Thursday, December 25, 2025
Home Blog Page 4512

Iran defense minister heads to Moscow

Dehqan departed for Moscow on Tuesday at the head of a delegation. The visit is taking place at the invitation of Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu.

The 2016 MCIS conference, the event’s fifth edition, will be held on Wednesday and Thursday and will focus on fighting terrorism.

As many as 500 officials and personalities, including 17 defense ministers, 14 deputy defense ministers, chiefs of staff, and experts, will attend the event.

The conference will discuss international convergence on fighting terrorism, and security issues concerning the Asia-Pacific region, as well as international stability and military cooperation.

Iran and Russia have cooperated in the area of defense toward countering the threat of terrorism in the Middle East.

The two countries have successfully provided assistance to the Syrian government in its efforts to push back terrorist groups in the Arab country.

Iran defense
An Iranian military truck carries parts of the S-300 missile defense system during the Army Day parade in Tehran, April 17, 2015. (Photo by AFP)

Dehqan has already visited the Russian capital twice over the past three months as the Islamic Republic was expecting the delivery by Russia of Russian S-300 missile defense systems.

Earlier in the month, Moscow began implementing an USD-800-million deal signed in 2007 to deliver the missile defense systems to Iran.

Moscow canceled the contract in 2010 under pressure from the West. President Putin authorized the delivery in April 2015, however, after an interim agreement that paved the way for the July 2015’s nuclear deal between the Islamic Republic and six world powers.

Dehqan will also discuss ways to buy Russian Sukhoi Su-30 fighter jets and T-90 tanks during his visit, the Iranian Embassy in Moscow has said.

Iran Summons Swiss Envoy over US Supreme Court Ruling

Iran Appoints Female Ambassador to Denmark

The Swiss ambassador to Tehran, who looks after US interests in Iran, was summoned to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to receive the Islamic Republic’s protest against the recent ruling by US Supreme Court on the transfer of about $2bn of frozen Iranian assets to the families of victims of the 1983 bombing in Beirut.

During the meeting, Mohammad Keshavarz-zadeh, General Director for the Americas at the Iranian Foreign Ministry, presented the Swiss ambassador with two official notes which conveyed Iran’s official protest over the ruling by the US Supreme Court.

He deemed the ruling a blatant violation of mutual contract obligations, such as the 1955 treaty between the two countries, as well as US international legal commitments on the judicial immunity and inviolability of the assets and properties of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Keshavarz-zadeh further expressed Iran’s strong protest over another ruling by a court in New York which accused Iran of having been involved in the 9/11 terrorist attacks without providing any evidence, calling the allegations ‘baseless’, ‘absurd’, and ‘contrary to accepted practices of international law,’ which guarantees government’s judicial immunity.

The Swiss ambassador said he will immediately notify the US Department of State and report the results back to Iran’s Foreign Ministry.

Iran’s Non-Oil Exports up 8%

“In the first month of the current Iranian calendar year (spanning March 20 – April 19), a total of 8.183 million tons of goods worth 3.7 million dollars were exported abroad indicating 37.89% and 7.91% increase in terms of weight and worth, respectively as compared with the same period last year,” Islamic Republic of Iran Customs Administration (IRICA) announced.

In the same period, 1.925 tons of goods worth 1.980 billion dollars were imported to the country indicating a 0.02% and 0.07% decrease in weight and value compared with the same time span in the past Iranian year.

The country’s balance of foreign trade in the same period has been positive with more than one billion dollars in favor of exports.

In the meantime, gas condensate worth 545 million dollars and petrochemical products as well as other goods worth 2.462 million dollars were exported.

China, the UAE, Iraq, the Republic of Korea and India mark the five major export destinations for Iranian non-oil goods including gas condensate.

From March 20 to April 19, 2016, soybeans ($87 million), corn as livestock feed ($59 million), barley excluding seed ($54 million), edible wheat ($45 million) as well as soybean meal ($40 million) were the most prominent imported goods.

The major countries doing business with Iran in the aforementioned time period comprise China, the United Arabic Emirates, Turkey, Germany and India.

Also, over 1696 passenger vehicles entered the country in first month of the current year revealing a 164.69% soar compared to a year earlier.

The imported vehicles cost 41 million dollars which shows 125.74 growth in terms of value compared with the same period in the earlier year.

The average price per ton of exported and imported goods were $367 and $1029, respectively in the mentions time span.

