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A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

Iranian Newspapers Headlines
Iranian Newspapers Headlines

Tehran playing host to a summit of gas-exporting countries and a meeting between the Supreme Leader and the Turkmen president dominated the front pages of Iranian newspapers on Monday. Also on the cover of reformist-leaning papers were the comments of the Expediency Council chairman about upcoming elections.

 

Ettela’at: The violent crimes of terrorist groups have nothing to do with Islam, said the Supreme Leader in a meeting with Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow.

The Leader further said that security, welfare and progress in neighboring countries and Islamic states serve the interests of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Ayatollah Khamenei: The brutal crimes committed by the terrorist groups, including beheading or burning people alive, show that they are detached from Islam.


 

Abrar: The commander of the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps has said that ISIS cannot carry out any massive operation in Iran.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

 


 

Amin: “We should not let security in the Caspian Sea be disrupted,” said President Rouhani in a joint meeting of ranking officials from Iran and Turkmenistan.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

 


 

Arman-e Emrooz: No longer can obstacles be thrown in the way of people, said Chairman of the Expediency Council Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.

He further said that a popular parliament paves the way for the emergence of a successful government.

Arman-e Emrooz: The interior minister has said that security forces have seized bombs ready to explode.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

 


 

Asrar: The hardliners are trying to show the country is in disarray, said Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani.

Asrar: A deputy interior minister has said that the Interior Ministry will deal with those who disrupt authorized meetings.

Asrar: “I promise to return [Mahmoud] Khavari [a former managing director of Bank Melli who has fled to Canada] to the country,” said the director of the General Inspection Office.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

 


 

Bahar: A trip aimed at cementing an alliance

The Russian president arrives in Tehran on Monday.

Bahar: “We should not get frightened by frustrating comments and political threats,” said the chairman of the Expediency Council.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

 


 

Ebtekar: The interior minister has said that those who are found disqualified [to run for the upcoming elections] are entitled to contesting their disqualification.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

 


 

Eghtesad-e Pooya: A deputy director of the Securities and Exchange Organization has said that foreign investors can open bank accounts [in Iran] from afar.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

 


 

Etemad: Licensed money laundering

Babak Zanjani [who is on trial for massive corruption] claimed in a court hearing Sunday that his financial operations and the transfer of money in sacks had the approval of three Cabinet ministers and the governor of the Central Bank when the ninth government was in office.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

 


 

Hambastegi: “Alliance with government supporters is our core strategy in elections,” said Mohammad Reza Aref, a reformist leader.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

 


 

Iran: A summit of the world’s giant gas producers in Tehran

The 3rd Summit of the Gas Exporting Countries Forum (GECF) will open in Tehran with the heads of gas producing countries in attendance.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

 


 

Javan: “We have gained positive results by acting on your advice,” the visiting Turkmen president told the Supreme Leader.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

 


 

Jomhouri Islami: Those who characterize people’s vote as something decorative take the country to the brink of a cliff, said Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani.

Jomhouri Islami: “We do not let pressure groups meddle in the elections,” said the deputy interior minister for political affairs.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

 


 

Kayhan: In massive rallies, Muslims in Italy, France and the US said that ISIS militants do not represent the Muslim faith.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

 


 

Mardomsalari: Nobody is entitled to disrupting speeches, said the Judiciary spokesman.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

 


 

Payam-e Zaman: Half of the country’s graduated population remains inactive, said the Statistical Center of Iran.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23


 

Resalat: The spokesman of the Judiciary has asked electoral candidates to urge their supporters to abide by the law.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

 


 

Rooyesh Mellat: The UN secretary general has called for global cooperation to combat terrorism.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

 


 

Saheb Ghalam: A diabetes control document will be unveiled on Monday.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

 


 

Shahrvand: A deputy director of the Welfare Organization has said that 15 safe houses have been launched for women who are vulnerable to [domestic] violence.

