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Iran arrests 22 over ethnic tensions in West Azarbaijan Province

Iran Police

General Rahim Jahanbakhsh, the provincial police commander, said on Monday the arrests followed reports that separatist groups attempted to exploit large public gatherings to promote ethnic divisions.

General Jahanbakhsh stated that the suspects sought to “create discord among Iran’s ethnic communities” during an annual religious commemoration, which drew significant crowds in cities like the provincial capital, Urmia.

“Through close coordination between police and vigilant citizens, we identified and neutralized the plot aimed at undermining national unity,” the police commander said.

Authorities say the detainees were influenced by “misguided statements,” without further clarifying.

General Jahanbakhsh warned that anyone threatening national cohesion would face “decisive legal action,” noting that foreign adversaries often seek to exploit Iran’s ethnic diversity.

The development comes days after a man was arrested in Urmia for insulting and provoking Kurdish citizens during a religious ceremony.

Several Iranian officials, including Islamic culture minister, have issued warnings against inciting ethnic and religious tensions in the country.

The city of Urmia, in northwestern Iran, is known for being a region where various ethnic groups, including Kurds and Turks, have lived peacefully together for generations.

Turkey protests over detention of Istanbul’s mayor an internal matter: Iran FM

Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi discussed regional and international developments with his Turkish counterpart Hakan Fidan on the phone.

During the telephone conversation, the two sides held talks over regional issues, particularly the situation in occupied Palestine, the resumption of  Zionist regime attacks on Gaza and Lebanon, the regime’s aggression against Syria, and US military strikes against Yemen.

Fidan highlighted Turkey’s participation in the recent Arab-Islamic Contact Committee meeting in Cairo to address Gaza’s crisis, underlining the need for Muslim nations to address the situation of the oppressed Palestinian people.

Iran’s foreign minister also condemned the Zionist regime’s crimes and acts of aggression in violation of ceasefire agreements in Gaza and Lebanon. Araghchi demanded immediate international action, especially by Islamic and regional states, to halt the occupying Zionist regime’s crimes.

He also denounced US airstrikes on Yemen, which coincided with Israel’s renewed attacks on Gaza, the West Bank and Lebanon. The Iranian foreign minister stressed the importance of regional cooperation and coordination to prevent acts of aggression against Muslim countries that cause instability and insecurity in the region.

Regarding Turkey’s internal developments, Araghchi reaffirmed the Islamic Republic of Iran’s principled stance, saying what’s unfolding in Turkey is an internal issue. He expressed confidence that relevant Turkish authorities would handle those developments appropriately in line with the Turkish people’s interests.

At the beginning of the telephone conversation, the top Turkish diplomat congratulated Araghchi on Nowruz and reiterated Turkey’s readiness to support diplomatic solutions for regional and global issues.

Iran asserts oil trade operates within legal frameworks, denies claims of shipment seizures

Iran Oil Tanker

Iran’s Deputy Minister of Petroleum for International Affairs and Trade, Seyed Ali Mohammad Mousavi, stated on Monday that Iran’s oil exports strictly comply with international trade standards.

The remarks came in response to reports citing Iraq’s oil minister, who – based on US officials’ allegations – claimed that several Iranian vessels were detained for “forging Iraqi documents.”

“These claims are entirely false and reflect Washington’s unlawful pressure campaign against Iran,” Mousavi said, suggesting that the Iraqi Oil Minister Hayyan Abdul Ghani’s comments were misrepresented or taken out of context.

Mousavi emphasized that Iran’s oil trade operates within legal frameworks and dismissed the allegations as “malicious propaganda” aimed at undermining Iran’s economy.

“Such efforts will not deter Iran from fulfilling its legal and commercial obligations,” he added.

The US has yet to provide evidence supporting the seizure claims.

Atomic agency spokesperson: Iran firm in upholding nuclear rights amid int’l pressure

Behrouz Kamalvandi

In an interview with the AEOI’s Public Diplomacy Center on the occasion of the Persian New Year, Nowruz, Behrouz Kamalvandi said, “The Islamic Republic is resolute in defending its rights,” warning that Western pressure would backfire.

