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Iranian President affirms support for Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity during Baku visit

President Pezeshkian, who arrived in the Azerbaijani capital at the head of 120-strong delegation, stated, “We believe Nagorno-Karabakh is an inseparable part of Azerbaijan’s territory and we respect this position.”

The region is disputed between the Republic of Azerbaijan and neighboring Armenia and has triggered conflicts between the two countries.

The Iranian president conveyed greetings from the Leader Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei and emphasized the fraternal ties between the two nations, calling them “not just neighbors but friends, brothers, and even relatives.”

The visit aims to strengthen bilateral relations following recent expert-level agreements.

President Pezeshkian expressed hope that the signed agreements would lead to broader cooperation, serving as regionala model for interaction.

President Aliyev welcomed the Iranian delegation, describing the visit as historically significant.

“During our private meeting, we discussed numerous issues and emphasized expanding relations across all sectors,” Aliyev said.

He expressed confidence that enhanced ties would benefit both nations.

Iran’s Deputy FM: Zero enrichment ‘non-negotiable’

Majid Takht Ravanchi

Takht-Ravanchi was briefing the Parliament’s Committee on National Security and Foreign Policy on Sunday on the third round of indirect talks between Iran and the United States held in the Omani capital of Muscat a day earlier.

The third round of indirect talks between Tehran and Washington was led by Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and US President Donald Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff. Earlier in the day, technical-level talks between Iranian and American experts also took place in Muscat.

Michael Anton, the State Department’s head of policy planning, led Washington’s expert-level delegation, while Iranian Deputy Foreign Ministers Kazem Gharibabadi and Takht-Ravanchi led Tehran’s team. The expert-level discussions focused on details of expectations and demands.

According to Ebrahim Rezaei, the parliamentary committee’s spokesman, Takht-Ravanchi said during the meeting that the negotiating team has never held discussions about its redlines, and the talks were restricted to the nuclear case.

Takht-Ravanchi explained that the Saturday talks in Muscat focused on building confidence about the peaceful nature of Iran’s nuclear program in return for the lifting of all sanctions.

During the session, Rezaei stated, it was emphasized that oil, petrochemical, gas, shipping, financial and banking sanctions must be lifted and that Iran’s resources and assets abroad must be released.

The participants also stressed the importance of lifting all trade, industrial, mining, transportation and insurance bans and terminating sanctions on institutions and individuals, he added.

He emphasized that Iran’s nuclear case in the UN Security Council and the International Atomic Energy Agency’s Board of Governors must be closed.

The Iranian lawmaker reiterated the Parliament’s support for any measure that would serve national interests, security and dignity, saying the talks must guarantee the country’s interests and security.

“Another issue emphasized in this meeting was that if the snapback mechanism is activated, we will activate our own levers, one of which is withdrawal from the NPT (Non-Proliferation Treaty),” Rezaei continued.

The so-called snapback mechanism allows for the return of the United Nations Security Council’s sanctions against Iran suspended under the 2015 nuclear deal, formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

The lawmaker also quoted Takht-Ravanchi as saying that Iran insists on improving cooperation with China and Russia and has high-level relations with them.

The deputy foreign minister stressed the need to pass a strategic partnership treaty with Russia.

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday signed a law ratifying a comprehensive strategic partnership agreement with Iran for closer cooperation in trade, defense, energy, and regional infrastructure projects.

The pact, signed by Putin and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian, has a duration of twenty years and establishes the legal framework for long-term cooperation in various sectors, including defense, energy, industry, agriculture, finance, transportation, science, culture, and technology.

President Pezeshkian says Iran welcomes foreign investors, international traders

“We express our readiness for any form of cooperation with countries around the world in scientific, economic, political, and social fields,” Pezeshkian said while speaking at the inauguration ceremony of the 7th Export Capabilities Exhibition of the Islamic Republic of Iran (Iran Expo 2025) on Monday.

He stated that Iran provides a prime platform for foreign investment and tourism, adding, “Trade, investment, and international cooperation are the foundations of lasting stability.”

Minister of Industry, Mines and Trade Mohammad Atabak, who also gave a speech at the ceremony, stated, “We’re committed to win-win international partnerships and stand ready to share our capabilities.”

