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Stonebreaker Mother; Breadwinner of Her Children

Stonebreaker Mother

Maryam Nasiri is a devoted mother who was forced by the love of motherhood to break up stones with her delicate hands to grow up her children in hardship and watch them thrive.

Stonebreaker MotherWe were truly amazed and couldn’t believe our eyes; a mother who is used to break stones with a 20 kg sledgehammer all by herself. Nasiri is from Ramhormoz, a city in Iran’s south-western province of Khuzestan.

Here is IFP‘s translation of a report by Iran newspaper:

“How on earth could you do such an arduous labour,” we wondered and she, with a heavy Khuzestani accent, said, “You’d understand, if you were a mother.”

Not satisfied with the answer, we kept on asking that, “we understand that you are a devoted mother and there is no doubt in your love, unparalleled courage and unwavering faith, but doing this on a daily basis by a woman is unbelievable.” Again, she sufficed it to say that “you’d understand if you were a mother…”

Her hands are in no way similar to the hands of the women we see every day; however, if you look through the eyes of your heart, you’ll find them the most beautiful hands on earth. Overworked hands with deep wrinkles, old calluses and healed scars… For years, she would go to a mine in the vicinity of her living place to make money and support her 7 children by breaking up hard rocks.

Nasiri, “the stonebreaker woman”, was introduced as the country’s “exemplary mother” by the Cultural International Mother Foundation. She received the plaque of appreciation with her callused hands and tearful eyes and turned to the audience who were giving her a standing ovation and said, “I am a mother and all Iranian mothers will sacrifice anything for their children’s convenience.”

Stonebreaker Mother

I Never Had a Childhood

Nasiri who is now 44 years old said that she was forced to marry a man 45 years older.

“I lost my father and became an orphan when I was only 5. When my mother remarried, I was handed over to my cousin,” she said, adding that, “My nomadic life was spent on carrying the sheep to the plains and mountains, in winters and summers, with my cousin’s children.”

She said since her cousin had a wife and children and often failed to meet the expenses, she acquiesced to get married at the age of 13.

“I was an orphan and couldn’t disagree. My husband was 45 years older than me,” Nasiri said, regretting that she never had a childhood like others.

She added that they were nomads of Zagros Mountains and her husband was a livestock rancher. Every day, she used to get the sheep ready for grazing on the plains, do the house chores and milk the livestock.

 

I Fought Mountain Rocks for My Children

Children had to go all the way to Rud Zard-e Mashin village; however, their parents couldn’t afford the fare of the school bus as the father had fallen from the mountain and become paralysed. They were forced to sell the 1 to 2 kilograms of rice they had in their house to pay for the fare. She described it as the bitterest moments of her life and said, “It was that day when I made up my mind to fight the hard mountain rocks with a sledgehammer and a crowbar,” she noted.

“I didn’t know what to do; tomorrow was ahead of us and my hands were empty,” Nasiri noted, adding that she didn’t sleep a wink all that night.

She went on to say that after the morning prayer, she was watching the sunrise over the mountain tops with a pensive look in her eyes that a sudden thought occurred to her. Early in the morning, she went out to buy a sledgehammer and a crowbar with the aim of making money by breaking up rocks.

“I would work up until the sun was over my head and then I would return to our nomadic tent and make lunch,” she said, adding that, “after my husband and children had their lunch, I would get back to work up until the sunset.”

“At nights, I had to carry out my motherhood job for my children, make them dinner and put them to sleep through lullabies,” she said, adding that, “I couldn’t sleep many nights because my hands were extremely sore; however, I never let my children know it.”

Nasiri regretted that she was deprived of caressing her children’s faces because her hands had become rough. She went on to say that Rasoul and Soleiman, her children, grew up and sometimes helped him.

Stonebreaker Mother

 

My Biggest Wish Is to Watch My Children Thrive

“I just want my children to appreciate my efforts by studying and being successful; hence, most of the times I wouldn’t let them come for help,” she stressed.

Nasiri, who is an epitome of motherhood, has quitted stone breaking for around three years and plays with her only granddaughter Raheleh, the delight of her life. Nasiri’s biggest wish is to see her children climbing the steps of success. Qassem studies in Shahid Chamran University of Ahvaz and Kazem in Imam Ali Officers’ Academy. Her daughters live with her and Rasoul and Soleiman have got married.

Nasiri says that her children have prohibited her from working for three years and added, “My children are grateful for my efforts and I am happy that I have grown them up through making Halal money.”