“A nation with millennia of history cannot be intimidated by coercion.”

He highlighted Iran’s nuclear achievements in the past year, including 160 scientific advancements and the successful hosting of an international nuclear science conference in Isfahan, attended by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) officials.

He noted that Iran’s progress “astonished” IAEA representatives.

Kamalvandi criticized “unfair media narratives” against Iran’s nuclear program, stressing that the country remains the most inspected by the IAEA.

He said Israel is leading a “smear campaign” and emphasized Iran’s transparency.

Despite US withdrawal from the 2015 JCPOA nuclear deal, he said Iran had shown “strategic patience” before partially suspending commitments, which he called “reversible” if its rights are respected.

He pointed out Iran continues to expand nuclear cooperation with Russia and China while urging the IAEA to uphold “technical neutrality.”

Kamalvandi expressed confidence that Iran would overcome current challenges, citing historical resilience.

White House admits it accidentally sent classified plan for Yemen’s Houthi attack to journalist

The Atlantic magazine’s editor-in-chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, announced he was given advance notice of the US strikes on the Houthis in Yemen on 15 March in a personal essay for the magazine.

In a response to Goldberg, National Security Council spokesman Brian Hughes said, “The message thread that was reported appears to be authentic, and we are reviewing how an inadvertent number was added to the chain.”

Speaking about the security breach, Goldberg stated he was first notified of the upcoming strikes on a group chat on the encrypted messaging platform Signal, which included US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth and Vice President JD Vance.

He noted, “I knew two hours before the first bombs exploded that the attack might be coming. Pete Hegseth had texted me the war plan at 11:44 am. The plan included precise information about weapons packages, targets, and timing.”

Goldberg added that Hegseth’s post contained “operational details of forthcoming strikes on Yemen, including information about targets, weapons the US would be deploying, and attack sequencing”.

Goldberg said he had initially received a connection request on Signal from national security advisor Michael Waltz on 11 March and was immediately concerned someone was masquerading as Waltz and that he was being entrapped before accepting the request.

Two days later, he received a notice that he was being added to a Signal chat group called the “Houthi PC small group.”

Goldberg added that PC stands for “principals committee” and generally refers to a group of the most senior national security officials, including the secretaries of defence, state, and the treasury, as well as the director of the CIA.

Senior members of the administration represented on the group chat included Secretary of State Marco Rubio; Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth; National Intelligence director Tulsi Gabbard; White House chief of staff Susie Wiles; homeland security advisor Stephen Miller; Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent; US special envoy Steve Witkoff; as well as a member of the CIA and National Security Council. In all, 18 people were listed as members of the group.

He added he had “never been invited to a White House principals-committee meeting, and that, in my many years of reporting on national-security matters, I had never heard of one being convened over a commercial messaging app”.

On 14 March, Goldberg stated a person called JD Vance expressed doubts about carrying out the strikes, saying, “I think we are making a mistake. 3 percent of US trade runs through the Suez. 40 percent of European trade does. There is a real risk that the public doesn’t understand this or why it’s necessary. The strongest reason to do this is, as POTUS said, to send a message.”

He added that he hated “bailing Europe out again”, referring to the notion that Europe benefits economically from US protection of shipping lanes.

A user identified as Hegseth agreed with him, saying, “VP: I fully share your loathing of European free-loading. It’s PATHETIC.”

Goldberg added that someone identified as SM, who he believed to be Stephen Miller, said, “we soon make clear to Egypt and Europe what we expect in return. We also need to figure out how to enforce such a requirement. EG, if Europe doesn’t remunerate, then what? If the US successfully restores freedom of navigation at great cost there needs to be some further economic gain extracted in return”.

The campaign of air strikes targeting Houthi rebels, which killed at least 53 people immediately after they began on 15 March, started after the Houthis threatened to begin targeting “Israeli” ships again over Tel Aviv currently blocking aid entering the Gaza Strip.