The seventh edition of Iran Expo, Iran’s largest and most significant export event for engaging with international markets, kicked off in Tehran on Monday morning with the participation of representatives from companies across over 100 countries.

More than 2,000 firms from around the world are in Tehran to engage in negotiations and establish trade interactions with Iran’s largest brands.

This came as Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei designated the new Persian year of 1404 as the year of “investment in production” which indicates the need to focus on directing financial resources towards productive sectors.

65% of Gaza war victims women, children, elderly: Report

Gaza War

In a statement, the Gaza-based Government Media Office confirmed that the Israeli forces have killed over 18,000 children and 12,400 women since Oct. 7, 2023, while wiping out 2,180 entire families.

It added that 5,070 other families now survive with only one remaining member.

Israeli strikes have also claimed 1,400 medical personnel, 212 journalists, and 750 aid workers.

The statement also said that “systematic attacks … have collapsed Gaza’s healthcare system and attempted to silence truth.”

The statement confirmed that facts on the ground, along with testimonies from Israeli pilots and military leaks, cited by rights organizations, admit to intentionally bombing civilian homes and neighborhoods.

“The facts leave no doubt that targeting civilians in Gaza is a systematic policy of the Israeli occupation within its plan to commit the crimes of genocide and ethnic cleansing,” the statement read.

The Israeli army resumed its assault on Gaza on March 18, shattering a Jan. 19 ceasefire and prisoner exchange agreement.

Israel has killed more than 52,200 Palestinians in the enclave since October 2023, most of them women and children.

The International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants last November 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.

Iranian parliamentary investigation finds ‘negligence’ in deadly port explosion, undermines ‘sabotage’ as unlikely

MP Seyed Morteza Mahmoudi, who is a member of the investigative team, told ISNA on Monday, “CCTV footage and eyewitness accounts revealed serious incompetence in cargo handling procedures.”

He cited “false declarations of container contents” and “lack of proper oversight” as key factors, while noting deliberate sabotage appears unlikely based on available evidence.

“The complete absence of proper control mechanisms for incoming and outgoing cargo created conditions for this tragedy,” Mahmoudi said.

“While other ports share similar vulnerabilities, the failures were particularly severe at Shahid Rajaei.”

The delegation will submit its final report to the parliament on Tuesday.

Ghalibaf on Monday pledged full transparency, stating that oversight agencies and four parliamentary committees are conducting thorough reviews to identify any negligence or intentional wrongdoing, with findings to be made public.

The explosion at Iran’s busiest commercial port, which has claimed at least 46 lives and injured over 700 others so far, has raised nationwide concerns about port management practices.

Music festival cut short in solidarity with Bandar Abbas port tragedy

Organizers announced the decision in an official statement, expressing grief over Saturday’s incident.

Governor Mohammad Ashouri Taziani declared three days of public mourning in Hormozgan province.

“The festival, which was set to feature five nights of regional folk music performances, will not continue its remaining programs,” the statement read.

In their poetic statement, the organizers wrote, “The southern home – with its palm tree, old boat in the corner – has one room in Ahvaz, another in Bushehr, and its largest, most beautiful room in Bandar Abbas.”

The organizers said a mourning ceremony will be held on Monday night to commemorate the victims of the incident.

“Tonight we gather in Saadat Schoolyard to read the final story and entrust you to God’s mercy,” the statement read.

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Fourth edition of Koocheh music festival kicks off in Bushehr

Iran insists on domestic uranium enrichment, sanctions relief as nuclear talks continue

Esmail Baghaei

In his weekly press briefing, Baqaei stated that no details would be finalized unless these key principles were included in the overall framework.

Regarding the negotiation process, the spokesperson expressed Iran’s willingness to hold more frequent discussion rounds if necessary, noting that the timing and intervals would be determined by mutual agreement.

He said the fourth round of indirect Iran-US negotiations is scheduled for Saturday, but the venue has to be decided. The diplomat added duration of indirect talks is to be decided by the negotiating sides.

Baqaei strongly criticized the “illegal and unjust” sanctions against Iran and asserted that their true purpose is to pressure ordinary Iranian citizens rather than achieve any legitimate policy goals.

He noted that European countries’ withdrawal from the negotiation process was their own decision, adding Iran is waiting for response from E3 – Britain, France, and Germany – on Iranian Foreign Minister Seyyed Abbas Araghchi’s offer of talks.

