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FIFA records Iran’s bid to host Futsal World Cup

A record of 13 Member Associations, from five continents, have stepped forward registering their interest in bringing the FIFA Futsal World Cup 2020 to their country in four years’ time.

The full list published by FIFA includes Costa Rica, Croatia, Czech Republic, Egypt, Georgia, Iran, Japan, Kazakhstan, Lithuania, Netherlands, New Zealand, the United Arab Emirates and USA.

Candidates can now expect to receive bid packs which include further information regarding the bidding process and the requirements to host the event, with the next step being them solidifying their commitment, with formal declarations of interest needed by 6 May.

The 2020 tournament will be the ninth edition of futsal’s premier competition, which has thus far been played on four of the six confederations, since beginning life at Netherlands 1989.

Iran never to allow Syria partition: IRGC chief

“We will continue to support the survival of the Syrian government [in its fight against terrorist groups] and its sovereignty and territorial integrity and will never allow any partitioning of any of Muslim territories,” Major General Mohammad Ali Jafari, the chief of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC), said on Tuesday in a meeting with IRGC commanders.

“We view disintegration as a British-American-Zionist strategy, therefore we will never allow any weakening of Muslim nations,” he added.

Opponents of the Syrian government have on several occasions floated the idea of the partition and federalization of Syria as the solution to the crisis in Syria.

Ram Ben-Barak, the director general of Israel’s Intelligence Ministry, called on February 14 for the partition of Syria along sectarian lines.

“I think that ultimately Syria should be turned into regions, under the control of whoever is there – the Alawites where they are, the Sunnis where they are,” Ben-Barak said.

Militancy began in Syria in March 2011, and has, according to the so-called Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, killed at least 270,000 people. Some reports, however, put the death toll at as high as 470,000.

The United Nations has appointed several special envoys for Syria over the course of the conflict in the country. Italian-Swedish diplomat Staffan de Mistura is the latest person to serve in the post.

Iran to ‘multiply’ missiles

General Jafari also said Iran will continue to develop more missiles as deterrence against enemy threats against the Islamic Republic.

“Our missiles that have become more precise and more destructive will be multiplied more than before,” he said.

“Before being ready for political and diplomatic options, we have become ready for [facing] the military option,” he added, noting that Iran would never “welcome” any war.

The IRGC successfully test-fired two ballistic missiles on March 9 as part of military drills to assess the IRGC’s capabilities. The missiles dubbed Qadr-H and Qadr-F were fired during large-scale drills, code-named Eqtedar-e-Velayat.

On March 8, Iran fired another ballistic missile called Qiam from silo-based launchers in different locations across the country.

The United States claims that Iran’s missile tests violate the UN Security Council Resolution 2231 that endorsed a nuclear agreement, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), reached between Iran and the P5+1 group of countries – the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany – on July 14, 2015.

Iran, however, has repeatedly announced that the missile launches were not against the Security Council resolution.

Iran Offers to Mediate Between Armenia, Azerbaijan

Mohammad Javad Zarif made the comments at a telephone conversation with his Armenian counterpart Eduard Nalbandian.

He said Iran is ready to play a role in the settlement of the crisis if the two warring sides want so.

Zarif once again called for the cessation of hostilities and for restoration of peace to the region.

The top Iranian diplomat is also going to meet his Azeri counterpart on Tuesday at a counter-terrorism meeting in Iran’s northern city of Ramsar.

Iran has repeatedly called on Baku and Yerevan in recent days to show restraint and start peaceful negotiations instead of military confrontation.

At least 30 soldiers have been killed in fighting between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces along the frontlines of the Nagorno-Karabakh region. Each side blames the other for the fighting.

Nagorno-Karabakh has been under the control of Armenian military and separatists since a war between Armenia and Azerbaijan ended in 1994. Years of negotiations have brought little progress in resolving the dispute.

Fighting on Saturday marked the worst clashes since 1994, said David Babayan, spokesman for the region’s separatist president.

Iran inks agreements with foreign pharmaceutical companies

Iran’s drug imports totaled nearly $1 billion over the last Iranian calendar year, which ended on March 20, 2016, he said.

There is no home-made version for the imported drugs, he said, adding sometimes the locally-produced drugs are unable to meet the market needs and that is why certain medicines are imported to Iran.

He further said that Iran has signed an agreement with an Austrian company to accomplish a semi-built drug factory.