Shahrvand: Neighborhood to neighborhood to identify HIV positive patients

The youth account for the largest number of passengers who board the AIDS bus [which has been stationed in western Tehran to offer free medical advice and conduct HIV tests].

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Nov. 23

 

 

Iran’s Time Museum (PHOTOS)

Tamashagah Zaman (Time Museum), which is 6,000 square meters in area, opened in Tehran in 1999.

A large number of bedside clocks as well as pocket- and wrist-watches are on display at the museum. Some of the exhibits bear the signature of their makers. The walls of the museum are graced with documents on Iranian calendar.

The following are snapshots of the museum published by Tabnak.ir:

Highlights of Ettela’at newspaper on Nov. 23

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 The violent crimes of terrorist groups have nothing to do with Islam, said the Supreme Leader in a meeting with Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow.

The Leader further said that security, welfare and progress in neighboring countries and Islamic states serve the interests of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Ayatollah Khamenei: The brutal crimes committed by the terrorist groups, including beheading or burning people alive, show that they are detached from Islam.

 The volume of trade between Iran and Turkmenistan will hit the $ 60b mark, said President Rouhani in a joint meeting of Iran-Turkmenistan high-ranking officials.

Iran and Turkmenistan can have more cooperation in the fight against terrorism, drugs trafficking and organized crime.

 The electoral process for the Assembly of Experts and the Islamic Consultative Assembly will open on December 11.

Secretary of the Electoral Commission Ali Pour-Ali Motlagh has said that registration for the Assembly of Experts and parliament starts on December 17 and 19 respectively.

 Iran will stage a massive naval drill – codenamed Velayat – in winter.

Navy Commander Rear Admiral Habibollah Sayyari has said that the Iranian naval forces have successfully countered pirates and protected the country’s tankers and cargo ships in high seas.

 A commemoration ceremony was held in Kerman to honor Ata Ahmadi [a philanthropist who has built more than 250 schools, old people’s homes and residential centers and contributed to road projects in Kerman Province].

Messages by Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani, Seyyed Mohammad Khatami and the education minister were read out in the ceremony. Ata Ahmadi was a no-show in the ceremony because he did not approve of the event in the first place.

Mahmoud Doaei [the head of Ettela’at newspaper]: If I wanted to follow the example of certain individuals, Ata would be one of them.

 The number of divorced women who have turned into breadwinners of their family is on the rise, said the State Welfare Organization.

A deputy director of the Welfare Organization has said that there are as many as 1,500 hotbeds in the country for which only 170 social centers are active.

 A deputy health minister has said that a diabetes academy will be launched [in the country] in the near future.

Mohammad Bagher Larijani further said that diabetics account for six percent of the country’s population.

 Iran’s principles to solve the Syrian crisis

Recent developments, including two conferences in Vienna, Austria, have put the Syrian crisis on a new track, creating a ray of hope for the first time that one of the biggest human tragedies of our time might come to an end.

Respect for the nations’ right to self-determination, opposition to imposition of the will of foreign players on independent nations, and opposition to arbitrary use of terrorism as a means to secure political objectives are the guiding principles of Iran’s Syria policy, said Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif in an opinion piece Ettela’at daily published on Monday November 23.

MORE

Homemade drone shot down as part of drills: Commander

General Farzad Esmaeili

Commander of Iran’s Air Defense said an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) that crashed recently near the country’s southwestern city of Shoush was a homegrown aircraft shot down by the local forces as part of an exercise.

Brigadier General Farzad Esmaeili told reporters on Sunday that the drone was shot down as part of an exercise and the shootdown was meant to test the preparation status.

His comments came following reports on Saturday that a military drone has crashed near the city of Shoush in Khuzestan Province.

“The remains of the drone were collected and delivered to the IRGC Aerospace Force local office,” Ghodratollah Dehghan, deputy governor of the province, told the Mehr News Agency Saturday.

Jason Rezaian sentenced to jail in Iran

Jason Rezaian

Iran’s Judiciary says The Washington Post reporter, who is in detention for spying among other charges, has been sentenced to imprisonment.