“Every morning through the window I stare at the mountain that I broke up with my hands to prevent a breakup in my life,” she concluded.

Iran, Bosnia Sign Economic MoU

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The document was signed by the countries’ officials in the presence of Iranian President Hassan Rouhani and the visiting chairman of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bakir Izetbegović, during a ceremony at Tehran’s Sadabad Complex on Tuesday.

It envisages the expansion of cooperation among the countries’ enterprises and industrial parks.

The Bosnian statesman arrived in the Iranian capital earlier in the day at the head of a high-ranking political, economic, and cultural delegation on a four-day visit.

Rouhani said during the ceremony that, ever since Bosnia’s independence from the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1992, Iran and Bosnia have maintained favorable bilateral relations.

He said there was peaceful coexistence among Muslims, Serbs, and Croats in the European country, which could function as a proper basis for peace and security there.

Rouhani referred to Islam as the religion of mercy, which he said invited the people of the world toward such coexistence, saying, “The promotion of moderate Islam can serve as a major cultural basis for European Muslims, including those of Bosnia and Herzegovina.”

A joint commission to be held in the Bosnian capital of Sarajevo in December is to examine and finalize the list of the areas of cooperation between the two countries, the Iranian chief executive said.

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25

Iran Newspaper front pages

The Chatham House Prize given to Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and his US counterpart John Kerry was a top story today.
Newspapers also covered the resumption of Iranian Judiciary’s human rights talks with the European Union.
The ongoing battle in Iraq to retake the ISIS-held city of Mosul as well as the US presidential elections and the remarks made by US candidates also received great coverage.
The above issues, as well as many more, are highlighted in the following headlines:

Abrar:
1- US Urges Iran and Russia to Stop Supporting Syria
2- Syrian Child Asylum-Seekers Used as Labourers
3- Park Once Again Underlines Cessation of Pyongyang’s Nuclear Program through Sanctions
4- Former MP: Rouhani’s Government Prefers Not to Be Transparent

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Abrar-e Eqtesadi:
1- Norway and Denmark Compete with Each Other to Work on Iranian Oilfield
2- Oil Price Starts Rising: Iran’s Oil Price Increased to Almost $50
3- Luxembourg Ready to Expand Economic Ties with Iran

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Afarinesh:
1- Biggest American Petchem Company Ready to Return to Iran
2- Official: Arak Heavy Water Reactor’s Purity Level Increased from 75.99 to 95.99 Percent

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Aftab-e Yazd:
1- MP: Reformist Lawmakers Will Give Vote of Confidence to Rouhani’s Three Proposed Ministers
2- Judiciary Chief: Cooperation with Hostile Media Is Complicity in the Crime

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Amin:
1- Iranian Vice-Speaker Motahari: US Policies Have Fanned Flames of Crisis in Middle East
2- US Confused about Syria Developments
3- German Technology Smiles at Iran’s Transportation System

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Arman-e Emrooz:
1- Rouhani: They Falsely Claim Our Government Pins Its Hope ion Foreigners
2- Chatham House Prize Given to Zarif
3- Health Ministry Official: Medication Kills 700 Iranians Annually

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Asrar:
1- Foreign Ministry Spokesman: Iran and Canada to Create Interest Sections Offices
2- Iraqi PM Denies Turkey’s Participation in Mosul Operation
3- MP Wars UAE over Persian Gulf Trio Islands

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Besharat-e Now:
1- Intelligence Minister: Leader and Government Opposed to Cutting Online Communication with the World
2- Handmade Explosives Imported to Iran through West and East: Intelligence Minister

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Ebtekar:
1- Foreign Ministry Spokesman: Zarif’s Gift to Kerry Helped Settle a Conflict
2- Agreement over Empty Seat of Lebanese President: Nasrallah Supports Aoun for Presidency
3- Impact of the Game between Elephant and Donkey over Iran’s Economy: Which US Presidential Candidates Will Be More Beneficial to Iran’s Economy?

