Thursday, December 25, 2025
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South Korea ups oil imports from Iran

Seoul bought 1,064,337 tons of Iranian oil last month, or 269,020 barrels per day (bpd), almost two times higher than 557,174 tons a year earlier, Reuters reported on Tuesday, citing Korean customs data.

The report said in the first two months of 2016, the world’s fifth largest oil importer brought in 1,923,560 tons, or 486,196 bpd, of crude from Iran, versus 830,800 tons in the same period in 2015.

Energy hungry South Korea plans to boost imports of Iranian oil, especially condensate, this year to meet growing demand.

The Asian country imported a total of 12.92 million tons of crude last month, or 3.26 million bpd. The total was 20 percent higher than the 10.74 million tons imported in February of 2015.

Seoul bought 203,165 barrels per day (bpd) of Iranian crude oil in January against 64,699 bpd a year earlier. The figure showed South Korea tripled its imports of Iranian crude.

The imports were the highest since 2012 when South Korea bought 230,769 barrels from Iran before it cut shipments due to intensified Western sanctions over Tehran’s nuclear program.

Iran now reportedly produces around 3.1 million bpd of oil as it seeks to regain market share after sanctions were effectively lifted in January.

The sanctions had cut its crude exports from a peak of 2.5 million bpd before 2011 to just over 1 million bpd in recent years.

Carpet washing (PHOTOS)

Many Tehran citizens head to Cheshmeh Ali neighborhood, city of Rey, southern Tehran, in the final days of the year to wash their carpets and rugs.

The following images have been released by Mehr News Agency:

 

 

100 Years of Solitude and Kindness / Welcome to Haj Ali Darvish Tea-house

The smallest tea-house of the capital city, which is nearly a hundred years old, is located in the middle of the bazaar among hundreds of others. You can spend some time in this teahouse and listen to the stories of the old owner who inherited this job from his father, and has since maintained its history and identity, never allowing it to be destroyed by ideas of profit.

Tehran’s smallest tea-house can be found next to the bazaar’s mosque and Haj Abdollah School. In a very small space, hardly two square meters, there’s tons of love and kindness awaiting the customers. He talks about many things, about himself and his feeling of loneliness, his memories of his father, the war, hiking in Darakeh mountains, about his sports shop next to Darakeh cultural house, about his good financial status and his fortune to not have to rely on the tea-house for his income.

We walk and talk for a long time. The numbness in my feet makes me notice how much time has passed. It is nice to talk to a lonely, old man who is extremely kind-hearted, who stands in this little memory-packed space every day. To forget the sadness of his life, instead he serves his customers with drinks like tea and coffee to keep this old heritage alive and lit up. The tea-house was first started in 1917, while his father, Haj Ali Darvish, (the founder of tea-house) is still alive, and lives at home with a nurse. The man has never married, in order to look after his father.

I don’t know of his education and he doesn’t like to mention it, but he knows Marx, Weber, Durkheim, and even Michel Foucault very well. It’s very obvious that he is also very well-travelled both in Iran and abroad, but he insists on introducing himself simply as a tea server.

He has his own way of giving bills to costumers. If it is your first time at his tea-house, then the first couple of glasses are on him. He asks all the customers whether it’s their first time or not.

Tehran’s smallest tea-house, now over 100 years old, still preserves its history and, more importantly, its identity. You can see this in both Darvish the father and Darvish the son.

100 years of loneliness and kindness, and a hot cup of tea and the sweet smell of coffee, tea or other herbal infusions can still excite any passerby. If your path ever takes you this way in Tehran, don’t forget to pay a visit to Haj Ali Darvish’s tea-house, and to enjoy a nostalgic cup of tea!

Ahmad Shaheed’s Human Rights report is politically motivated, biased and unacceptable

Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman, Hosein Jaberi Ansari reacting to the latest human rights report by UN Special Human Rights Rapporteur, Ahmad Shaheed said such reports are compiled based on views of certain countries aimed and certain countries by abusing the international human rights mechanism, reported Tasnim News Agency.