The company used to produce drugs in India and export them to Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Georgia and Iran, he said, adding the agreement is being implemented and the companies’ drugs are made in Iran.

Riyahi further noted that a very large German serum-producer company has signed an agreement with Iran and would soon start making the product inside the country.

He continued that French multinational pharmaceutical company Sanofi plans to make drugs for specific diseases in Iran.

According to the Iranian official, Iran has inked an agreement with Danish Novo Nordisk drug-maker to make insulin and diabetes-related diseases medicine.

Return of the Flamingo to Lake Urmia after 28 Years

The Head of the West Azerbaijan Department of the Environment said, “Our department agents found a wounded flamingo while they were conducting a tour of the Solduz area of Lake Urmia National Park.”

Omid Yusefi said, “The flamingo was severely wounded in its leg by hunters.”

He continued, “The ring around the bird’s tarsus stated that the flamingo was born in 1988 in Lake Urmia National Park. The lake’s water-level was high that year, leading many flamingos to roost there.”

He added, “The flamingo is currently at a veterinary clinic, and will be kept there until it fully recovers.”

This region used to be a safe and regular breeding and nesting place for flamingos and other waterfowl in the years before Lake Urmia began facing its current water problems.

Recycling​ Park: The Most ​Unique Park in Tehran

In different parts of the park, for instance, benches and even flowerpots are made of used tires.

Innovative citizens have also used their creativity to build multi
​-​dimensional statues using iron and other metals. The statues are installed in various ​places to ​beautify the park.

​This means that citizens can see how a park can be decorated using​ leftover materials; such moves help them better understand the importance of managing their waste.

Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict to Serve Interests of Daesh: Academic

What is Happening in Nagorno-Karabakh

On late April 1, clashes erupted on the line of contact between the Nagorno-Karabakh Defense Army and the Armenian Armed Forces on one side, and the Azerbaijani Armed Forces on the other side in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Defense Ministry of the Azerbaijan Republic announced in a Saturday statement that Armenian troops opened fire 127 times along the border over a 24-hour period using mortars and heavy artillery shells that struck civilian regions.

According to official statements from the sides involved, 18 Armenian soldiers and 12 Azerbaijani soldiers were killed during the clashes, and several pieces of military equipment from both sides were destroyed.

18 Armenian soldiers and 12 Azerbaijani soldiers killed

On Sunday, Azerbaijan said it had decided to “unilaterally cease hostilities” and pledged to “reinforce” several strategic positions it claimed to have captured inside the Armenian-controlled territory.

Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry said in a statement that, in response to pleas from international organizations, it will be unilaterally “suspending a counter-offensive and response on the territories occupied by Armenia.”

However, the truce failed to stop the fighting. Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian stressed that a “ceasefire would only be possible if the militaries of both sides return to the positions” that they held prior to the outbreak of hostilities.

 

Traditional Dispute between Azerbaijan, Armenia

Nagorno-Karabakh has been under the control of the Armenian military and separatists since a war between Armenia and Azerbaijan ended in 1994. Years of negotiations have brought little progress in resolving the dispute, though a fragile truce has been in place.

Ethnic Armenian separatists backed by Yerevan seized control of the mountainous Nagorno-Karabakh region in a war in the early 1990s which claimed some 30,000 lives. The rival states have never signed a peace deal, despite the 1994 ceasefire.

Energy-rich Azerbaijan, whose military spending exceeds Armenia’s entire state budget, has repeatedly threatened to take back the breakaway region by force if negotiations fail to yield results. Armenia says it could crush any offensive.

Armenia says it could crush any offensive

The new fighting which broke out on Saturday has been the worst since 1994, said David Babayan, a spokesman for the region’s separatist president.

 

Fresh Round of Clashes: Implications for the Middle East

Rahmat Hajimineh, PhD., a university professor and Middle East expert, said in an interview with Fararu news website that the fresh round of conflicts in Karabakh between the Azerbaijan Republic and Armenia has a number of implications.

“First of all, despite two decades of ceasefire between Azerbaijan and Armenia, the recent clashes showed that the disputes between the two sides have remained in place through all these years like a fire under the ash,” he said.

“The efforts made so far had apparently just prevented all-out, serious conflicts between the two countries,” Hajimineh noted, underlining that the situation is best described as being neither at war nor at peace.

“Secondly, the resumption of clashes between the two countries indicated that territorial disputes, even in the third millennium, are still one of the major sources of tension between interested parties, particularly in underdeveloped regions,” the Middle East expert went on to say.

