Thursday, December 25, 2025
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Commander: Enemy has passive role in Persian Gulf

Speaking in the commemoration ceremony of 100 martyrs in Kashan, Fadavi said the US is now certain that it will sustain damage if it does any action against Iran.

On IRGC’s courage in capturing US marines in the Persian Gulf waters, he said that it was the fourth time that English and American forces were captured by IRGC.

Referring to the fact that the U.S had no success in preventing Islamic Revolution’s expansion, he added that the United States’ attempts in Syria for five years bore no result and the Americans admitted that their failure in Syria was because of of Iran’s support.

Preparations for Iran’s 2017 Presidential Elections to Begin in Early Fall

The executive phase of 2017 presidential votes will be kicked off in late September or early October 2016, Rahmani Fazli noted in a meeting with the country’s governor-generals held here in Tehran.

He further referred to the recent polls held across Iran on February 26, and noted that there was no ambiguity or doubt about the health of parliamentary and Assembly of Experts elections.

“We did not even have a handful of objections and protests at the organization of recent elections,” he added.

Earlier on Thursday, Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei also praised the tranquility and peace in which Iran’s elections were held recently, saying that while other Middle Eastern nations are experiencing insecurity, the polls were held in full security.

“While life in the countries around us has been associated with insecurity and terrorist incidents, the elections were held with such glory and massive participation of people without any bitter incident,” the Leader said in a meeting with the chairman and members of the Assembly of Experts in Tehran.

Ayatollah Khamenei added that the security of the polls was such that people in Tehran were flocking to polling stations to cast their ballots from 8 a.m. to midnight without facing any problems.

The Leader also expressed his gratitude to the efforts made by the Iranian security forces and the interior and intelligence ministries to ensure the safety of the votes.

Elsewhere in his remarks, Ayatollah Khamenei lauded the “healthy” polls, saying that despite the enemies’ propaganda campaign and claims by some inside the country, all elections held by the Islamic Establishment have been healthy and there has never been an organized move to influence the outcome of the elections.

The Leader further referred to the 62-percent turnout in the polls as “very meaningful and significant”, stressing that with such massive presence at the polling stations, the Iranian people practically demonstrated their confidence in the Islamic Establishment.

More than 60 percent of some 55 million eligible voters cast their ballots at around 53,000 polling stations across the country.

4,844 and 161 candidates ran for the parliament and the Assembly of Experts, respectively.

There are 290 seats in the Iranian parliament, elected by direct vote of people in nationwide election for four years.

The Assembly of Experts is also a high-ranking body that elects and oversees the activities of the leader of the Islamic Revolution.

Members of the 88-seat assembly are directly elected to office by people for an eight-year term. It holds biannual meetings to appoint a new chairman.

Japan to supply Iran with medical devices

Japan’s Nikkei newspaper has reported that about 40 mammography machines will be handed over to the Iranian Health Ministry as part of what has been described as the official development assistance program.

Using the same program as a gateway, Japanese corporations will develop the Iranian market with ultrasonic diagnostic equipment, endoscopes, and other offerings they are strong in.

Fujifilm Holdings and Toshiba unit Toshiba Medical Systems are among the companies apparently showing interest in the upcoming bidding, the Nikkei added.

With the lifting of economic sanctions, businesses around the world are rushing to take advantage of the promising Iranian market. And Japan, as part of its growth strategy, plans to help its corporations make inroads into Iran, added the report.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe plans to visit Iran in August. The visit will be the first by a Japanese premier to Iran in 38 years.

Business leaders in industries such as trading, automobiles and energy will likely accompany him in the trip.

The Nikkei has also reported that Japan is to resume yen loans after a 15-year hiatus.

On a related front, Reza Nazar-Ahari, Iran’s ambassador to Tokyo, has announced that several key Japanese banks are preparing to open branches in Iran.

Nazar-Ahari added that the Japanese banks have already opened offices in Tehran and that the proceedings are underway for them to launch their operations in the Islamic Republic.

Tehran flower garden

Flowers are seen on the eve of Nowrouz in Shahid Mahallati Flower Market in southeastern Tehran, where over five million flowers are traded in the market on a daily basis.

The following images have been released by Mehr News Agency:

 

Iran FM arrives in New Zealand

Zarif wraped up his official two-day trip to Thailand and set off for New Zealand Friday evening.

During his stay in New Zealand, Zarif is scheduled to hold talks with the country’s prime minister, foreign minister and a number of other ministers and senior officials on ways to improve relations, particularly in trade and economic sectors.

