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A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15

Iran Newspaper front pages

Iranians are preparing for new year celebrations as the next calendar year begins on March 19.

The last Tuesday night is celebrated in Iran by a fire festival which has derailed in the past few decades from a fire festival to a cracker phenomenon in the country in which dozens are killed every year.

Many headlines cautioned their readers about the dangers and accidents caused by the crackers in these days.

Above all, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani’s meeting with his Vietnamese counterpart in Tehran, and UNSC’s meeting which bore no further sanctions on Iran because of its missile launch took many headlines on Tuesday, March 15.

Here are the top headlines:

 

Abrar:

  1. EU extends Moscow sanctions
  2. Blast kills 37, injures 125 in Ankara
  3. Mogherini to visit Tehran on April 15
  4. Iran, Vietnam trade to hit $2bn
  5. UNICEF: Syria no place for kids
  6. Australia, Iran FMs to discuss Iran missile tests
  7. France reacts to Iran missile tests

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

 

Abrar Eqtesadi:

  1. Iran singled out from oil freeze plan: Russia
  2. Iran boosts price of exported petchems

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

 

Afkar:

  1. Guardian Council endorse equal blood money for men, women [in car accidents]
  2. Judiciary chief: Cultural impunity, country’s chief priority
  3. Iran launches Chabahar-Oman sea lane

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

 

Arman-e Emrouz:

  1. Not everyone can be fooled: Hassan Khomeini
  2. Men, women blood money equal [in Iran]
  3. UN Security Council meets to discuss Iran’s missile launch

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

 

Asrar:

  1. No adventures against anyone in the world: Gen. Soleimani
  2. [Sudanese President] Omar al-Bashir: Saudi security above Sudan security
  3. MP: Men, women blood money equal in car accidents
  4. Iran self-restraint not eternal: Mohsen Rezaei to Riyadh
  5. Iran favors enhanced ties with ASEAN member states: Rouhani
  6. Police seizes over 7t of crackers
  7. Terrorist cells smashed in Western Iran
  8. Iran missile tests no violation of JCPOA: Cmdr.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

Ebtekar:

  1. Answer is short: No

Russia opposed any sanctions on Iran over missile tests. Russia’s envoy to the United Nations Vitaly Churkin said Monday, “The clear and short answer is no.”

  1. Guardian Council confirms election results in 50 constituencies
  2. Parliament election runoff on April 30
  3. Deal to buy 118 airbus jets to be finalized in two months

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

Ettela’at:

  1. Iran to launch first financial free zone
  2. Iran eyes enhanced ties with ASEAN members: Rouhani
  3. Iran, western Asia’s most stable country: Zarif
  4. Terrorist blast kills 37, injures 125 in Turkish capital
  5. New York Times: Deliberate oil price slump catches Riyadh

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

 

Etemad:

  1. No sanctions for missile tests
  2. Russian troops leave Syria

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

 

Hemayat:

  1. Fear loom Turkey after blast
  2. Anti-Iranian judgment defaced US judiciary system: Iran’s Larijani
  3. Judiciary chief: Iran judiciary stands firm in proceeding cases of corruption, “loved ones”

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

 

Iran:

  1. Head of tourism organization inaugurates 14 airport projects
  2. Russia to build 1,400mw power plan in Iran
  3. Iran, Vietnam eye $2b trade
  4. Iran-Oman sea lane launched
  5. Iran prepares for arrival of spring

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

 

Jomhouri Islami:

  1. Iran missile test no violation of UNSC resolution: Zarif
  2. Russia endorses Iran crude oil production growth

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

 

Javan:

  1. We have always been shielding Sunnis by our lives: Gen. Soleimani
  2. Martyr Bakeri’s life was all about his belief in rule of jurists (Velayat Faqih): Wife
  3. Stead rise in oil price
  4. Turkey intelligence knew about Ankara blast

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15



 

 

Kayhan:

  1. 3,500 Saudi forces killed in Yemen war

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

 

Khorasan:

  1. No sanctions approved in UNSC meeting on Iran missile tests
  2. 10 killed, 2,502 injured in Iran fire festival

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

 

Kaenat:

  1. Iran foreign ministry slams US court’s recent anti-Iran judgment
  2. Iran, Russia ready for oil swap

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

 

Payam Zaman

  1. Judiciary chief: Resistive economy, scientific growth, cultural impunity are three major priorities of country
  2. Car market still hibernating
  3. Zarif reacts to allegations against Iran missile tests
  4. Russia rules out further sanctions on Iran
  5. Air pollution, Tehran’s top concern