“territorial disputes are still a major source of tension, particularly in underdeveloped regions”

“And thirdly, the conflicts demonstrated the failure of international groups and organizations – like the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk Group – in the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute,” Hajimineh added.

Therefore, he added, it has been shown that ultra-regional groups cannot end such conflicts without providing a comprehensive formula for the settlement of dispute based on the consent of both sides.

“The resumption of conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia thus shows that the disputes between them are still in place as they were in the early 1990s, and there is even a risk that they would continue or even worsen,” the Iranian university professor noted.

 

The Main Reason behind the Resumption of the Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict

“The main reason [behind the ongoing conflicts] is the old historical and territorial dispute about the Karabakh region, which is claimed by both sides with nationalist attitudes,” Hajimineh said.

The nationalist approaches held by the two sides towards the issue, the pressures exerted by internal sides in both Azerbaijan and Armenia, and the attempts by the two sides to maintain their political legitimacy can be considered as the factors behind the continuation of crisis and dispute, he went on to say.

The nationalist dimensions of the dispute complicate its settlement

As a result, Hajimineh added, it can be said that the addition of a nationalist dimension to the territorial dispute has made its settlement more complicated, since any provocative move on the front line between the two sides’ military forces would lead to tension and conflict.

 

Continued Clashes to Destabilize Iran’s Borders

Asked about the stance Iran should take towards the crisis, Hajimineh noted that the exacerbation of conflict between Iran’s two northern neighbors, Azerbaijan and Armenia, would definitely result in instability along Iranian borders.

Therefore, as the Iranian Foreign Ministry has reacted to the issue, Iran should focus on the peaceful settlement of the dispute within a peaceful group framework, without resorting to force, he said.

“Given the geopolitical significance of the crisis-hit areas, increased insecurity in the region can definitely have negative consequences for Iran’s national security in the long-term,” Hajimineh underlined.

Increased insecurity in the region can definitely have negative consequences for Iran’s national security

“It is thus expected that Iran pursues an active diplomacy to help resolve the conflict peacefully in a bid to establish sustainable peace in the region,” the Middle East expert told Fararu.

 

Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict to Help Daesh Recruitment

The university professor further referred to the possible benefits the ongoing clashes would have for terrorist groups, including Daesh, saying that radical and extremist groups have been seen to find more room for emerging and expanding in those regions where there is a security vacuum, and with a high level of tension.

“Given the growth of extremism and radicalism, and the operation of such groups as Daesh in the Middle East, any return to conflict and tension can prepare the grounds for their activities and recruitment,” he said.

Conflict and tension can aid terrorist activities and recruitment

“Today, we are witnessing that extremist and radical forces are using fluid movement tactics in insecure geographical areas to protect themselves,” Hajimineh asserted.

If tensions run high in the region in this period of time, it would benefit extremists and radicals, at least in the sense that global attention would be diverted from the fight against terrorism and their activities in Syria and Iraq, he noted.

 

Russia Expected to Intervene in the Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict

“Given past experience, and the active role traditionally played by the Kremlin in the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute, and also considering the recent role Russia played in Ukraine and Syria, the Russians are again expected to try to take the initiative in this region, which is regarded as their backyard, and is of great significance to Moscow,” he said.

“However, given the major role played by the Minsk Group in settling the crisis, Russia is trying not only to prevent the exacerbation of the conflict through the Minsk Group, but also to reinforce its multilateral diplomacy in this case – as in the Syrian crisis – in co-operation with other players,” Hajimineh stated.

“Nowruz Remains Eternal in the Course of History”

In an interview with IBNA, Dariush Mohajer, the author of Nowruz in the Four Corners of the World, acknowledged Iranian culture as a global culture and stated, “We come across many Iranian cultural elements in regions which have never been ruled by the Persian Empire.”

Dariush Mohajer, author of "Nowruz in the Four Corners of the World"
Dariush Mohajer, author of “Nowruz in the Four Corners of the World”

This author said: “Nowruz is a beautiful phenomenon and despite all persisting problems, will remain forever. There are about twenty regions in the world which are impressed by Nowruz, and in the year 2010, the Assembly of the United Nations International recognized Nowruz as a global day.

He added some points about the Mozabites and said: “The first Islamic government was formed in this region by someone of Iranian descent called Abdolrahman Ibn Rostam. He and his followers were among the Khawarij and after they came to the area, they were called ‘Rostamian’ or ‘Rostamouyeh’.”