The Houthis started targeting vessels in November 2023, in what they say is in solidarity with Gaza, and have impacted the vital route. It carries around 12 percent of world shipping traffic, forcing some companies into a costly detour around the tip of southern Africa.

The Joe Biden administration initially targeted the Houthis after their campaign. But Trump has vowed to use lethal force on the Houthis, and US strikes have taken place over the past 10 days.

AFP reported that Trump told journalists, “I don’t know anything about it. You’re telling me about it for the first time,” also saying that “the attack was very effective” in any case.

Goldberg said that communications about highly confidential pending military action over Signal “may have violated several provisions of the Espionage Act”.

Hegseth has also told reporters that “nobody was texting war plans” following news breaking that Goldberg gained access to a Signal group chat featuring Trump administration officials talking about plans for an attack against Houthi rebels in Yemen.

“Nobody was texting war plans, and that’s all I have to say about that,” Hegseth said Monday outside a plane in Hawaii after being asked about Goldberg’s access to the chat.

Hegseth also called Goldberg “a deceitful and highly discredited, so-called journalist who’s made a profession of peddling hoaxes time and time again.”

Oscar-winning Palestinian director missing after severe beatening by Israeli settlers

Susya is also the site of an Israeli settlement, which is illegal under international law and something most American administrations have agreed violates Article 49 of the Geneva Convention.

Ballal’s whereabouts are now unknown after Israeli soldiers then seized him from the ambulance that arrived to treat him, his co-director and fellow Oscar winner of the documentary No Other Land, Yuval Abraham, said on X.

Abraham, a journalist for +972 magazine, said in a separate post featuring a shaky cell phone video that masked settlers “attacked Hamdan’s village, they continued to attack American activists, breaking their car with stones”.

The five Jewish-American activists at the scene “are participating in a three-month long coresistance project” in Masafer Yatta, the village at the heart of No Other Land, the Center for Jewish Nonviolence said in a statement released on Monday.

Masafer Yatta is a short drive southeast of Susiya.

The activists “responded to calls to come and support the village of Susiya while it was under attack,” and “when the activists returned to their car to seek shelter, the settlers surrounded the car, slashed its tires, and smashed the windows with stones”, the statement read.

Basel Adra, the Palestinian resident of Masafer Yatta whose story is told in the film, said on Monday that he was “standing with Karam, Hamdan’s 7 year old son, near the blood of Hamdan’s in his house, after settlers lynched him”.

Ballal “is still missing after soldiers abducted him, injured and bleeding”, Adra said.

“This is how they erase Masafer Yatta.”

Israeli settler attacks on Palestinians and their homes and farms are commonplace. The attacks are often violent and can be deadly and can include the torching of property and animals and the beatings of residents.

The United Nations humanitarian agency, OCHA, has documented at least 220 attacks by Israeli settlers on Palestinians in 2025 alone.

In a particularly gruesome case in 2015, an 18-month-old Palestinian boy was burned to death when settlers torched a home in Duma, south of Nablus.

Former US President Joe Biden sanctioned a number of Israeli settlers for carrying out such attacks, but President Donald Trump has since lifted those sanctions.

“Local and international activists regularly document the actions of settlers carrying out similar attacks, often calling the police for some sort of recourse, but settlers are rarely, if ever, held accountable for their crimes,” the Center for Jewish Nonviolence added.

Eyewitnesses have often recounted how the Israeli military either stands by as settlers carry out attacks or arrests the Palestinians and foreign activists who are defending the property.

Turkey arrests over 1,100 in protests since Istanbul mayor’s detention

The detention last Wednesday of Imamoglu, President Tayyip Erdogan’s main political rival, has triggered the biggest street protests in Turkey in more than a decade. On Sunday, a court jailed him, pending trial, on corruption charges that he denies.

Despite bans on street gatherings in many cities, the mostly peaceful anti-government demonstrations continued for a fifth consecutive night on Sunday, with hundreds of thousands taking part.

Yerlikaya said 123 police officers had been injured during the protests so far, adding that the government would not allow “the terrorising of the streets”.

Those detained include nine journalists who covered overnight protests in several cities, the Journalists’ Union of Turkey said on Monday.