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

 

Rah-e Mardom:

  1. Zarif: We have not invaded, nor will invade any country ever
  2. Hackers invade bank accounts
  3. Article: Role of women in society

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

 

Resalat:

  1. Rule of Islam impossible without Velayat Faqih: Gen. Soleimani
  2. US has violated JCPOA articles, spirit: Mohammad Javad Larijani
  3. Enemy seeks ways to manipulate decision making of politicians: Judiciary chief
  4. Mohsen Rezaei warns Saudis of Iranian self-restraint

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

 

Rooyesh Mellat:

  1. Iran burning accidents 8 times more than world standards
  2. Iran, Australia ties growing in post-sanctions setting

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15



 

 

Shargh:

  1. UNSC meeting ends without fresh sanctions on Iran
  2. We are not looking for adventures: Gen. Soleimani

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

 

Shahrvand:

  1. Islamic Republic not seeking adventurism: Gen. Soleimani
  2. 4,000 ambulances stationed in Iranian roads

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

 

Saheb Ghalam:

  1. Novak’s major oil mission in Iran
  2. Iran foreign debts crosses $5.5bn
  3. Car market bearish
  4. Refinery producing Euro-4 petrol at full capacity

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15


 

Asia:

  1. All foreign deals to be enforced next year

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on March 15

 

Iran Always Defends Sunnis against Terrorism: General Soleimani

General Soleimani

“The Islamic Republic as a revolutionary country has certain principles which include a wider framework,” General Soleimani noted in an address to a Sunday gathering in the southern Iranian city of Kerman.

“In which country have we tried to convert our Sunni Muslim brothers into Shiite,” General Soleimani asked, adding that Iranians have always shielded their Sunni brothers.

The IRGC Quds Force Commander further pointed to Takfiris (extremists) and Takfirism (extremism), saying that humanity in the Sunni Muslim world is today more than any other place in the world under the attack of Takfiri groups.

Those who created Takfirism thought it would make the Islamic Republic and Shiites kneel down, while it is a fire in the house of Sunni brothers, General Soleimani noted.

“Is this an adventure that the Islamic Republic defends the properties and lives of Muslims? Is this a fault that the Islamic Republic stands against a group whose members buy and sell 2000 young women in a single region; a group that has inflicted a catastrophe on them,” he asked, defending Iran’s assistance to Iraq and Syria in the ongoing fight against terrorism and extremism.

“Is this a big flaw that the Islamic Republic is standing against the anti-Muslim groups and preventing the destruction of Muslim people’s mosques and other holy places,” the IRGC general further asked.

“Since the Islamic Republic has gained a central position in the Muslim and Shiite world, the enmities have also increased,” he said, adding that the hostilities today differ from those in the past, and the weapons used are also different.

“Despite the claims made by our enemies, they are not hostile to Iran because of our adventurism, as we have never been looking for adventure against anyone anywhere in the world,” he noted.

No country in the world is more decent, peace-seeking, and tolerant toward its neighbors than Iran, General Soleimani said, adding that the Islamic Republic has never inflicted any harm on its neighboring countries.

“Although the world is full of tyranny, the Islamic Republic has not aggressed anywhere in the world,” he added.

 

Iran Never Sought Adventure against “Illegitimate” Saudi Regime

“Nowhere in the Islamic Revolution’s history have we sought any adventure against Saudis and their government, though they are illegitimate, and despite the fact that their people do not have any role in the ruling system and government, and that the government is controlled by a family,” General Soleimani added.

It is rather Saudi Arabia that has always looked for adventure against Islam and Iran, he stressed.

He pointed to the ongoing war waged by Riyadh last March against the innocent people in Yemen, saying, “When an apparently Muslim state bombs the Muslim people in Yemen day and night for one year without any Islamic, legal, and humanitarian consideration, and when it brutally devastates men and women, what does it mean?”

General Soleimani also deplored a recent move by the Persian Gulf Cooperation Council (PGCC) and the Arab League to label the Lebanese Resistance Movement, Hezbollah, as a terrorist group.

“Lebanon’s Hezbollah as an Arab and Islamic party has not started any adventure against Saudi Arabia; it has just done on its own what all Arab armies could not do from 1947 to the end of the 1960s in defending the Arabs. Hezbollah defeated the enemy of Muslims, and that was not an adventure,” he went on to say.

