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Iran FM says talks with IAEA chief “constructive”; urges agency to maintain neutral role in nuclear talks

Seyed Abbas Araghchi met on Wednesday evening with the IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi during his visit to Tehran.

In a statement posted on X, Araghchi called the discussions “productive,” stressing the IAEA’s potential to facilitate a peaceful resolution to Iran’s nuclear dossier.

Araghchi stated the IAEA can play a pivotal role in the coming months if it maintains technical focus and resists political pressures.

He noted, “As various disruptive elements have aligned to derail the current negotiations, we need a ‘Director General of Peace.’”
The Iranian foreign minister emphasized Iran’s desire to trust Grossi’s mission to “keep the agency away from politicization” and adhere strictly to its professional mandate, unaffected by “unjust external pressures.”

Iran’s foreign minister demanded that the IAEA adopt “clear positions” against threats targeting Tehran’s peaceful nuclear facilities.

During the talks, Araghchi briefed Grossi on the indirect negotiations between Tehran and Washington regarding sanctions relief and nuclear issues, the first round of which was held in Oman on Saturday.

Grossi welcomed the revived diplomatic efforts, expressing full support for continued dialogue “until mutually acceptable results are achieved.”

Iran warns ‘moving goalposts’ could derail Tehran-Washington negotiations

“Moving the goalposts constitutes a professional foul and an unfair act in football. In diplomacy any such shifting (pushed by hawks who fail to grasp the logic/art of commonsensical deal-making) could simply risk any overtures falling apart,” Baqaei said in a post on his X account on Wednesday.

“It could be perceived as lack of seriousness, let alone good faith. We’re still in testing mode,” he added.

His post came after Witkoff stated on Tuesday that an agreement on Iran’s nuclear program would require Tehran to “stop and eliminate its nuclear enrichment and weaponization program.”

The American envoy had already announced that Washington would be satisfied with a cap on the level of Iran’s uranium enrichment activities.

Delegations from Iran and the US held a round of indirect talks in Muscat on April 12, mediated by the foreign minister of Oman.

The two sides, led by Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi and Witkoff, have expressed satisfaction with the initial steps.

The next round of negotiations is scheduled for April 19.

Taremi’s strike against Milan in Serie A voted as best goal of year

Mehdi Taremi

Taremi scored the goal for Inter in Italy’s Serie A.

Meanwhile, people participating in the polling chose Sareh Javanmardi as Iran’s Paralympic Woman of the year 1403.

The Paralympic shooter from Shiraz is the first ever female gold medalist from Iran to win in the shooting category of the Paralympics Games.

The Iran women’s national handball team was also selected as the best national team of the year 1403 in Iranian sports by the popular vote while the women’s sitting volleyball team were voted as the best team of the year 1403 in Iranian sports.

Gaza has become ‘mass grave’ for Palestinians: MSF

Gaza War

“Palestinian lives are once again being systematically destroyed,” the MSF said in a statement, adding that a series of deadly attacks over the past three weeks by Israeli forces “have shown a blatant disregard for the safety of humanitarian and medical workers in Gaza.”

Israel has killed over 51,000 people in Gaza since October 2023, nearly a third of whom are children. It resumed hostilities on March 18, shattering a January ceasefire and prisoner exchange agreement with Hamas.

The organization cited a March attack by Israeli forces on aid workers, when the bodies of 15 emergency responders and the ambulances they were traveling in were found in a mass grave on March 30 in Rafah, southern Gaza.

It called for “international and independent investigations” to establish accountability on attacks on aid workers.

“This horrific killing of aid workers is yet another example of the complete disregard shown by Israeli forces for the protection of humanitarian and medical workers. The silence and unconditional support of Israel’s closest allies further emboldens these actions,” said Claire Magone, general director of MSF France.

The medical aid agency also criticized the failure of the Humanitarian Notification System, a mechanism intended to coordinate safe movement with Israeli forces.

It added the system is now “barely affording any protection guarantees.”

“We are witnessing in real time the destruction and forced displacement of the entire population in Gaza,” stated Amande Bazerolle, MSF’s emergency coordinator in Gaza.

“Gaza has been turned into a mass grave of Palestinians and those coming to their assistance.”

“With nowhere safe for Palestinians or those trying to help them, the humanitarian response is severely struggling under the weight of insecurity and critical supply shortages, leaving people with few, if any, options for accessing care.”

Trump tariffs will mean world uses less oil in 2025: IEA

The International Energy Agency slashed its forecasts for global oil demand growth by a third for the year ahead, and warned that it could make further downward revisions depending on whether a trade war develops.

The Paris-based agency had previously forecast that the world’s appetite for crude, which is a key economic indicator, would rise by 1.03m barrels a day this year to a record high.

But after Trump’s “liberation day” tariffs on global trade it has cut its forecast growth to 730,000 barrels a day. Oil demand growth could slow further next year to 690,000 barrels a day due to “the weaker economic environment”, it said.

“While imports of oil, gas and refined products were given exemptions from the tariffs announced by the United States, concerns that the measures could stoke inflation, slow economic growth and intensify trade disputes weighed on oil prices,” the agency said.

The benchmark price for oil fell from almost $75 a barrel to four-year lows of below $60 a barrel in under a week after Trump set out a swathe of global tariffs on trade, including particularly punitive rates for Chinese goods.

Oil prices have reclaimed some ground, after Trump paused some of the tariffs for 90 days, pending negotiations. But fears over a global economic slowdown have remained, keeping an oil market recovery in check.

Big banks have revised down their forecasts for the oil price to account for a potential global economic recession. The Swiss bank UBS cut its price forecast by $12 a barrel to $68 a barrel for this year while Goldman Sachs said it expected the benchmark crude price to average $63 a barrel this year, and fall further to $58 next year.