Iranian Producer Joins Cannes Film Festival Jury

Shahabi is the owner of Sheherazad Media International (SMI), a private company active in worldwide distribution of Iranian cinema and co-productions with foreign companies. Her company introduced to the world films from acclaimed directors such as Rakhshan Bani-Etemad, Asghar Farhadi, Mohammad Rasoulof, Mania Akbari, Saman Salour, etc.

She also produced ‘From Iran, A Separation’, a documentary following Asghar Farhadi’s ‘A Separation’ after it won the Oscar in 2012.

Farhadi’s latest film, ‘A Salesman’, was added to the competition lineup last week. The film is a loose adaptation of Arthur Miller’s classic play ‘Death of a Salesman’, starring Shahab Hosseini and Taraneh Alidoosti.

Other juries include American actress Kirsten Dunst, Danish actor Mads Mikkelsen, Hungarian director Laszlo Nemes, Italian actress, director and writer Valeria Golina, Canadian actor Donald Sutherland and French actress Vanessa Paradis.

The Cannes Film Festival is slated to run May 11-24.

US Curbed Nuclear Deal in 2005: Jack Straw

Kazakhstan’s capital city of Astana was hosting the 13th Eurasian Media Forum on April 20-22, with many global figures attending as speakers. Former British FM Jack Straw was also among the speakers and, on the sidelines of the event, sat down with Hamid Reza Gholamzadeh of Mehr’s English edition to respond to a number of questions in an exclusive interview. Here is what he had to share:

The NYTimes published a report recently saying that Europeans are dissatisfied with US regulations – sanctions on Iran’s missile program as well as the visa waiver rule –as MEP Marijetje Schaake put it, “Europe is being taken hostage by American policy; We negotiated the nuclear deal together, but now the U.S. is obstructing its execution.” You believe that US administration is pro-JCPOA and it is Congress which is curbing it… Do you think that Obama and his team have done enough to push the deal forward, or is the US taking the JCPOA hostage to put pressure on Iran’s missile program?

I am completely clear that the administration of President Obama fully supports the JCPOA and wants to see it implemented; President Obama and Secretary Kerry invested huge amount of political capital in it. As you know, Obama even had to face down direct opposition in Congress from Bibi Netanyahu. So, currently they strongly favour the deal. The problems which have arisen between this US administration during the last 9 months of its life and Congress are hard. A Democrat president has a Republican Congress, that is important and it is very frustrating. In my view – and I don’t speak for the British government – it is very frustrating for the UK as well. Both of us have interests in Iran, and are doing what we can to seek a resolution to this.

I‘m very concerned about it and many people come to me who are involved or want to be involved in trade with Iran, and they are also concerned.

During the Saadabad negotiations back in your time, you and other European officials didn’t recognize Iran’s right to have centrifuges, while Iran was fully committed to NPT and Additional Protocol – why? Don’t you think that if you had accepted it, the deal might have been reached years earlier?

All of us accepted Iran’s right to a civil nuclear program. I personally accepted Iran’s right to run some centrifuges for a low-enrichment program. We gained an interim agreement in October 2003 that was agreed in Tehran, and we had two more agreements in Paris and Brussels. But we were very close to a final agreement; and when I saw Dr. Zarif at the beginning of 2014, on a parliamentary delegation, he acknowledged that what stopped the deal in 2005 was not about centrifuges; it was our inability to get agreement from the Americans for concessions like aircraft spare parts.

You have talked of the role Wahhabism has played in forming extremist and terrorist groups such as ISIS – can you elaborate on that?

Wahhabism was a homegrown movement within Sunni Islam to I quote ‘purify Islam,’ and you see that in other religions. I said it is a perversion even from Wahhabism, but it seems to me that to deal with this virus that has infected the mindset of these men, you need to take military action to eliminate them, but you still have to deal with the problem in their mind, and to challenge them theologically; I mean in a very direct way, because what they claim is that the more extreme you are in terms of day to day behaviour, the closer you are, they say, to the Almighty and everyone not believing like them is an infidel and it is not only about Christians, it is about Shias as well. They celebrate violence and suppression of women. I don’t see enough challenge, intellectual and theological challenge, against this. Another issue is the lack of what we would call in Europe a “reformation” within Sunni Islam. I think there are differences between Shiism and Sunnism which are striking in all sorts of ways. I’m very struck by sorts of parallels between what we had in Europe and what there was in Iran. The fact that, in the 16th century, in Iran and also in England, leaders break away from a supernatural authority over their religion, and started to develop religious practice and theology to fit their national culture and identity. The Safavids in Iran did that, and Henry VIII in England. The second thing is, there is an authoritarian structure in the Church of England, and also in Shiism, the Ayatollah. The theology of the church requires them to move with the time, to keep up with science and, for example, to encourage literature and books like this. Look at the vibrancy of intellectual life – in Iran, filmmakers and people like that can go to workshops and so on. I know it is a bit of generalization, but there is a shortage of such intellectual figures in some Sunni countries.