This selective approach will not improve human rights condition internationally but rather will lead to some political quarrel among countries and in long run undermine efforts aimed at upholding such rights globally, Mr. Ansari said.

He added that from our point of view, the latest report by Ahmad Shaheed content wise is biased and politically motivated and discriminatory. Methodologically, the report is unbalanced and imaginative and instead of relying on concrete realities it is prepared based on unsubstantiated information.

Foreign Ministry Spokesman said, the government of Islamic Republic of Iran is committed to improving quality of human rights and is trying to foster basic human rights of its nation based on country’s Constitution and religious values and is busy with preparing Citizenship Rights Charter. He said due to what I said and because the report reflects some political objectives, we categorically dismiss the latest human rights report made by Ahmad Shaheed against Islamic Republic.

Mr. Ansari went on saying that promotion of human Right is an important issue for every country and only through cooperation and dialog as well as non-selective and fair treatments, human rights could be improved universally.

Undersea pipeline to take Iran gas to India: Report

Indian media reports said Tuesday that the planned multi-billion project will circumvent Pakistan.

“The deal for the Iran-India undersea gas pipeline will be done. Matters have become easier as the US-imposed economic sanctions on Iran have been lifted,” the Indian daily, The Tribune, quoted an unnamed government official as saying.

The 1,400 kilometer pipeline will link Iran’s southeastern port of Chabahar to India’s western Gujarat State, bypassing the exclusive economic zone (EEZ) of Pakistan.

New Delhi will also reportedly fund a rail link between Chabahar and Zahedan, the provincial capital of Iran’s Sistan-Baluchestan.

The railway will join the Iranian port with International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC) to provide direct access to Central Asia.

India thus seeks to use the undersea gas pipeline to import natural gas from Turkmenistan.

The $4.5 billion pipeline will bring 31.5 million cubic meters of gas per day to India’s west coast.

Laying such a pipeline would need technical expertise for which a global consortium will lead the way.

A report by the Economic Times said last month that executives of Gail and Indian Oil Ltd (IOL) will meet Iranian officials to discuss the price of gas to be used in the pipeline which has to pass through the Sea of Oman and the Arabian Sea.

The paper said Oman might join the pipeline at a later stage, making it a trilateral initiative given its geopolitical proximity both to India and Iran.

Iran and Oman have already signed a deal to build an undersea pipeline to ship 20 million cubic meters per day of gas to the sultanate for a period of 25 years. The deal worth $60 billion also includes turning Iranian gas to LNG for exports.

India has sought to establish a direct gas link with Iran after Pakistan’s ‘foot-dragging’ in completing an onshore gas pipeline between the three nations.

Iran ready to restore peace, stability to Afghanistan: Envoy

‘Iran believes in this issue and has always taken steps in this direction,’ Gholamali Khoshroo told a UN Security Council session on Afghanistan’s developments on Tuesday.

‘The international community is required to support the national solidarity government in Afghanistan in its fight against terrorism and in achieving economic and social development.’

He said Iran supports the peace process in Afghanistan adding that cooperation with terrorist groups will be an impediment on the road to encountering terrorism.

‘In Iran’s view, enhanced economic relations with Afghanistan is an approach to establish peace, security and stability in the country and Iran has always taken steps in this direction.’

Khoshroo referred to Iran’s cooperation with Afghanistan including the joint fights against narcotics, hosting thousand of Afghan refugees and construction of railroads to connect the two countries.

Rezaei: Saudi Arabia should be Fearful of Iranian Silence

According to Khabar Online, Dr. Mohsen Rezaei has given a warning to the Saudis in the form of a note on his Instagram page.