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Etemad:
1- Culture Minister’s Complaints: Jannati Bids Farewell by Telling Untold Stories
2- Russian Ambassador to Iran: We Inform Iran of Details of Our Consultations with US

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Ettela’at:
1- Countdown for Full Liberation of Mosul: 300 ISIS Elements Killed in Major Attack by Iraqi Forces on Qayyarah
2- Aoun Appreciates Hezbollah Secretary General’s Role in Resolving Issue of Power Vacuum in Lebanon
3- Second Round of Iran-Europe Comprehensive Talks to Be Held in December
4- Jamshid Momtaz Nominated for Membership in UN’s International Law Commission

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Hemayat:
1- Trump: I Won’t Pay Ransom to Iran If I Become President
2- ISIS Withdraws from Eastern Mosul

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Iran:
1- Iranian Young Footballers Book Place in World Cup after 16 Years: Iran Beats Uzbekistan to Advance to Semi-Finals

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Javan:
1- Trump: American System Is Corrupt, Rigged, and Failed
2- Moscow: Terrorists’ Time Is Over
3- Rouhani: I Learned from Imam Khomeini How to Negotiate with Six Powers

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25
Jomhouri Eslami:
1- President: Imam Khomeini Led the Revolution to Rid the Society of Lie and Accusation
2- Bank Saderat’s Assets Released in Europe
3- Syrian Popular Resistance Formed against Turkey’s Aggression

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Kayhan:
1- US Coordination with ISIS Is More than Its Coordination with Baghdad
2- MPs: Government Seeks to Evade Accountability for Its Failures through Cabinet Reshuffle
3- Zionist Regime [Israel] Has Captured 1,000 Palestinian Kids in Current Year

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Khorasan:
1- Deputy Health Minister: 55% of Iranians Die Soon Because of Accidents, Lifestyle, and Diseases

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Payam-e Zaman:
1- UN Ready to Host 150,000 Mosul Refugees

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Saheb Qalam:
1- Foreign Ministry Spokesman: Fight against Terrorism Can’t Be an Excuse for Violation of Sovereignty
2- Venezuela Calls for Inviting US to Oil Meetings
3- Antalya Art Achievements Prize Given to Asghar Farhadi

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Shahrvand:
1- Human Rights Talks in Brussels: Iran’s Judiciary Joins New Round of Iran-EU Talks
2- Iranians to Remain Online: ICT Minister Says Iran’s Access to Global Internet Won’t Be Cut Off

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Shargh:
1- Zarif and Kerry Jointly Receive Int’l Award
2- Failed Minister; Culture Minister: We Wanted to Respect Culture Professionals as Ministers of Rafsanjani and Khatami Used to Do

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Vaghaye Ettefaghieh:
1- Iran, a Victim of Climate Changes [The issue was discussed in a meeting attended by Iran’s Environment Chief Ebtekar and UN’s Gary Lewis

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25


Vatan-e Emrooz:
1- Trump: Clinton Globalized Terrorism
2- Why the Telecommunication Giant Bought Time Warner and CNN? Media Monopoly in the Free US!
A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on October 25

 

​Iran to Stop Gasoline Imports Next Year

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Ali Kardor, the managing director of the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC), told domestic media that there would be no provision in next year’s budget bill – currently being drafted by the government – for the import of gasoline.

This, Kardor said, is because a key gasoline production project – the Persian Gulf Star Refinery – will come on stream by next June with an initial capacity of 12 million liters per day.

Besides, the official told Mehr News Agency, Iran expects its average consumption of gasoline to increase by only 2 percent within the next few months.

Kardor further emphasized that Iran is currently importing a maximum 5 million liters of gasoline per day. The figure, Kardor emphasized, is half of the amount imported in March.

The Persian Gulf Star Refinery is projected to have a production capacity of 35 million liters of gasoline per day once fully developed, Mehr News Agency added.

Once the project is in full swing, Iran will be able to become an exporter of gasoline, Kardor emphasized.

Iran had to import around 20 million liters per day of gasoline to satisfy a runaway domestic consumption of some 80 million liters per day. However, consumption drastically dropped after the country abolished subsidized fuel allowances for motorists in 2010 – a move that led to an increase in prices of fuel, thus discouraging rampant consumption.

Finnish, Bosnian Presidents in Iran for Talks

Presidents of Finland

Heading a political and business delegation, Finland’s President Sauli Väinämö Niinistö arrived in Tehran on Tuesday morning at the invitation of his Iranian counterpart President Hassan Rouhani.

The two presidents are expected to discuss Tehran-Helsinki relations and explore avenues for stronger economic interaction.

Separately, President of Bosnia and Herzegovina Bakir Izetbegović travelled to Tehran this morning and held a meeting with President Rouhani after an official welcome ceremony.

There has been growing enthusiasm for closer ties with Iran after coming into force of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) in January, a nuclear agreement between Tehran and the Group 5+1 (Russia, China, the US, Britain, France and Germany).