The UK is one of main sources of arms sale to the Saudis, who reportedly are supporting ISIS with their weapons. You said that “There is support from elements in Saudi Arabia for ISIS in Syria.” Do you think that London’s selling of weapons to Riyadh can be justified if they are supporting terrorists?

I’m quite sure no arms that we have sold Saudis have gone to ISIS. The system that we have in the United Kingdom for export licenses for arms is very, very tight. I cannot comment on particular sales as I haven’t seen the licenses. But I can tell you from my period in government, that in the five years that I was in charge of granting licenses to these exports, we looked at the applications very carefully, and turned down some, and they were all reported to a committee in the House of Commons.

Jack Straw112

President Obama just visited your country, paying his probable farewell visit as president to the UK; it seems that Brexit was main topic at the meeting. What’s your take on this trip? What outcomes do you expect?

I think what he said was very helpful. And I think it will assist the campaign against Brexit. Let’s say I’m strongly in favour of Britain remaining inside the EU, as I see very little advantages in leaving and very big disadvantages, and it generally increases the risks to the future of the UK in all sorts of way. So it was very helpful, I can say, and I noted there are some politicians on the other side who complained about Mr. Obama’s right to offer his opinions; yet these people like Boris Johnson are telling other people what to do every day! Just as we are entitled to comment on events and policies in the United States, and we do all the time, they are also entitled to comment on us. I hope very much that we will win; it looks like we will, but there is still time to go.

For more than a year now, the Saudis have been invading Yemen, killing women and children and destroying their infrastructure. Why are Europeans, and particularly the UK, still silent on the issue?

This silent war shows the relativism of news reporting across the world. It is a difficult country to get into, precisely because it is one of the poorest countries in the world and the region. Western states don’t have much of stake in it. That becomes sort of reinforced as people don’t know a great deal about it. Everybody I speak to believes that it has been a disaster and there has to be a political settlement. Of course, there are people in the GCC who do support this action against Yemen, but there are also people who have serious reservations about the situation in Yemen.

So do such things matter in UK export licenses for arms sale that you said?

You asked me questions about licensing for arms; I don’t know quite certainly that none of arms we sold Saudis have gone to ISIS; I don’t know, sitting here this morning, about the situation of the Saudi forces or the UAE forces, and the use of those arms in Yemen. I think it is being considered by a parliamentary committee in England.

I think there is a general problem about a lack of information and understanding about Yemen. One example is that Houthis, who believe in seven Imams, are considered as Shias, who believe in 12 Imams.

What is your opinion about the leadership of Jeremy Corbyn in the Labour Party?

As you know, he and I were together on the parliamentary delegation to Iran in January 2014; he is a nice man, very interested in world affairs. I didn’t actually support him; I supported a different candidate, Yvette Cooper, who I thought was better qualified for leadership. Now, he is leader and everyone in the Labour party is concentrated on winning the upcoming elections in Scotland, for the London mayor and in municipalities elsewhere. We have Sadiq Khan who is Labour candidate for mayor of London, who if elected, will be the first Muslim mayor of London. And beyond that, we have the referendum on Brexit. So, Mr. Corbyn was elected democratically and we all get on with it.

How do you see the relations between Iran and UK after the nuclear deal? In which areas do you see more potential for cooperation?

With the signing of the JCPOA, there has been a big change in the approach of the government overall, and the government has now said they want to open and improve relations with Iran and I’m delighted about that. I want to see a reopening and flowering of the relationship; I believe this should be the beginning of political and cultural cooperation. In terms of business, the prime minister very wisely appointed Lord Norman Lamont as UK trade representative. That’s very important because Lord Lamont, like me, has been a long-standing supporter of Iran and spoke out for Iran when it was unpopular to do so. Now we are gradually increasing our diplomatic representation in Tehran. In terms of trade, Britain is very good in oil and gas, and also in manufacturing and obviously in services of all kinds like investment, legal services and so on. That’s why it is very important to us to get the Americans out of the way and have the Americans clear these obstacles out of the way.