 

General Soleimani Says Iran’s Independence Is Exemplary

The full independence and democracy in Iran has made it distinguished from other countries, General Soleimani noted, adding that such a difference is not a negative one, but an exemplary distinction.

He went on to say that the Islamic Republic is independent in different fields including its economy, armed forces, and decision-making bodies.

 

Significance of Velayat-e Faqih (Guardianship of the Jurist)

A prominent feature of the late founder of the Islamic Republic Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini was his revival of Velayat-e Faqih as a hidden necessity in the Muslim world, he noted, adding that the need for establishing an Islamic ruling system was emphasized by Imam Khomeini.

“Today, it is not possible that someone protects Islam without defending the Jurist,” the Iranian commander added, reiterating that if one wants to protect Islam and the Muslim world, that would be impossible without Velayat-e Faqih.

The peace in Iran is a result of Velayat-e Faqih, the Iranian general went on to say.

“In Iraq, it was made clear that if it was not for the Islamic Republic and Velayat-e Faqih, the holy shrines would be threatened in the first week (of war),” he added.

Iran has served the Iraqi nation in recent years and sacrificed the lives of its nationals to protect the Iraqi people’s dignity, General Soleimani said.

 

Iran Now Needs Multidimensional Preparedness

“Today is much more important than yesterday; being prepared today is much more important and difficult than it was in the Sacred Defense (eight-year war with Iraq) era, because preparedness in that era was one-dimensional, while it should be multidimensional today,” IRGC commander said.

“In those days, the enemy was just in one front; now, it is in several fronts, and preparedness against the enemy needs multidimensional preparedness,” he added.

 

Prerequisites for Martyrdom

The Iranian commander, who was speaking in a conference on Iranian martyrs, also referred to the culture of martyrdom in Iran, saying that a prerequisite to martyrdom is “being a martyr”.

“If someone is a martyr, he would achieve martyrdom, and if someone does not smell like a martyr, he would not be a martyr even if he is killed (in the war),” he added.

“A martyr is someone that when you see him, listen to him or hang out with him, you smell martyrdom from him,” General Soleimani went on to say.

He further noted that abandoning one’s earthly belongings is one of the pillars of being a martyr.

Staying loyal to one’s commitments is also a major condition for being a martyr, the IRGC Quds Force Commander added.

Today, one can say if someone is not committed to defending the Islamic Republic and the Islamic Revolution, he or she is not committed to religion, he added.

“Today, protecting the Shiite Islam, the basis of religion and its principles, protecting Islam and Islamic principles is different from the past, because major changes have been made in the world,” General Soleimani noted.

Zarif calls for Iran-Australia cooperation against extremism

The Iranian foreign minister made the remarks during a joint press conference with his Australian counterpart Julie Bishop at the Parliament House in Canberra on Tuesday.

“We share the view that Daesh is a common enemy, nobody can look at Daesh as a possible leverage. We all need to cooperate together to fight Daesh and extremism,” he said, adding, “We have seen instances of that type of extremism creating crimes across the world from Sydney to San Bernardino and everywhere in between.”

The Iranian foreign minister also noted that the removal of anti-Iran sanctions has paved the way for further economic cooperation between Iran and Australia.

“We are happy that after the removal of sanctions Australia took the measures that were necessary, the legislation that was necessary were adopted here in Australia so now the road for cooperation between Iranian and Australian business communities is now open,” he said.

Broaching on Iran’s recent missile tests, he stressed that the launches were purely for self defense.

“We will not use those missiles against anybody except in self-defense. We challenge those who question our missiles program,” he stated.

For her part, Bishop congratulated Iran on the upcoming Iranian calendar New Year (starting on March 20), the successful parliamentary and Assembly of Experts elections and the conclusion of Iran’s nuclear deal with the world powers.

She also stressed that the battle against terrorism in Iraq and Syria is a matter of “common interest” for both countries.

Zarif is in Australia on a two-day visit on the last leg of his six-nation Asia-Pacific tour. He has met with Trade Minister Steven Michele Ciobo and held talks with the country’s Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull.

The Iranian foreign minister’s meeting comes as the Australian foreign minister paid an official visit to Tehran in April, 2015 for the first time in some 12 years. She had invited her Iranian counterpart to visit Australia back then.

Saudi anti-Hezbollah bids provocative, rash: Iran

Amir Abdollahian

“Saudi Arabia’s anti-Hezbollah move is against peace, stability and security of Lebanon,” Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister for Arab and African Affairs Hossein Amir-Abdollahian told Iranian national TV on Monday.