It was not immediately clear why the journalists were detained.

Imamoglu’s main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) has been calling for protests against the court decision to arrest the mayor, which they label as politicised and undemocratic.

Imamoglu has denied the charges he faces as “unimaginable accusations and slanders” and has also called for nationwide protests.

Erdogan said last week that the government would not accept “the disruption of public order”. His government denies that the investigations are politically motivated and says the courts are independent.

Omer Celik, spokesperson for Erdogan’s ruling AK Party, noted on Monday the CHP’s call for protests was aimed at covering up the opposition’s shortcomings.

“Democratic protest is a (fundamental) right, but the language used by the CHP is not the language of democratic protest,” Celik added.

News of Imamoglu’s arrest covered the front pages of Turkish newspapers on Monday, with opposition media suggesting the mayor was arrested for being the most credible challenger to Erdogan.

The mayor’s supporters say the jailing of Imamoglu demonstrated a lack of justice in Turkey.

In an address to the demonstration in Istanbul’s Sarachane district in front of the municipality building, CHP leader Ozgur Ozel stressed on Sunday that they would continue the protests until Imamoglu was released.

Trump growing angry over ongoing Russia-Ukraine aerial attacks: Report

Donald Trump

Following Trump’s recent calls with Russian President Vladimir Putin and President Volodymyr Zelensky, the Kremlin claimed it had ordered a 30-day pause on strikes against Ukraine’s energy infrastructure. Kyiv supported a mutual halt on energy strikes but accused Russia of continuing attacks against Ukraine’s civilian targets.

Washington and Kyiv previously backed a broader 30-day ceasefire that would include ground operations, but Moscow rejected the proposal unless it included a halt on foreign military support for Ukraine and other conditions that would weaken Kyiv’s ability to defend itself.

Sources close to Trump told the Telegraph that he remains committed to brokering a ceasefire but is growing impatient.

Despite this, White House officials, “those closest to the president,” reportedly maintain a calm atmosphere and urge patience with the process.

Meanwhile, Russian forces continue heavy attacks on Ukrainian cities. At least four people were killed and 13 injured in Russian strikes over the past day, regional officials reported on March 24.

Kyiv has also reportedly launched strikes against Russia. Ukrainian drones attacked the Kavkazskaya oil pumping station in Russia’s Krasnodar Krai on March 19, causing a fire that firefighters are still battling five days later, Russian authorities claimed.

On March 21, Russia also accused Ukraine of shelling the Sudzha gas metering station in Kursk Oblast, a key transit facility for Russian gas exports to Europe. Ukraine’s General Staff denied the claim, accusing Moscow of staging a provocation.

Baghdad claims Iranian oil tankers using forged Iraqi documents

Iran Oil Tanker

Abdel-Ghani was asked if he had received messages from the United States over the possibility that state oil marketer SOMO could be subject to sanctions itself over the violation of Iranian sanctions.

“We received some verbal inquiries about oil tankers being detained in the Gulf by U.S. naval forces carrying Iraqi shipping manifests,” the oil minister said on state television late on Sunday, adding there had been no formal written communication.

“It turned out that these tankers were Iranian … and were using forged Iraqi documents. We explained this to the relevant authorities with complete transparency and they also confirmed this.”

Iran views neighbour and ally Iraq as vital for keeping its economy afloat while under sanctions. But Baghdad, a partner to both the Washington and Tehran, is wary of being caught in the crosshairs of Trump’s policy to squeeze Iran, sources have stated.

Iranian Wrestling Federation chief elected as vice president and board member of Asian Wrestling Council

The council elections, marking the highest participation in its history, were held in Amman, Jordan. Dabir secured 27 votes to join the council’s board as its third member.

Meanwhile, Mohammad Zayed from Jordan won the presidency with 34 votes, while Ye Zhang  from China received 28 votes.

Seven candidates competed, with each requiring 20 votes to become a member of the council. However, former council president Dowlat Turlykhanov fell short with 16 votes.

Another success for Dabir was thst he unanimously won 7 votes from new board members for the vice presidency.