In his note, he wrote that over the past two years, Saudi rulers have recklessly launched campaigns in the Middle East region. These have killed tens of thousands of people, and made millions homeless, he claimed

The Saudi Foreign Minister recently said that he intends to send Saudi troops to Syria through the Iraqi port city of Basra, which would mean invading both Iraq and Syria, as well as coming close to the Iranian borders, Dr. Rezaei contended.

He gave his opinion that although the United States and Israel are considered enemies, the Saudis should also be afraid of Iran’s silence and patience. Saudi Arabia should know that in case of continued aggression, it will face severe punishment, the Secretary warned.

Sunnis, Wahabis differ widely: Grand Ayatollah

Speaking at the ceremony to launch the website on exposing Wahabism here on Tuesday, he said, ‘Daesh and al-Nusrah are vicious children of Wahabism.’

‘Wahabis are not only targeting Muslims but also the principle of Islam. They are attempting to introduce Islam as a violent religion and are giving such an excuse to the anti-Islam elements.’

In the meantime, he added, ‘We are more concerned about Islam because they are marring the image of Islam.’

‘Who has given the Wahabis the permission to feel that they are custodians of all Muslims?’ he asked and said, ‘Their imaginary belief has led them to antagonize all of Islamic ulema and to threaten them to accept their thought or lose their lives.’

Ayatollah Shirazi said that there are even US statesmen who announced that the core of these dangerous thoughts is located in Saudi Arabia which have to be eradicated.

Iran stands by Turkey in anti-terror fight: VP

“Iran and Turkey are both victims of terrorism and the two countries understand the necessity of fighting this ominous and inhuman phenomenon,” Jahangiri said in a telephone conversation with Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on Tuesday.

A deadly car bomb explosion in the centrally-located Kizilay district of Ankara on Sunday claimed the lives of at least 37 people and injured over a hundred more.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility; however, the Turkish premier announced on Monday that there are strong indications that the blast was carried out by the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which Turkey deems as a terrorist organization.

Jahangiri further said cooperation between Tehran and Ankara in the region and the world would be instrumental in uprooting terrorism.

He said terrorist attacks across the world show the expansion of groups that are threatening global peace and security.

“Countering terrorism requires foresight and collective international action,” Jahangiri pointed out.

The Turkish premier, for his part, hailed Iran’s support for his country in its fight against terrorism.

On Monday, Turkey launched retaliatory air strikes on PKK depots and shelters in the mountainous Kandil and Gara regions in northern Iraq.

Ankara has been engaged in a large-scale campaign against the PKK in its southern border region in the past few months. The Turkish military has also been conducting offensives against the positions of the group in northern Iraq.

The operations began in the wake of a deadly July 2015 bombing in the southern Turkish town of Suruc. More than 30 people died in the attack, which the Turkish government blamed on the Takfiri Daesh terrorist group.

Ayatollah Khamenei urges independent states to unite against foreign interference

In a meeting with Vietnamese President Truong Tan Sang in Tehran on Tuesday, Ayatollah Khamenei said world powers are making attempts to meddle with the internal affairs of other countries.

“These acts of interference have sometimes been through waging wars like the Vietnam War and sometimes through other methods, and the way to counter such meddling is cooperation and rapprochement between independent countries,” said the Leader.

Ayatollah Khamenei also said that the Islamic Republic’s policy is based on cooperating with Asian states including Vietnam.

“We are also aware of your cooperativeness at international bodies and we believe that we must broaden cooperation as much as there is possibility and potential,” the Leader said.

Ayatollah Khamenei also heaped praise on the “courage and resistance” of the Vietnamese nation and prominent figures like veteran revolutionary leader Ho Chi Minh and military commander General Vo Nguyen Giap against the US aggression in the 1940s.

For his part, the Vietnamese president offered gratitude to the Islamic Republic for its support of Vietnam within international bodies and said his country will continue to support Iran’s right to peaceful nuclear energy.

He expressed hope that Iran would view Vietnam as a key partner in its transactions.