He added that Riyadh has been conducting “hasty and unbalanced” moves in the region over recent months.

The senior Iranian diplomat emphasized that the latest Saudi decision against Hezbollah comes while the “legitimate and important” group is instrumental in Lebanon and in the “fight against the Zionist regime [Israel] and terrorism in the region.”

He said Hezbollah is a source of honor for the Muslim and Arab world and added that statements against the group would fail to have any influence on its power and position.

At a meeting of the Arab League’s foreign ministers in Cairo on March 11, the group declared Hezbollah a terrorist organization. The measure was approved by a majority of the Arab League ministers except those from Lebanon and Iraq.

The decision came after the [Persian] Gulf Cooperation Council officially added Hezbollah to its so-called list of “terrorist” organizations on March 2. The [P]GCC comprises Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Oman, Bahrain and Kuwait.

The move by the six-nation Arab bloc came days after Riyadh halted USD 4bn in aid to Lebanese security forces. The decision came following recent victories by the Syrian army, backed by Hezbollah fighters, against Takfiri militants fighting to topple the Damascus government.

Algeria refused to classify the movement as a terrorist organization. Palestinian resistance movement, Islamic Jihad, also praised Hezbollah as a resistance movement, which has a history in the struggle against the Zionist entity as well as in supporting the Palestinian cause. Iran, Syria and Yemen’s Houthi Ansarullah movement have also slammed the move by the [P]GCC.

Lashing out at Riyadh’s aggressive stance toward Hezbollah, Sheikh Naim Qassem, the deputy secretary general of the resistance movement, said on Saturday that the Saudi regime is striving to affirm that Hezbollah is a terror group in “all the forums that allow it to make this move.”

“It is putting pressure on others at the Arab foreign ministers meeting to do the same,” he said during his address in the eastern city of Baalbek.

Hezbollah Secretary General Seyyed Hassan Nasrallah has said the Saudi regime seeks to instigate “strife” between Shias and Sunnis in the region, urging the Lebanese not to be intimidated by threats posed by Riyadh and Tel Aviv.

Iran’s UN Mission: Missile Test Part of Efforts to Boost Defense Capabilities

The following is the full text of the Iranian mission’s press release on Monday.

Pursuant to a campaign of disinformation that followed the recent missile test-launches by the Iranian military forces, the Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations would like to provide the following clarifications:

1-      Iran, as a country living in the most unstable and volatile region of the world, is fully entitled to build a credible conventional capability to deter and defend against any aggression. Iran’s recent ballistic missile test launches were part of ongoing efforts of its armed forces to strengthen its legitimate defense capabilities and to demonstrate the effectiveness and readiness of missile systems against security threats. It is demagoguery for those who are at the supplying and receiving ends of around $100 billion of the state-of-the-art weaponry just to the lower Persian Gulf region in 2015 (while Iran’s entire defense budget was around ten times less in the same year) to hype this much Iran’s conventional missile-test launches. The disparity between Iran’s defense spending and that of other regional states is colossal, and has been acknowledged even by the US officials at the highest levels.

2-      Brazen threats against Iran’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, multiplied in the past several years, have made it all the more imperative for Iran to build a legitimate deterrent capability. As an example of these threats, Moshe Yaalon, Defense Minister of the Israeli regime, in a speech on 5 May 2015 in the Shurat Hadin Law of War Conference in Jerusalem threatened to use nuclear bomb against Iran. (For detail, see Iran’s letter to the Security Council dated 19 May, 2015) The same regime remains the only obstacle in the way towards establishing a Nuclear-Weapon Free Zone in the Middle East and the only one in our region in unlawful possession of nuclear weapons.

3-      The statements made by the Iranian military commanders reflected only the concern over such threats. The commander of the Aerospace Force of the Guards Corps, whose statements are wildly distorted by vested-interest parties, reiterated in his interview following the tests that “we won’t start any war, we aim, however, to defend ourselves … we don’t intend to attack any country, but if we come under attack, we should be able to retaliate.”

4-      Security Council resolution 2231 does not prohibit legitimate and conventional military activities, nor does international law disallow them. Iran has never sought to acquire nuclear weapon and never will in the future, as it fully honors its commitment under the NPT and the JCPOA. Consequently, Iran’s missiles are not and could not be designed for delivery of unconventional weapons. We reject arbitrary interpretation of the provisions of Security Council resolution 2231 and its annexes, and call upon all parties to act in good-faith and refrain from provocations.