The IEA warned that the falling oil market prices triggered by Trump’s trade tariffs were likely to upend his own election promise to expand the country’s oil and gas industry by urging producers to “drill, baby, drill”.

US shale producers need global market prices of at least $65 a barrel to drill new shale oil wells and make a profit, according to the IEA, and the industry could now also face higher costs on importing steel and drilling equipment as a result of the tariffs.

The agency has revised down its forecasts for US oil production growth this year by 150,000 barrels a day to 490,000 barrels a day. Meanwhile, the countries which make up the OPEC oil cartel and their allies have said they will increase their collective oil production by 411,000 barrels a day – although the increase may be smaller in reality because some countries are already exceeding their quotas.

The IEA warned that risks to its forecasts “remain rife given the fast-moving macro backdrop”.

At least 1,400 medical personnel killed in Gaza war: Health Ministry

In a statement published on Telegram, the ministry said: “More than 1,400 health workers have been martyred, while around 360 others from the health sector remain in Israeli detention.”

The Israeli army renewed a deadly assault on Gaza on March 18, shattering a ceasefire and prisoner exchange agreement that took hold in January.

At least 51,000 Palestinians, most of them women and children, have been killed in Gaza in a brutal Israeli onslaught since October 2023.

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.

Trump admin. seeking to cancel ‘almost all’ funding for NATO, UN: NYT

Donald Trump NATO

The initiative is part of a plan that would see the State Department’s budget reduced by nearly 50%, two unnamed officials told the outlet. It also reportedly suggests curtailing international peacekeeping operations, all of the State Department’s educational and cultural exchanges, and defunding humanitarian assistance and global health programs by more than 50%. It is unclear whether Secretary of State Marco Rubio is on board with the plan.

AP sources have confirmed the proposal but stressed that it must undergo multiple rounds of review before being submitted to Congress for approval. One senior US official cited by the agency called the budget outline “aggressive” in its cost-cutting goals.

Responding to questions about the reported plan to cut NATO funding, State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce insisted that the US remains fully committed to the military bloc. She stressed, however, that Washington does not see NATO as a tool for waging war, but rather as a deterrent.

“We want to make sure… that the nations in NATO can actually deliver on the mission of NATO, which is to be a deterrent. It is not to help with wars or to help fight them… NATO was meant to be a collection of entities that would stop the bad actors from doing the bad thing,” she added.

The Trump administration has repeatedly pushed NATO members to increase their defense spending, arguing the US bears a disproportionate share of the burden. Trump has warned that the US might not defend NATO members who fail to meet spending targets.

On Monday, Vice President J.D. Vance said Europe cannot remain a “permanent security vassal” of the US, arguing that the current situation benefits neither America nor European countries.

Sanctions-hit aging fleet, equipment blamed for Tehran metro incident

Metro Iran

In response, the Tehran Metro released a statement emphasizing passenger safety as its top priority, but did not shed light on the cause of the incident.

However, some metro workers, as reported by Entekhab news website, attributed the incident to the severe wear and tear on the train fleet and locomotive connectors that have been hit hard by US sanctions.

They pointed out that critical components, many of which directly impact the safety of train operations, have not been adequately maintained or replaced due to unavailability.

According to the employees, the aging state of the trains poses significant safety risks, with Wednesday breakdown being a direct result of deteriorated connectors.

Sources also highlighted broader systemic issues, including insufficient basic equipment such as window blinds for operators to mitigate sunlight glare, let alone critical safety components like couplers that ensure passenger safety.

It was noted that sanctions imposed by the US government play a role in exacerbating maintenance challenges, disproportionately affecting ordinary citizens who are reliant on public transportation.

Veteran Iranian journalist says US has “crossed red lines” in nuclear talks

Iran nuclear program

In a scathing editorial published on Wednesday, principalist analyst Hossein Shariatmadari said recent remarks by US special envoy Steve Witkoff proved America remains committed to “extortionate demands” despite diplomatic overtures.

Witkoff said on Tuesday that Tehran ‘must stop and eliminate’ its nuclear enrichment program to reach a deal with Washington, raising the bar of US demands ahead of the next round of talks on Saturday.

The comments came hours after the Iranian Leader cautioned against both excessive optimism and pessimism regarding the talks, Shariatmadari pointed out.

“Witkoff’s statements leave no doubt America has already failed its first test,” wrote Shariatmadari, referencing the envoy’s increasing demands on Iran’s nuclear activities.

The editorial cites former US intelligence official George Friedman to argue Washington’s true objection is Iran’s independent regional power projection.

Shariatmadari asserted the US continues discussing Iran’s nuclear program despite Tehran’s repeated declarations that the matter is “non-negotiable” under religious edicts.

Iran’s FM to handover Ayatollah Khamenei’s written letter to Putin

Ayatollah Sayyed Ali Khamenei

“The purpose of my trip to Russia is to convey the Leader’s written message to Putin, which will be delivered during a meeting with him,” Araghchi told reporters on the sidelines of the cabinet meeting on Wednesday.

Earlier on Monday, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei announced “Mr. Araghchi will head to Russia later this week in a visit that was previously arranged.”

The Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs confirmed on Monday that Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov will meet Araghchi.

“We are expecting Iranian colleagues, talks with Lavrov as well as meetings with Russian officials are planned,” ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said.

On the Iran-Russia comprehensive strategic agreement, Baghaei confirmed it has passed the Russian Duma and is now moving through Iran’s legislative process.

“This has been a Foreign Ministry priority,” he noted.