I’m a member of the British-Iran Chamber of Commerce, which is led by Norman Lamont; and there is a great British-Iranian diaspora, particularly in London; and they had a tough time during the period of sanctions. I don’t have any formal role in relations, but people come to me for advice.

Interview by Hamid Reza Gholamzadeh

Jack Straw served as UK foreign secretary in Tony Blair’s cabinet and was one of three European FMs conducting first rounds of nuclear talks between Iran and the EU3.

Saving the Earth Needs a Revolution in Environmental Protection

Massoumeh Ebtekar said that a continuation of people’s behaviour towards the environment and inappropriate levels of consumption in Iran and the world are unsustainable.

Addressing a local meeting attended by master musicians and a number of artists, Ebtekar said that the recent signing of the Paris climate deal by 175 countries, including Iran, in New York was a good step in line with changing human behaviour towards the planet.

She further welcomed green music festivals, saying that holding such festivals nationally and internationally can be helpful.

She made the remarks while referring to the successful experience of holding an international green film festival, which linked cinema and the environment.

Ebtekar expressed her hope that similar moves will continue in other artistic fields.

FM Zarif: Seizure of Iran’s Assets Destroys Credibility of US Justice System

Zarif was speaking to the New Yorker in an interview published on Monday, and the following is the full text of the published interview.

 

Q: President Obama just finished meetings in the (Persian) Gulf with the King of Saudi Arabia and the five other sheikhdoms. He talked about opening space for peaceful coexistence between Iran and the Gulf states, but he also talked about a strong defense against Iran.

A: Well, I guess old habits die hard.

Q: He spoke of reaching out to “the more reasonable forces in Iran, so we don’t see an escalation in proxy fights across the region.”

A: That’s what I do not believe—that dividing Iran into “reasonable” and “unreasonable” forces is either correct, conducive, or anybody’s business. When the United States exercised that practice in the past, it didn’t produce results.

Q: You told me right after you took office, in 2013, that after the nuclear deal your top priority was better relations with the (Persian) Gulf states. What is it going to take to end those proxy fights?

A: The region is our No. 1 priority. We wanted to take every opportunity to work with our Persian Gulf neighbors. We have presented, both publicly and privately, proposals for engagement and dialogue. Unfortunately, they have fallen on deaf ears. Primarily by Saudi Arabia.

It’s not that there needs to be tension. We started exercising restraint a long time ago, when they supported Saddam Hussein for eight years, and then he turned and attacked them. Over the past two and a half years, when we were engaged in the nuclear negotiations, the Saudis did everything to undermine those negotiations, glutting the oil markets, and we exercised restraint. There’s a limit.

Q: The nuclear deal seems to be in some trouble. Can you explain the problems?

A: The most important problem is that the United States is taking a back seat after eight years of scaring everybody off, imposing heavy penalties on people who wanted to do business with Iran. Billions of dollars of penalties were imposed on various European financial institutions. The United States was supposed to go to various banks and tell them bygones are bygones.

Q: What do you expect to come out of your meetings with Secretary Kerry?

A: I want to see European banks doing business with Iran without fear of US retaliation. A lot depends on it. As we implemented our obligations fully, we are entitled to benefit fully. The United States needs to do way more. They have to send a message that doing business with Iran will not cost them. Period. No ifs and buts.

International regimes, international treaties, international norms are observed not because of the goodness of anybody but because they bring benefits. If they don’t, then the longevity of those agreements come into jeopardy.

Q: Is the deal in danger of collapsing?

A: No, the deal is in place. But if one side does not comply with the agreement then the agreement will start to falter.

Q: This is the final year for President Obama and Secretary Kerry. What do you think a new President, whether a Democrat or a Republican, is likely to mean for the future of a process that was started during the Obama Administration?

A: I’m more interested in seeing this process come to fruition during the Obama Administration. I believe that, once it does, the future Presidents of both Iran and the United States will see it is in their interest to safeguard it and to make sure that it continues, because we believe it’s a good deal. We believe it’s a deal that is in the interest of both sides and in the interest of the international community. We believe that, once it is fully implemented, everybody will see the beneficial side effects or spillovers in other areas. So my focus—and we have quite a bit of time—is to entrench this agreement during the months that are left of Secretary Kerry’s tenure, and of my own, and make sure that everybody recognizes the benefit of being compliant with the deal.

Q: Do you think that the next President, whichever party wins, is likely to be as friendly or as interested in dialogue as the current President is?