He would also meet Iranian nationals residing in New Zealand and hold talks with the country’s private business people.

The Iranian foreign minister is expected to deliver a speech at a conference organized by New Zealand Institute of International Affairs and address reporters.

Zarif paid a two-day visit to Thailand and participated in the 14th Asia Cooperation Dialogue (ACD) Ministerial Meeting.

He also met with senior Thai officials, including Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha and Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai.

On Friday, Zarif sat down with Shamshad Akhtar, Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations and Executive Secretary of the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), dispatches reported.

The Iranian minister started his six-nation tour last Sunday and paid visits to Indonesia, Singapore, Brunei and Thailand. He would visit Australia on the last leg of his tour.

On February 19, New Zealand lifted its sanctions against Iran following the implementation of Tehran’s nuclear agreement with world powers, dubbed the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

US fears obstructing trade with Iran – UK

“A lot of British and American banks have been fined enormous sums of money. Some of them have deferred prosecution agreements, some are still arguing with American regulators so they are very very cautious,” Lord Norman Lamont, UK’s trade envoy to Iran, has been quoted by Iran’s media as saying.

“But I think we are beginning to see signs of some of the smaller banks coming back in and I think it will be like a pebble that starts the bigger stones rolling,” he told IRNA.

Lord Lamont also emphasized that the closure of the British Embassy in Tehran had contributed to a stalemate in trade ties between the two countries.

Lord Lamont has been appointed as the UK’s trade envoy to Iran as part of a wider government attempt to reverse Britain’s underwhelming record of exports, IRNA added.

The appointment of the former chancellor to the new role comes just three months after a series sanctions against Iran were lifted as part of a deal with the P5+1 group of countries – the five permanent members of the Security Council plus Germany – over Iran’s nuclear energy program.

The media reported this past Wednesday that UK’s Business Secretary Sajid Javid plans to visit Iran in May for high-level economic and trade talks.  Javid will head a large delegation that has been described as Britain’s biggest ever trade team travelling abroad.

The trade mission will include executives from across the oil and gas, financial services, infrastructure and engineering sectors, the Financial Times reported.

This came as Mohammad Nahavandian, the chief of staff of President Hassan Rouhani, was visiting London over the past few days to discuss the expansion of Iran-UK trade ties.

Nahavandian, in his meeting with the British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond, called on UK to help facilitate banking transactions with Iran that are still believed to obstruct trade with the country in face of the removal of the sanctions against the country in January.

In a separate development, British Prime Minister David Cameron on Thursday was reported to have rebuked Barclays for hampering companies trying to export to Iran.

In a strongly worded letter to Jes Staley, the bank’s chief executive, Cameron said that Barclays appeared to be operating “in opposition to the policy of the UK government,” the Time reported.

Barclays is refusing to process customers’ payments from Iranian entities, despite EU and UN sanctions having been lifted, the report added.

Compassionate People and Dollars in the Street

Parviz Parastouyi is one of Iran’s most famous actors, and has won several awards including Best Actor at this year’s Fajr Film Festival. In Iran, it can be a difficult job to be a famous artist without being aligned with either Reformist or Principalist causes. Parviz Parastouyi, however, seems to be an exception. He has managed to keep himself impartial while talking about the good things of both sides – perhaps this is why he has been so admired by the people as an independent character.

The following is a story shared by him on his Instagram page, narrating a story which happened to him not on the cinema screen but on a real-life Tehran street. The story has been taken from Alef News, and translated by IFP.

Parviz Parastouyi shared a story of a strange event on his Instagram page, writing about a day when he was taking a family member’s dollars to the bank.

 

“Compassionate People and Dollars in the Street”

“A while ago, I was going to a bank to exchange $5,000 belonging to one of my relatives. I placed the envelope of money in the middle of a file, but unfortunately, due to my carelessness, I was holding it upside down. While I was walking across the street, the notes were falling out one by one without me noticing it.

“Hearing the sound of car horns and seeing the people’s surprised faces made me glance back. I saw that all the dollars had fallen from the envelope, and were spread over a wide area of the street – spreading even more because of the wind. At that moment, some kids on their way home from school arrived on the scene as well.

“I was shocked and couldn’t move, thinking about my relative’s money being scattered to the wind, simply stunned at the result of my carelessness.

“The voice of a young woman holding a baby in her arms, who was picking dollars up from the ground, brought me back to the present: “Why are you standing there doing nothing, come on, pick them up!”