Stating that the Mozabites had inherited some of their fathers’ features, he said: “They used to clean their houses and streets and alleys on the eve of spring and wore new clothes and visited their relatives. Therefore, despite the changes happening in the region in more than a thousand years, climatic changes have not forced them to give up some of their traditions.

Nowruz geopolitics
Geopolitics of Nowruz: Saving Farsi Culture From Elimination

In another part of his speech, Mohajer pointed to a group of people living in the Western provinces of China named Uyghurs who celebrate Nowruz. Some scholars believe that the Uyghurs were Manichaeists before they adopted Islam.

He continued, saying that it is interesting to know that this group of people use Persian vocabulary and pray in Persian. This is despite the fact that since 1947 (the time of Mao), Persian language has been banned, but these people are still using it in China. Moreover, this area has never been ruled by the Persian Empire.

Yazd Ashkezar Water Mill architectural masterpiece

It is the oldest in Yazd Province and the largest in the country, said Mohammad-Mehdi Sherafat according to Iran Daily.

Water mills are among the historical sites of Yazd Province. They were established near villages and along the aqueducts, Sherafat added.

Ashkezar Water Mill, which dates back to the Ilkhanid era, reaches a depth of seven meters, he said.

Located 20 km from the provincial capital Yazd, it was renovated by Yazd Cultural Heritage Department, and is ready to receive visitors, he said.

The brick water mill is one of the 18 water mills in the province registered on the National Heritage List, he said.

Yazd is one of the most well-known desert cities of Iran.

Many Iranians and foreign tourists are interested in visiting Yazd to see the architecture which is typical of desert areas.

It is known as the city of wind-towers, Zoroastrians, ‘termeh’ (traditional brocade), silk weaving and sweets (such as ‘baqlava’ and ‘qotab’).

A trip to Yazd will make one familiar with life in desert towns and how people adjust to it. You learn about ‘qanat’ (underground water supply system) for which Iranians are well-known.

The water reservoirs, icehouses, wind-towers and pigeon towers make it worthwhile to visit Yazd, as tourists explore the uniqueness of this ancient city.

Yazd, located 270 km southeast of Isfahan, has a population of approximately 560,000. It attracts a growing number of tourists each year.

The city is hot and dry in summer due to its location, which is between the two main deserts of Dasht-e Kavir and the Kavir-e Lut.

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5

Iran Newspaper front pages

Abrar:

  1. Landmark week for Brazilian president
  2. Administration may tackle general budget deficit using reserve accounts
  3. Iran non-oil exports greater than imports: Rouhani
  4. Defense Ministers of Iran and Azerbaijan discuss Karabakh crisis on phone
  5. Brussels attacks and nuclear security concerns

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Arman-e Emrouz:

 

  1. Hashemi, a real reformist: MP Motahari
  2. Black box of Ahmadinejad’s return
  3. Ex-vice president indicted
  4. 23 suspects in Do-Gonbadan municipal corruption case
  5. No oil exports without nuclear deal: Rouhani

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Ebtekar:

  1. The Big Reveal: Panama Papers

An unprecedented global investigation into a massive leak of secret documents from the Panamanian law firm, Mossack Fonseca & Co. opens a virtual Pandora’s Box into the shadowy world of offshore companies.

  1. Parliament deliberating resistive budget bill
  2. Hashemi’s real approach on Iran’s missile strength

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Ettela’at:

  1. Teacher sacrifices his life for students
  2. Government submits 10-article bill to curb violence against women
  3. Idlib air raid kills al-Nusra Front spokesman
  4. Bolstering missile power crucial: Rafsanjani
  5. Iran trade balance positive for first time since Islamic Revolution: Rouhani
  6. Heavy snow grips East Azerbaijan and Ardebil provinces

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Etemad:

  1. Today’s Watergate

The Panama Papers revelation has shaken the world’s media, as the leak from the Panamanian law firm, Mossack Fonseca, continues to be investigated. It involves more than 11.5 million documents, nearly 215,000 companies and 14,153 clients of the firm, according to the German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung, which obtained the information and shared it with other media outlets and the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, a nonprofit group.