A: Many people in Iran won’t consider this government to be that friendly anyway.

Q: How often do you communicate with Secretary Kerry on average?

A: Quite often.

Q: Two or three times a week?

A: Depending on the circumstances, but it may be two or three times a day. We’re dealing with a complicated agreement, and we both want to see it implemented.

Q: Will you miss Secretary Kerry?

A: The jury’s still out. I’m still trying to work with him, in order to make sure that the very serious achievement that he and I and the other participants in the negotiations were able to achieve is preserved, strengthened, and guaranteed a long life.

Q: I attended a breakfast with the governor of Iran’s Central Bank last Friday, in Washington, the day after he saw Secretary Lew. How has the discussion between Tehran and Washington changed in the last two and a half years during the negotiations?

A: We had hoped that greater interaction on this issue would dent the mistrust. And I don’t think it’s too late. As the Leader (Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei) said last year, if the experience of the nuclear negotiations proves that the United States is changing its approach toward Iran—is basing its approach to Iran on mutual respect and interests—then there is a chance of change. But if the United States wants to continue with its hostile policies, then we will have to stick with the nuclear deal and try to basically keep it alive and functioning. The nuclear deal could still be the base and not the ceiling. But it requires positive political will on the side of the United States to stop this whole practice of simply repeating the old, outdated lines when it comes to Iran.

Q: A senior US official said that the Administration had hoped that the nuclear deal would open the way to settle other past problems, to clear the decks, in a way—particularly before President Obama leaves office. There is concern that Iran has been unwilling or unable to solve some of those other issues.

A: We have a saying in Farsi: “First, prove your brotherhood, and then ask for inheritance.” The United States needs to first show that it is implementing the JCPOA No one is asking whether Iran is implementing the JCPOA And almost every Iranian official believes that the United States hasn’t implemented it. So you’ve got to prove your brotherhood first, or sisterhood, and then we talk about the inheritance. The dividends of a successful implementation of the nuclear agreement will come, but once it is successfully implemented.

Q: The Supreme Court ruled that Iran’s Central Bank has to pay two billion dollars to victims of acts linked to Iran, particularly the 1983 bombing of Marine barracks in Beirut. I lived there and I heard it go off, and I hear it go off in my head quite often. And I saw American bodies being dug out of the wreckage for weeks and weeks. It was traumatic for the United States. Iran often describes itself as the victim of US action, but this was one action in which Iran’s allies and Iran were held responsible.

A: By US courts, who are also holding Iran responsible for 9/11! I have lost every respect for US justice. The judgment by the Supreme Court and the other, even more absurd judgment by a New York circuit court deciding that Iran should pay damages for 9/11 are the height of absurdity. How would you explain Iran being held accountable for the damages to the victims of 9/11—and others being absolved of any responsibility, those who were actually responsible for it?

These cases cannot stand in any serious civilized court of law. When a US court condemns Iran for 9/11, it finishes the credibility of the US justice system when it comes to Iran.

People can legislate in other countries to confiscate American assets. Would you be happy with that? The United States has committed a lot of crimes against Iranians, against the people of Vietnam, the people of Afghanistan, the people of Iraq. Can they legislate in their own countries that for every collateral damage suffered because of American bombing, for every person who was tortured by the Savak, which was created by the United States, those people can claim money from the United States and go confiscate it? Would you be willing to accept it? So why should we accept the Supreme Court ruling? The Supreme Court is the Supreme Court of the United States, not the Supreme Court of the world. We’re not under its jurisdiction, nor is our money.

It is a theft. Huge theft. It is highway robbery. And believe you me, we will get it back.

Q: In Congress, there is an array of proposed measures to impose new sanctions because of Iran’s missile tests.

A: That’s the problem with the United States. It believes it can control everybody’s behavior. The missile tests are our right. We have made it very clear that these will not be used other than in self-defense. They’re not designed to be capable of carrying nuclear weapons.

What do you expect, Iran to lie dead? You’ve covered the Iran–Iraq war, you remember missiles pouring on Iranian cities with chemical weapons. You remember that we didn’t have any to defend ourselves. Let’s not reopen that chapter. Everybody who is accusing Iran of provocation because of our missile tests should make the simple statement that I have made, that our Revolution Guards commanders have made—that Iran will never attack any other country. Pure and simple. By the way, that’s the legal obligation of every country, to say that.

Here I think you owe us. US planes were giving Saddam Hussein intelligence to hit our civilians with chemical weapons. We don’t owe anybody anything on defense.