5-      We, likewise, reject the raising of this issue in a meeting of the Security Council and consider it to be contrary to the prevailing positive environment, and detrimental to the good-faith implementation of the JCPOA.
Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations – New York

 

Iran missile tests don’t violate nuclear agreement, EU says

Mogherini made the announcement following an EU foreign ministerial meeting held in Brussels on Monday, a day after France said Iran may face sanctions over the tests.

She claimed that the tests could increase tensions in the region despite not being a violation of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

On March 9, Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) successfully test-fired two ballistic missiles 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.

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

Earlier, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif stressed that Iran’s missiles are a means of defense.

“We spent a fraction of any other country in the region on defense, and missiles are a means of defense that we require,” he said.

Security Council meeting

Meanwhile, director general for political and international affairs at Iran’s Foreign Ministry, Hamid Baeedinejad, announced that the UN Security Council had concluded that the missile tests do not violate Security Council Resolution 2231, which provides for the termination of previous UN resolutions on the Iranian nuclear program and establishes specific restrictions that apply to all states without exception.

“As expected, the Security Council wrapped up today’s session without adopting a decision after hearing the opinions of the US and some other member states,” Baeedinejad said after a closed-door meeting of the 15-nation council. 

Earlier, Russia’s envoy to the United Nations Vitaly Churkin also announced that the tests were not in violation to the UN resolutions and that his country was opposed to imposing new sanctions.

Reacting to Churkin’s remarks, the US ambassador to the UN promised to continue for action against Iran’s ballistic tests.

“We’re not going to give up at the Security Council,” Samantha Power said.  

Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council – the United States, France, Britain, China and Russia – plus Germany started to implement the JCPOA on January 16.

After the JCPOA went into effect, 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 restrictions on its nuclear activities.

Syria Says Putin, Assad Agree to Reduce Russian Air Force Presence

It said President Bashar al-Assad and Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed the move in a telephone call, saying it was in line with “the continuation of the cessation of hostilities and in accordance with the situation on the ground”.

It said Russia also pledged to continue its support for Syria in “combating terrorism”, Reuters reported.

 

41,000 More Flights Passing through Iranian Airspace, Compared with Last Year

According to Iranian Student News Agency (ISNA), this type of flights are flights by foreign airlines through the airspace of a country en route to their destinations. Airlines are required to receive necessary permission and authorization from the countries whose airspace they pass through during their flight, and have to pay a certain amount as a fee.

Since Iran is located in both the East-West and North-South air corridors, it plays an important role in providing the best possible secure routes for flights between the Persian Gulf states to Northern European and North Atlantic countries.

Before June 2015, each day 450 flights on average were registered as passing through Iranian airspace. However, following instability in Ukraine and Iraq, that number has increased by 100 percent, and currently more than 900 international flights pass through Iranian airspace daily.

Artists Renovate Urban Spaces

In this event, 486 artists from graphic arts, sculpture, graffiti, and environmental arts are coming together to present their works in Tehran’s public spaces.

The Baharestan program (Tehran’s spring urban arts festival) runs every year at the same time as Nowrouz (the Persian New Year), under the slogan of “A New Year, A New Tehran”.  It will be held for one month.

 

 

Iran FM defends right to use missiles for defense

“We spent a fraction of any other country in the region on defense, and missiles are a means of defense that we require,” he said in an interview with Radio New Zealand.

He added that the missile tests did not violate a nuclear agreement, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), clinched by Iran and the P5+1 countries – the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany – on July 14, 2015.

Zarif said the missile launches were not against the UN Security Council Resolution 2231 that endorsed the nuclear agreement.

Resolution 2231 (2015) provides for the termination of the provisions of previous Security Council resolutions on the Iranian nuclear program and establishes specific restrictions that apply to all states without exception.

The resolution calls upon Iran not to undertake any activity related to ballistic missiles designed to be capable of delivering nuclear weapons, including launches using such ballistic missile technology.

The United States claims the tests violated the United Nations resolution and is pushing for UN Security Council action on Iran’s recent ballistic missile tests.

“We stated when the nuclear deal was approved by the Security Council and during the course of nuclear discussions that we will continue with our defense capabilities and that these defense capabilities have nothing to do with nuclear weapons,” Zarif said.

He emphasized that the missiles were not designed to carry nuclear warheads and said Iran has “provided the best guarantee” that it would never develop nuclear weapons.

The Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) successfully test-fired two more 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.

After Iran and the P5+1 group started to implement the JCPOA 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.