonathan Betkolia denounced as baseless the US State Department’s report on religious freedom violations in Iran, saying the report is aimed at tarnishing the cultural image of Iran across the world.

“As an Assyrian Christian in Iran, I have not seen yet a violation of religious minorities’ rights in Iran over the past four decades. The minorities enjoy absolute freedom to perform their religious rites in the country,” he said.

The representative of Iranian Assyrian Christians in the parliament went on saying that Iran’s Cultural Heritage Organization has already registered as national heritage all Christian churches across the country, and also repaired and renovated them.

“Besides their churches, the Christians in Iran also have established their own guilds as well as schools and so on,” he noted.

Betkolia also said in the Islamic Republic, minorities’ schools like those of Armenians, Jews, Zoroastrians and Assyrians are not under any pressure to teach Islamic books. “They are only obliged to teach their own religious books in their schools,” he added.

The Iranian lawmaker also noted that instead of accusing Iran of racial and religious discriminations and promoting Islamophobia across the world, the US had better stop rights violations and brutal measures adopted by its police and security forces.

“The Americans themselves don’t allow religious books to be thought in their schools but accuse Iran of violating religious freedom. This comes as minorities in Iran enjoy absolute freedom to perform their rites,” he noted.

“In the US, religious books have been burned repeatedly by extremists but we have not ever seen a similar case in Iran,” he added.

No Limit on Photojournalists’ Presence in Iran Parliament: MP

No Limit on Photojournalists’ Presence in Iran Parliament-MP

From taking selfies with Mogherini to eating pears; paparazzi put their noses into everything!

It all began when the Iranian Parliament invited dozens of foreign dignitaries to take part in the swearing-in ceremony of President Hassan Rouhani.

A few number of the MPs showed an interest in taking selfies with EU Foreign Policy Chief Federica Mogherini, something which was captured by photojournalists and went viral on social media.

Critics lashed out at the lawmakers (mostly reformists) for their enthusiasm for selfies. It was then when the phrase “selfie-taking lawmaker” was coined and made its way into Iran’s language of politics.

The criticisms were so intense that the peripheral event greatly overshadowed the positive outcome of the oath-taking ceremony.

No Limit on Photojournalists’ Presence in Iran Parliament: MPNow, another topic is the front-page news in media and on social networking sites. This time, a conservative legislator leaves an important open session of parliament where lawmakers were reviewing the qualifications of President Rouhani’s nominees for ministerial posts. The MP returns after a few minutes with three pears in each hand, not knowing that photojournalists were capturing every moment of his unusual action! He was widely mocked and criticized for the pears, and the issue sparked a great controversy in coming days.

Following these two events, rumours emerged that some lawmakers (probably selfie-taking MPs and those interested in having snacks in the middle of an official session!) have set aside their political differences (irrespective of whether they are conservative or reformist) and arrived at the conclusion that the way to maintain the Parliament’s dignity is to limit the number of journalists allowed on the parliament floor. Accordingly, the same lawmakers are trying to get this restriction legalized. This issue, even if it is a mere rumour, has prompted a sharp reaction from the advocates of the free flow of information and transparency.

However, a top parliamentarian says no restrictions will be imposed on the presence of reporters and photojournalists in the Parliament, as reported by the Iranian Parliament’s Persian-language news agency ICANA.

“The legislators and the Parliament’s Presiding Board are definitely opposed to such a plan (restricting journalists),” said Behrouz Nemati, the spokesman for the Presiding Board.

He said it would be pointless to limit the activities of journalists who are simply discharging their responsibilities.

Nemati stressed that journalists should not be restricted; rather, lawmakers should correct their behaviour.

“As the cultural observer of the parliament’s Presiding Board, I announce here that photographers and journalists should continue their work seriously because no restrictions have been envisaged for them,” he added.

“A limited number of legislators have aired their grievances [over the presence of reporters], but so far no motion has been submitted to the Presiding Board to call for a limit on the presence of journalists and photographers,” he noted.

He said photojournalists have a duty to capture moments, and added a picture is sometimes more influential than hundreds of meetings and speeches.

“If some of the legislators are opposed to our views, we will definitely enter into talks with them on behalf of the Presiding Board and explain to them that they should exercise more self-restraint,” he said.