Q: Is there any potential for another round of negotiations over the missile program?

A: We had two and a half years of negotiations, and we made it very clear, time and again, that our defense is not subject to bargaining. We spend a fraction of what all your allies in the region spend on defense. We have a much bigger country and a much larger population to defend. What is the population of the United Arab Emirates? How much do they spend on defense? I mean, get real. Our entire defense budget is between ten and fifteen billion dollars.

Q: In Syria, the ceasefire, the cessation of hostilities, and the peace talks are on the verge of collapse.

A: We had every hope for the peace talks. We need to not put the cart before the horse, and we need to go ahead with the negotiations and then, in the course of the negotiations, decide the future of Syria.

Q: Including the fate of President Assad?

A: This is what we’re hearing from Geneva: “O.K., if Assad doesn’t go tomorrow, we’ll start a war.” Everybody knew that Assad won’t go. Everybody knew that this was a process that would take eighteen months—and at the end of eighteen months the Syrians would decide how to conduct the elections.

The Syrians haven’t yet decided what type of constitution they will have, whether it will be a Presidential system, whether it will be a parliamentary system. If you have a parliamentary system, you’re just debating an irrelevant issue, because in a parliamentary system the role of the President becomes minuscule. So why are we trying to find an excuse to continue fighting if what we’re fighting over right now may become immaterial in a year’s time?

Q: Have you ever talked to President Assad about his future?

A: I have presented to him our ideas about going forward with a political process, and he was for it two and a half years ago. He is for it now. We believe that his future is in the hands of the Syrian people, not in our hands. I think he’s happy putting his future in the hands of the Syrian people.

Q: It concerns me that there may be no Syria left at the end of this war.

A: Yeah, if they insist on trying to resolve everything either through military conflict or to get what they want before they start negotiating.

Q: There is a report that Iran has as many as thirty-five hundred military advisers and personnel in Syria, and that there are now fourteen thousand Shiite volunteers from other countries—Afghanistan, Iraq, Lebanon—who are also fighting in Syria, many of them supported by Iran.

A: I know that there are Shiite volunteers in Syria. I know that there are Hezbollah fighters in Syria. We have said that we have advisers in Syria. I heard that regular Army people are also sending advisers, so it’s not just the Revolution Guards. The numbers I’m not privy to.

Q: Iran held parliamentary elections in February, and the second round takes place on April 29th. The new parliament includes more supporters of President Hassan Rouhani than the last parliament. How will that affect his ability to enact or win support in parliament for the reforms he campaigned on in 2013?

A: Because we do not have a rigid party system, parliamentarians have the ability to make up their own minds based on issues and how they feel the population wants them to address particular issues. That’s how the previous parliament, which was not a reformist parliament, supported our nuclear negotiations. If we cannot perform, these supporters can become our opponents. So, while this parliament has more people that have views similar to the President, it doesn’t mean that the President has a guaranteed majority on any issue. Politics is politics anywhere you go.

Q: And what will be the first initiative or two that President Rouhani tries to put before the new parliament?

A: The Citizens’ Bill of Rights does not require parliamentary approval. The President may want to put in place certain procedures and guarantees and mechanisms, so that may require parliamentary approval. The rest is more what parliament can do to prevent policies from being implemented. Parliament has a rather serious ability to question ministers, question policy, even impose impeachment of ministers. We’ll see less of that.

Q: In June, Iran is scheduled to hold its international cartoon biennial, and the theme is the Holocaust.

A: It’s not Iran. It’s an NGO that is not controlled by the Iranian government. Nor is it endorsed by the Iranian government.

Q: But clearly it has to get a permit to hold the function.

A: Not really. It doesn’t need a permit to hold the function. We need to issue visas for people who come, and we take into consideration that people who have preached racial hatred and violence will not be invited.

Q: Why does Iran allow a cartoon festival on the Holocaust?

A: Why does the United States have the Ku Klux Klan? Is the government of the United States responsible for the fact that there are racially hateful organizations in the United States? Don’t consider Iran a monolith. The Iranian government does not support, nor does it organize, any cartoon festival of the nature that you’re talking about. When you stop your own organizations from doing things, then you can ask others to do likewise.

Q: You and the President have both wished Jews around the world Happy New Year.

A: So we will not be going to that festival’s opening.

Shah Nematollah Vali Shrine

The mosque contains the mausoleum of Shah Nematollah Vali, the renowned Iranian mystic and poet. He died in 1431, aged over 100.