“Unbelievably, I saw lots of people all doing what I was supposed to do. There were several people on the pavement, the kids, and some young boys and girls who were stopping the cars to let others pick up the notes.

“A few minutes later, I was surrounded by compassionate people who were stretching their arms toward me holding crumpled notes. I didn’t know whether I should take the notes from them or kneel down in front of them for their honesty.

“A shopkeeper from the other side of the street came and took me into his shop. He gave me a glass of water then went and collected more notes from people who didn’t even want to be thanked for what they’d done. We counted them. Not even a single note was missing.

“After that day, I once again came to the conclusion that a good society is not necessarily one which is guided by government. We can make it ourselves. It’s not too late!”

Iran’s FM Warns of Far-Reaching Effects of Insecurity

Delivering a speech at Thailand’s Foreign Ministry in Bangkok on Friday, the top Iranian diplomat called for concerted action against the sources of insecurity.

“One thing that we have failed to recognize… is (that) our security is globalized, that you cannot live in a secure world where others are suffering from insecurity. There can no longer be islands of security,” he explained.

“All of us need to recognize that in our world, today, you cannot gain at the expense of others, you cannot be secure when others are insecure, you cannot be prosperous when others are in poverty,” Zarif added.

He then reiterated that violence and extremism will not be confined to a specific region in the world.

“There is nothing that can be localized, look at our region… Some unfortunately believe that extremism, radicalism could be contained in Iraq and Syria, that radicals, extremists and the Syrian soldiers could kill each other off. Now we see the consequences, we see that extremism cannot be contained in one locality, one country, one region, one continent.”

The top Iranian diplomat is in Thailand as part of a tour of Southeast Asia and Australia.

He attended the 14th Asia Cooperation Dialogue (ACD) Ministerial Meeting in Bangkok on Thursday and held meetings with top Thai officials.

 

Iran’s Missile Power Non-Negotiable: General

Iran’s defense capacities and its missile power are non-negotiable and are regarded as the Establishment and nation’s red lines, Deputy Chief of Staff of the Iranian Armed Forces Brigadier General Massoud Jazayeri said Friday.

He also slammed as “unjustifiable” the West’s “hasty and emotional” reaction to the military drills that the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) or other Iranian Armed forces stage to keep fit for defending the country’s territorial integrity.

The general described Iran’s missile power as a main deterrent factor contributing to national security in the face of ultra-regional forces with excessive demands and of the “cancerous tumor of Israel.”

His comments came after a recent missile exercise by the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps provoked hue and cry in the West.

The IRGC Aerospace Division test-fired a number of advance, ballistic missiles with pin-point accuracy in the drill.

IRGC Commander Major General Mohammad Ali Jafari had already described the message of the missile drill as security for Iran and the neighboring countries.

 

Iran urges facilitation of banking operations, trade exchanges

In a meeting with British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond in London on Friday, Mohammad Nahavandian added that the implementation of Iran’s nuclear agreement with world powers, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), has created great potentialities for the expansion of Tehran-London relations.

After the JCPOA went into effect on January 16, all nuclear-related sanctions imposed on Iran by the European Union, the Security Council and the US were lifted. Iran, in return, has put some limitations on its nuclear activities.

The nuclear agreement was signed between Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council – the United States, France, Britain, China and Russia – plus Germany on July 14, 2015 following two and a half years of intensive talks.

Iran expects countries, particularly those involved in the nuclear agreement, to prepare the ground for banking activities and trade exchanges between financial and banking institutions, Nahavandian said.

He added that countries, which are keen to improve trade and economic cooperation with Iran, should adopt “practical measures” that would have direct and objective effects on the country’s economy.

Iran’s constructive interaction, as the main strategy in the country’s foreign policy, has opened a new chapter in its cooperation with other states, the senior official pointed out.

Practical measures to improve mutual relations

The British foreign secretary, for his part, hailed the removal of sanctions against Tehran and said his country is eager to take practical measures at the earliest to broaden relations with Iran in all fields.

Hammond expressed hope that the remaining few obstacles in the way of bolstering financial and banking cooperation with Iran would be removed as soon as possible.

Britain is resolute on the resumption of activities of its financial and banking institutions in Iran, he said.

After the implementation of the JCPOA, many European Union countries such as Italy, France and Germany signed billions of dollars worth of agreements with Iran.

British Business Secretary Sajid Javid said on Wednesday that he and other European counterparts were making efforts to ease the impact of banking restrictions on Tehran. He added that he would lead a trade delegation to Iran later this year.