On technical matters, Baqaei confirmed that an International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) delegation had arrived in Tehran for follow-up discussions with Iranian nuclear officials.

These talks, which are purely technical in nature, come after last week’s meeting between the agency’s director general and senior Iranian representatives, he explained.

The spokesperson also addressed regional tensions, warning against any provocative actions by Israel, promising “any adventurism against Iran will see a crushing response.”

Baqaei also touched on President Pezeshkian’s visit to Republic of Azerbaijan, describing it as a “really important” trip that “can open a new chapter in our relations.”

Worldwide military spending hit record $2.7 trillion last year, sharpest rise since Cold War

Military spending rose worldwide with particularly large increases in Europe and the Middle East, according to a new report by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).

Several European countries had seen “unprecedented” rises in their military spending, the report noted.

In real terms, spending rose by 9.4 percent globally compared to 2023, with 2024 marking the 10th year of consecutive spending increases.

“This was really unprecedented,” Xiao Liang, a researcher with the SIPRI Military Expenditure and Arms Production Programme, told AFP.

“It was the highest year-on-year increase since the end of the Cold War,” Liang continued, adding, While there may have been steeper increases during the Cold War, data for the Soviet Union is not available.

More than 100 countries, including all of the 15 largest spenders, increased their military budgets last year, according to the report.

“This really speaks to the heightened geopolitical tensions,” Liang said.

The spending increase was likely to have “a very profound socio-economic and political impact”, he added, noting, “Countries have to make trade-offs in their budgetary decisions.”

“For example, we’ve seen many European countries cutting other spending like international aid to fund the increase in military spending, and … trying to raise taxes or rely on loans or debt to fund the spending,” Liang stated.

The main contributor to the rise in expenditure was the European region including Russia, where spending rose by 17 percent to $693 billion.

All European countries, except Malta, expanded their budgets, “pushing European military spending beyond the level recorded at the end of the Cold War”, SIPRI said.

Russia’s military expenditure reached $149 billion in 2024: a 38-percent increase on the previous year and a doubling since 2015.

Ukraine’s military spending grew by 2.9 percent to reach $64.7 billion.

While that sum only corresponds to 43 percent of Russia’s arms spending, for Ukraine it is the equivalent of 34 percent of its GDP. That means it is carrying the highest military burden of any country.

Germany’s spending increased by 28 percent, reaching $88.5 billion, overtaking India as the fourth largest in the world.

“Germany became the biggest spender in Central and Western Europe for the first time since its reunification,” Liang noted.

The world’s largest spender, the United States, increased expenditure by 5.7 percent, reaching $997 billion. That alone accounts for 37 percent of worldwide spending and 66 percent of the military spending among NATO countries.

Total military spending by the 32 members of the US-led alliance rose to 1.5 trillion as all members increased their spending.

“We’ve seen in 2024 that 18 out of the 32 NATO countries reached the 2-percent GDP spending target, which is the highest since the founding of the alliance,” Liang added.

While some of the increases have been a result of European military aid to Ukraine, it has also been fuelled by concerns of potential US disengagement with the alliance.

“There has really been a shift in European defence policies, where we will see large-scale procurement plans into the arms industry in the years to come,” Liang explained.

Military budgets also drastically grew in the Middle East to an estimated $243 billion, an increase of 15 percent from 2023.

As Israel continued its offensive in the Gaza Strip, its military expenditure surged by 65 percent to $46.5 billion in 2024. SIPRI noted that this represented “the steepest annual increase since the Six-Day War in 1967”.

The world’s second-largest spender, China, increased its military budget by 7 percent to an estimated $314 billion, “marking three decades of consecutive growth”.

China – which has been investing in modernising its military and expansion of cyberwarfare capabilities and nuclear arsenal – accounted for half of all military spending in Asia and Oceania.

Pakistan threatens India with nukes

In a televised address on Sunday, Abbasi reminded India that Pakistan possesses numerous missiles and 130 nuclear warheads, which are “not for display.”

“Nobody knows where we have placed our nuclear weapons across the country. I say it again, these ballistic missiles, all of them are targeted at you,” the official stated.