  1. SWIFT is open [for Iran]
  2. Prohibition of photography for figures, legal: Top judge

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Afkar:

  1. Soureh Mehr doubles cultural output
  2. Not one single oil barrel could be exported without nuclear deal: President Rouhani
  3. For the White House’s information: Missile power is a red line for Iran

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Emtiaz:

  1. Tehran mayor calls for moving railway center outside of capital
  2. Official says smuggled fruits are inadvertently tainted
  3. 3,000 homeless addicts arrested in Tehran
  4. Persepolis tops world tourist destinations

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Iran:

  1. Iranian bank ends allegations that SWIFT is not open for Iran banks

It was rumored that the SWIFT international money transfer system was not operational in Iran. To disprove the allegations, the Central Bank of Iran invited reporters to its SWIFT room to let them see how the system is working.

  1. 10% drop in Iranian visits to Turkey during Nowruz

Visits to Dubai also fell by 18% during the New Year holidays.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Payam Zaman:

  1.  MPs issue statement in support of Iran’s missile program
  2. Italy PM in Tehran on April 12
  3. No freeze in Iran oil exports
  4. SWIFT fully operational for Iran: CBI
  5. Rouhani: No one has any right to violate people’s privacy

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Jamejam:

  1. Turkey, UAE visits no longer in vogue
  2. Education ministry earns IRR130bn during Nowruz
  3. Iran lifts ban on import of luxurious items
  4. Cyberspace addiction

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Jomhouri Islami:

  1. European firm to invest $7bn in Iran petrochemical industry
  2. I have and will always stress necessity of bolstering missile power: Rafsanjani
  3. Badr: ISIS to become history by year-end
  4. 300 SWIFT links with foreign banks
  5. EU parliament knocks Erdogan

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Javan:

  1. Swift open, but not functional
  2. 2,600GB world corruption shock
  3. Government lifts ban on import of luxurious goods
  4. US road map for realization of the ‘spirit of the deal’

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Hemayat:

  1. Weakening missile and security strength is a betrayal: Top judge
  2. Revealed: CIA master-plan for toppling Assad
  3. JCPOA an unbalanced document: Javad Larijani

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Khorasan:

  1. Corrupt banking managers charged with “corruption on earth”
  2. History’s biggest financial corruption revelation
  3. SWIFT up and running
  4. Iran sends commandos to Syria as advisors

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Rah-e Mardom:

  1. Leader’s condolences to General Salami for mother’s death
  2. JCPOA paves way for country’s progress: Rouhani
  3. $20bn capital trapped in luxury houses

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Resalat:

  1. Buying foreign goods causes domestic unemployment

Yahya Ale Eshagh, an economist, decries the purchasing of goods from overseas

  1. Why Iran exceeded commitments in nuclear deal
  2. Rouhani: Year 1395 [started March 20] is the year of management of practice and action in line with resistive economy
  3. No person better than Ayatollah Khamenei: Rafsanjani
  4. Javad Larijani: Montazeri is an example of people like Hashemi who change attitude

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Rooyesh Mellat:

  1. Century’s biggest financial scam revealed
  2. Iran trade balance positive for first time last year: Rouhani

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Shargh:

  1. Dirty hands: List of corrupt world leaders released
  2. Iran deploys commandos in Syria
  3. MP Motahari: Establishment endorsed JCPOA with all pros and cons

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Shahrvand:

  1. Iran dumps 780k tons of tainted foodstuffs

Close shave for 15m Iranians

  1. MPs praise Red Crescent for Nowruz vigilance

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Sahib Ghalam:

  1. Election runoff determines parliamentary climate: MP
  2. US equations wrong about Iran
  3. Insurance coverage for 53 cancer and special illness drugs

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Kaenat:

  1. Iran tax earnings meet planned target

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Kayhan:

  1. Banana imports allowed if apples are exported
  2. Biggest lesson in Syria war was that the West cannot be trusted: Assad
  3. CBI: SWIFT up and running

Traders: Banking transactions not possible

  1. Floods kill 75 in Pakistan
  2. Karabakh conflict: lessons and players

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5


 

Asia:

  1. Italian banks given green light to reengage with Iranians
  2. Italian PM in Tehran next week
  3. Iran to revise housing taxes

 

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Abrar Eqtesadi:

  1. Iran to revoke fuel cards
  2. Iran and Turkey reconsider preferential trade tariffs
  3. Iran to export gas to India through undersea pipeline
  4. Iran eyes 7 steel projects by year-end in March 2017
  5. Ban on selling crude oil to Shell lifted
  6. No dollar-based banking relations

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on April 5