 

 

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26

Iran Newspaper front pages

Recent remarks by the Leader of the Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei, on the need for establishment of an Islamic civilization and its features were widely covered by Iranian press on Tuesday.

The US confiscation of Iranian assets and the reactions are still a hot topic across all newspapers. The Iranian government has vowed to reclaim the money, and different factions are trying to pin the blame on each other.

 

 

Abrar:

1- Iran and Japan to Expand Nuclear Cooperation

2- Fight against Terrorism to Continue until Last PKK Bomb Defused: Erdoğan

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Abrar-e Eqtesadi:

1- BP to Buy Iran’s Crude Oil

2- Iranian Parliament and Gov’t Stress Ahmadinejad’s Accountability over US Seizure of Iranian Assets

3- Philippines Considering Opportunities to Invest in Iran’s Oil and Gas

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Arman-e Emrooz:

1- FM Zarif’s Meeting with Men of US Capitol

2- Ahmadinejad Gov’t Officials Should Be Prosecuted for Investing in Hostile Country: Advisor

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Asia:

1- Turkey’s Eximbank to Establish $400m Credit Line for Iran

2- Iran Private Sector to Hold “Safe Iran” Exhibition

3- World Ports Open to Iran’s Ships

4- Expansion of Iran-US Negotiations: Zarif Starts Talks with Congressmen

5- Iran Best Spot for Petchem Investments

 

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Asr-e Rasaneh:

1- Iran Sells Heavy Water to US at Conventional Price

2- Iran Cyberspace Centre Reacts to Opening of Netflix to Iranian Users

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Ebtekar:

1- Iran Hopeful about This Year’s Hajj despite Cold Talks with Saudis

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Emtiaz:

1- Iran in Danger of Malaria Return: UNDP Officer

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Etemad:

1- Islamic Civilization Has Nothing to Do with Expansionism: Leader

2- Behind the Curtains of Zarif’s Meeting with US Democrats

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Ettela’at:

1- Leader Outlines Local Progress Model Based on Iranian-Islamic Culture

2- IMF: Iran’s Economic Growth Rate to Increase to 4% This Year

3- 15 Killed, 40 Wounded in Terrorist Attack near Sayyidah Zaynab Shrine in Damascus

4- Iran Discovers Huge Reserves of Gas Hydrates in Sea of Oman, Shale Gas in Lorestan

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26

 

 


 

 

Ghanoon:

1- Hope (Omid) for Freedom: Possible to Change Imprisoned Scientist Omid Kokabi’s Sentence

2- Kurdish Artist Who Buried His Sculpture: My Protest Was Artistic, Not Political

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Hafte Sobh:

1- World’s Largest Mall in Tehran: A Project Two Times Bigger than Dubai Mall

2- Western Infatuation with Iran: Int’l Trade Experts Discuss Iran’s Contradictory Capacities

3- Iran Should Take Commercial Fight against US Dollar Seriously

A Route for the Iranian Economy to Escape from the Dollar’s Deep Hole

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Hemayat:

1- US Confiscation of Iran’s Property against “Spirit of JCPOA”: Judiciary Chief

2- Army Forces Volunteering to Fight Daesh in Syria: Deputy Commander

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Iran:

1- Iran to Legally Pursue Seizure of Its Assets by US

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Javan:

1- Secret Documents on Riyadh-Tel Aviv Military Alliance

2- Iran’s State TV to Air Euro 2016 Football Matches Instead of Regular TV Series in Ramadan

(IRIB used to produce several TV series to air during the holy Islamic month of Ramadan when Muslim people fast all day. This year, however, most likely because of financial problems, it seems that it prefers to avoid spending money on TV productions and instead, show the Euro 2016 games, due to begin on June 10, 4th of Ramadan).

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Jomhouri Eslami:

1- Iran to Receive 5-8 Airbus A320 and A330 Planes This Year

2- Saudi Arabia Main Cause of Many Regional Crises: An-Nahar

3- JCPOA Shows Iran’s Diplomatic Capacity to Clear Up Misunderstandings: First VP

4- Iranian Pilgrims to Attend Hajj Only If Their Dignity Is Maintained: Official

5- Sponsors of Terrorism in Stalemate (Editorial)

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Keyhan:

1- Islamic Civilization Is Islam’s Impact on Nations: Leader

2- Mossad Trains Saudi Officers in Israel

3- Iran’s Sanctions Are Terminated, But Just on Paper: Media Reports

4- Deputy FM: Iran’s Frozen Assets Were Deposited during Khatami Reformist Gov’t

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Khorasan:

1- Incumbent and Former Gov’t Officials Duel in Media over US Seizure of Iranian Assets

2- Ambiguous Conditions of Iraqi Parliament in Light of Moves by Sadr Movement

3- Cruz-Kasich Alliance against Trump

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Mardom Salari:

1- Closing Ceremony of Fajr Int’l Film Festival: Winners Announced

2- East and West Queuing Up to Start Economic Cooperation with Iran

3- Nozoti: A Ceremony to Become a Zoroastrian Priest

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Resalat:

1- Ex-CBI Chief: $75bn of Iran’s Foreign Exchange Reserves Are Dollar-Based Bonds

2- Leader’s Int’l Advisor: Americans Have no Place in Region

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Sayeh:

1- Animal Abuse Yet to Be Criminalised in Iran: Legal Expert

2- Number of Iranians Diagnosed with HIV Rise 10% Annually: Health Minister

3- Iran’s Win-Win Game in South Africa: Ex-Envoy to Pretoria

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Shahrvand:

1- FIFA’s Largest Medical Centre in Middle East Opens in Iran

2- Police Permitted to Punish Drivers Who Are Drunk or Refuse to Observe Islamic Hijab

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26


 

 

Shorou:

1- 35m Iranians Suffer from Obesity: Health Minister Warns

2- Iran’s Security Forces Smash Terrorists’ Largest Bomb-Making Workshop: Minister

 

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on Apr. 26

 

US and Canada to Join Iranian Crude Customers

Given the removal of sanctions, new oil agreements were estimated to be inked with major European firms like Shell, BP, Eni, Total and Repsol, though North American companies seem to have overtaken them in launching oil talks with Iran.

Accordingly, over the past few months, several American and Canadian companies have initiated talks on implementing projects in upstream and midstream sections of Iranian oil, gas and petrochemical industries aiming to make investments, sell goods and equipment, offer drilling services as well as to purchase oil products from Iran.

Iran’s Minister of Oil, Bijan Zanganeh, had previously pointed to negotiations held with several American companies like General Electric, stressing, “The talks have been constructive.”

In addition, the Managing Director of the National Iranian Oil Company, Roknodin Javadi, has rejected the existence of legal restrictions or prohibitions on making oil deals or joint investments with North American companies, especially American ones: “Iran is ready to sell oil to all world countries except for the Israeli regime.”

In time for the return of General Electric to the negotiation table, Halliburton of the US has also conducted talks with the National Iranian Drilling Company on offering certain technical services as the likelihood of signing oil agreements with the American firm has increased for launching new drilling projects with Iranian private and state companies.

Managing Director of the National Petrochemical Company (NPC) Marzieh Shah-Daei touched upon certain talks with a number of American companies on running new cooperation in petrochemical industries, maintaining that “No direct talk has been conducted with American oil giants, though one American firm has made proposals thorough its branch in Europe.”

Shah-Daei said the axis of talks with the American-European company had been the purchase of technical knowledge, asserting “Direct investment in Iranian petrochemical industries on the part of American companies is not currently at stake.”

Meanwhile, some managers of Iranian petrochemical firms have reported on receiving proposals from American companies on exports of certain petrochemical and polymer products, like different grades of PVC powder.

Also, as Head of Technology and Research at the Iranian Offshore Oil Company (IOOC) Javad Rostami noted, “The project to examine the economic justification and feasibility of the Binaloud oilfield has been handed over to a Canadian company. Currently, we are looking forward to receiving its final report.”

Head of Oil Industry Equipment Producing Association Reza Khiamian also reported on talks with Canadian oil equipment producers, adding “In addition to the North American countries, some negotiations have been held with European countries like France and Germany.”

Khiamian further enumerated the main axes of talks between Iranian and Canadian companies, including “Knowledge and technology transfer, establishment of a production line for manufacturing advanced industrial equipment as well as investment attraction.”

On Monday, the Director of the DMC Process Project at the Research Institute of the Petroleum Industry (RIPI), Mansur Bazmi, reported on collaborations with a Canadian company on the construction of an oil desalination plant: “Iran and Canada will both participate in the construction the facilities.”

Meanwhile, Iranian oil industry officials refuse to name the American and Canadian sides of the ongoing negotiations, concluding that “The companies involved in the course of negotiations need to remain confidential, for the time being.”