Commenting on New Delhi’s decision on Wednesday to unilaterally suspend the key water-sharing Indus Waters Treaty, Abbasi charged that “if they stop the water supply to us, then they should be ready for a war,” echoing previous statements by Pakistani officials.

India, in turn, asserted earlier this week that the suspension would remain in place “until Pakistan credibly and irrevocably abjures its support for cross-border terrorism.”

New Delhi has never before suspended the treaty, which regulates river systems that impact millions of lives in both countries.

The already acrimonious relations between the two nuclear powers further soured on Tuesday, when several gunmen killed 25 Indian tourists and one Nepalese national in Baisaran Valley, a popular destination in the Kashmir region.

India was quick to accuse its neighbor of aiding militant infiltrations in Kashmir – an allegation Pakistan strongly denies.

The Resistance Front, a militant group allegedly linked to Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba, has reportedly claimed responsibility for the terrorist attack. Indian police say that two of the suspects are Pakistani nationals.

On Wednesday, New Delhi downgraded diplomatic ties, expelled Pakistani diplomats and closed the land border with its neighbor.

Islamabad responded in kind, reiterating its accusations that India oppresses the majority-Muslim population of Kashmir.

According to NDTV, Indian and Pakistani troops have exchanged fire across the Line of Control (LoC) in Kashmir for a third night. The LoC is the de facto boundary between the countries. Indian security forces are also reportedly conducting anti-terrorist raids on their side of the border.

Speaking to Sky News earlier this week, Pakistani Defense Minister Khawaja Asif warned that the confrontation with India could escalate into an “all-out war” with a potentially “tragic outcome,” given that both nations are nuclear powers. He also alleged that New Delhi had staged the deadly incident earlier in the week.

North Korea confirms soldiers sent to fight in Ukraine war

In a statement provided to North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on Monday, the Central Military Commission of the ruling Workers’ Party said that the country’s leader, Kim Jong Un, had sent troops into combat alongside Russian forces as part of a mutual defence treaty between Moscow and Pyongyang.

The KCNA quoted Kim as saying that soldiers were deployed to “annihilate and wipe out the Ukrainian neo-Nazi occupiers and liberate the Kursk area in cooperation with the Russian armed forces”.

“They who fought for justice are all heroes and representatives of the honour of the motherland,” KCNA quoted Kim as saying.

North Korea “regards it as an honour to have an alliance with such a powerful state as the Russian Federation”, KCNA added.

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Kim signed a comprehensive strategic partnership treaty in June last year, committing the two countries to come to each other’s assistance, militarily, in the event of war.

According to South Korea’s official Yonhap News Agency, Kim also said that a monument would be built soon in the capital, Pyongyang, to honour those who had fought against Ukraine.

“Flowers praying for immortality will be placed before the tombstones of the fallen soldiers, effectively acknowledging troops killed in combat,” Yonhap reports, noting that North Korea had so far remained silent about the thousands of soldiers it had sent to Russia in October.

Ukrainian officials stated earlier this year that some 14,000 North Koreans were deployed against its forces, including 3,000 reinforcements who were sent to replace the North Koreans’ early battlefield losses.

Lacking armoured vehicles and unfamiliar with drone warfare, the North Koreans had taken heavy casualties early on in fighting but adapted quickly, according to reports, and later contributed to reclaiming Russia’s Kursk region from occupying Ukrainian forces.

Estimates of the casualty rate among North Korean forces fighting for Russia have varied widely.

South Korea’s National Intelligence Service (NIS) said in January that about 300 North Korean soldiers were killed in combat and another 2,700 had been injured.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky put the number of killed or wounded North Koreans at 4,000, while the United States estimated a lower figure of about 1,200 casualties.

North Korea’s statement follows Russia’s chief of staff, Valery Gerasimov, on Saturday hailing the “heroism” of the North Korean soldiers, who he said “provided significant assistance in defeating the group of Ukrainian armed forces”, while reporting to Putin that Kursk had been regained from Ukrainian forces.

Ukraine’s General Staff quickly countered, saying that its defensive operation in certain areas in Kursk was continuing.

The US State Department announced in a statement on Sunday evening that North Korea and other “third countries” had “perpetuated” Russia’s war on Ukraine and that it must end, as should Moscow’s support for Pyongyang.