President Rouhani has already announced that Tehran welcomes warmer ties with the European countries, noting that such cooperation will greatly contribute to the settlement of regional and international issues.

14 Dead, 106 Injured after Explosion at Residential Complex in China

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The local government in the nearby city of Yulin told CNN on Tuesday that 106 had been injured and the search for survivors continued.

It added that initial investigations showed some kind of explosive had caused the blast.

The blast took place at about 2 p.m. on Monday in a prefabricated house which had been built inside a larger residential compound.

Rescue crews were combing through the rubble overnight in the hope of finding survivors and to discover the cause of the explosion.

The city hospital was damaged in the blast, as were several other buildings in the near vicinity.

Local media have reported that Fugu County, where Xinmin is located, has a large number of mining companies that would require explosives.

It is the latest in a series of deadly explosions in China — in 2015, more than 110 people were killed in Tianjin, close to Beijing, when a chemical warehouse blew up.

Earlier this year, a warehouse storing chemicals exploded in Jiangsu province, although no one was injured.

European Diplomats Meet Zarif in Tehran

zarif01

In one of the meetings on Monday, the Iranian foreign minister and Karlheinz Kopf, joint acting president of Austria, who is also the second president of the European country’s National Council, discussed a range of issues, including Tehran-Vienna ties, collaboration between Iran and the European Union, as well as the latest regional and international developments.

In a separate gathering, Greek Ambassador to Tehran Georgios Ayfantis met with Foreign Minister Zarif and talked about the bilateral relations between Tehran and Athens, Tasnim reported.

zarif02

Syria Ceasefire and Delivery of Humanitarian Aid Are Iran’s Priorities

Zarif also had a meeting with the European Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Management, Christos Stylianides.

During the meeting, Zarif said the Islamic Republic attaches great importance to the enforcement of a lasting ceasefire in Syria and dispatch of humanitarian aid to its war-stricken people.

“[The enforcement of] a ceasefire and the dispatch of humanitarian relief have always been among our priorities in Syria and we are ready for any cooperation in this regard,” he said, as reported by Press TV.

For his part, the European official hailed Iran for hosting Afghan refugees and for providing Syria with humanitarian aids.

Stylianides also highlighted Iran’s “key and positive” regional and international role.

Syria has been gripped by civil war since March 2011 with various terrorist groups, including ISIS, currently controlling parts of it.

Some 470,000 Syrians have been killed throughout the five years of bloodshed, 4.8 million have fled the country, and 6.6 million have become internally displaced by the violence.

At Least 60 Killed in Extremist Attack on Academy in Pakistan

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At least 60 people were killed when three militants armed with automatic rifles and grenades attacked a police training centre in the volatile southwestern Pakistani region of Baluchistan, security and rescue officials said Tuesday.

More than 120 people were injured. It was the second major attack in the provincial capital, Quetta, since August.

Security officials said militants shot a guard at the main entrance to the Baluchistan Police College about 9:30 p.m. Monday before entering the compound and taking aim at the dormitories where hundreds of cadets are housed.

At least two attackers detonated suicide vests while a third was shot dead by paramilitary soldiers, officials said, Los Angeles Times reported.

Cadets fled the explosions by scaling the walls of the compound, many of them sustaining injuries.

The death toll by Tuesday morning had surpassed 60. Nearly all the dead were cadets, according to a rescue official who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

About 700 cadets were usually housed at the facility, about 12 miles outside Quetta, although the numbers were slightly lower Monday because exams had recently concluded, Baluchistan’s home minister, Mir Sarfaraz Ahmad Bugti, told reporters.

“A complete search operation of the sprawling academy has been conducted and it is declared clear,” Bugti said after the siege, which lasted about four hours. He said that three militants had carried out the attack, although previous reports suggested the number was as high as six.

Several cadets were injured as they scaled a 10-foot perimeter wall to escape. Survivors told reporters outside the academy that the assailants’ faces were obscured by masks or scarves.

“They were carrying Kalashnikovs and firing indiscriminately on the cadets inside hostels,” one cadet said.

The bodies of slain cadets were transported to police headquarters in Quetta for a collective funeral prayer, after which they would be dispatched to their homes in different parts of the province, police officials said.

Baluchistan, a remote province along the Afghan border, is home to a long-running insurgency by ethnic separatists seeking to break away from the Pakistani state.

It has been the site of several recent attacks. The most recent came in August, when a splinter group of the Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing that killed 64 people at a Quetta hospital, mostly lawyers who had gathered to mourn a slain colleague.

‘Germany May Fund Iran Plane Purchases’

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Abbas Akhoundi, Iran’s minister of roads and urban development, told reporters that he had raised the issue in a meeting with the visiting German Minister of Transport and Digital Infrastructure Alexander Dobrindt.

“Discussions with the German delegation included the possibility of using the leasing facilities of German companies for purchasing planes by Iran Air,” Akhoundi said after a meeting with Dobrindt, who is heading a major trade team to Tehran.

The move could help push ahead a major plane purchase scheme that Iran is pursuing with giants Airbus and Boeing. Iran has sealed deals with both to purchase over 100 planes from each. Yet, the deals are still pending the identification of leasing institutions to fund the purchases.

German Transport and Digital Infrastructure Minister Dobrindt, for his part, emphasized that Berlin has established a special office at the Federal Ministry of Finance to facilitate financial issues relating to doing business with Iran.

The mission of the Office for Development of Banking and Financial Relations with Iran will be to expedite the proceedings for the finalization of major trade deals with Iran and also to facilitate Germany’s new investments in the country, Dobrindt emphasized.

The German delegation arrived in Tehran this past Friday heading a major trade delegation to discuss the expansion of economic ties between the two countries.

Iran and Germany signed six basic agreements to develop economic relations during the meeting between Akhoundi and Dobrindt.

The agreements mostly concerned the participation of German companies in Iran’s plans to develop its transportation sector.

Iran President Says Any Foreign Intervention ‘Very Dangerous’

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“We regard as very dangerous [acts of] intervention by foreign countries without any coordination with the host country and believe that [for any foreign measure,] the Syrian and Iraqi governments must request help and demand that another country act against terrorism inside their territories,” Rouhani told reporters at the end of his visit to the central Iranian province of Markazi on Monday.

“This [regulation] is based on international principles and [any move] contrary to it will exacerbate insecurity,” he added.

He said the Middle East has been grappling with the problem of terrorism for years and added that Western powers are not interested in the elimination of this phenomenon in the region despite being plagued by the scourge and its consequences.

“Some big powers are toying with terrorist groups in line with their own illegitimate goals and despite overflowing the region with tools and equipment, they are not carrying out any positive measure against them [terrorists],” the Iranian president stated.

He urged regional countries to respect the territorial integrity of other countries because “shifting borders is very dangerous.”

Rouhani’s remarks came as thousands of Iraqi army soldiers, fighters from pro-government Popular Mobilization Units and Kurdish Peshmerga forces are taking part in the military operation to retake the northern city of Mosul, the last major stronghold of the Daesh Takfiri group in the Arab country, from the terrorists since October 17.

Turkey is adamantly insisting that it wants to play a military role in the recapture of Mosul despite Iraq’s opposition, triggering a serious diplomatic row between the two neighbors.

Ankara has deployed troops to a base near Mosul, claiming that they were there to train Kurdish militants for the battle against Daesh.

Addressing a forum of Muslim scholars and politicians in Baghdad on Saturday, the Iraqi prime minister called on Turkey and Saudi Arabia to stop interfering in the domestic affairs of his country.

“We want the good of Saudi Arabia and Turkey provided that they do not interfere in the domestic affairs of our country,” Abadi said.

He added that Turkey had sent troops without the Iraqi government’s request and emphasized that Ankara is not battling Daesh but is trying to expand its outreach.

The Iraqi premier emphasized that Ankara did not help Baghdad when it was requested.

For more than a year, Turkey has maintained a contingent of its troops in northern Iraq, alleging that it is training local forces in their fight against Daesh Takfiri terrorists.

However, tensions have escalated after the beginning of the major offensive to liberate Mosul.

Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus said on October 12 that the country’s military forces will continue their presence in northern Iraq regardless of Baghdad’s repeated protests and escalating tensions between the two neighbors.

“Turkey’s presence in Bashiqa (military camp) is legitimate. We will continue our presence there as long as it is needed,” Kurtulmus said.

Following Turkey’s deployment of its forces to northern Iraq, Syria condemned the “flagrant” move and said Ankara has repeatedly violated Syrian territorial integrity and is supporting militant groups fighting against the government of President Bashar al-Assad.

Turkish troops are also deployed to northern Syria, a move condemned by Damascus as a violation of its sovereignty.