“Jason Rezaian’s verdict has been issued, but he has not been formally notified of it,” Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejeie, the spokesman for the Judiciary, said on Sunday.

The official added that the verdict includes prison term, saying he could not reveal the details of the ruling.

The 39-year-old Iranian-American faced charges of “espionage, collaboration with hostile governments, gathering classified information and spreading propaganda against the Islamic Republic,” his lawyer Leila Ahsan said.

The Post correspondent, who had been working for the paper in Tehran since 2012, was arrested on July 22, 2014 along with his wife, Yeganeh Salehi, and a female photographer. The women were released on bail in October 2014.

 

Terrorist crimes have nothing to do with Islam: Leader

Leader

Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei says the atrocities committed by Takfiri terrorists have nothing to do with Islam.

The Leader made the remarks in a meeting with visiting Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow in Tehran on Sunday.

Ayatollah Khamenei said the terrorist groups’ savage crimes, such as beheading and torching people, show that they know nothing about Islam, noting, “Islam is the religion of fraternity, kindness and seeking the best for others and these crimes have nothing to do with Islam.”

“In countering the violent terrorism and barbarism [committed] by Daesh [IS] and like-minded Takfiri groups committing these crimes in the name of Islam, people should be given the chance to practice rightful Islamic activities,” said the Leader.

The best way for blocking the infiltration of the Takfiri currents, the Leader said, is to bolster genuine Islamic ideologies, which he described as “moderate and sensible.”

Ayatollah Khamenei also described the nations of Iran and neighboring Turkmenistan as close relatives and underscored the need for the two countries to take “effective and practical” steps with a view to implementing bilateral agreements.

The Leader underlined the necessity for Iran and Turkmenistan to further cooperation amid tense conditions prevailing in the region.

“Iran-Turkmenistan border are frontiers of peace and calm, and are reason for the two sides’ peace of mind and the possibility of using the Iran route for access to the Persian Gulf and high seas is a valuable opportunity for Turkmenistan,” said Ayatollah Khamenei.

For his part, the Turkmen president described as unfavorable the ongoing political conditions in the region and noted that Daesh and its followers are foreigners to the teachings of Islam. He expressed regret that certain governments are supporting the Daesh terrorists.

Berdimuhamedow also expressed delight with his meeting with Ayatollah Khamenei, saying Iran and Turkmenistan maintain historically good ties.

He welcomed Ayatollah Khamenei’s description of Iranian and Turkmen nations as close relatives and said the implementation of the recommendations of the Leader during previous visits have born fruitful results.

The Turkmen leader also said that some countries are interested in becoming linked to high seas through Iran and Turkmenistan.

The Turkmen head of state had last met with Ayatollah Khamenei during a 2012 visit to the Islamic Republic.

Gurbanguly arrived in Tehran earlier in the day on a visit aimed at boosting the bilateral ties.

So far during the visit, Iran and Turkmenistan have signed nine memorandums of understanding for the expansion of cooperation in different fields, including the health and medical sector, media, power transfer, sports, transportation, and housing.

During his stay, the Turkmen president is also to attend the third Gas Exporting Countries Forum (GECF) summit, which is to be held in the capital on Monday, with nine heads of states, including Russia’s President Vladimir Putin in attendance.

The West made a strategic mistake: promotion of a fake Islam

Paris-attacks-web

An Iranian expert says that the Europeans have tried in recent years to stop the spread of Islam by painting a frightful picture of it. To that end, he says, they have introduced a violent and horrific version of Islam [and a negative image of its followers] through a media blitz.

Mohammad Esmaili Dehaghi Mohammad Esmaili Dehaghi made the comment in an opinion piece published by Tasnim News Agency on November 21 on the Paris terror attacks and its aftermath. The following is the translation of part of that piece:

After the identity of those behind the multiple terror attacks in Paris was established, it was revealed that some of the perpetrators are of European background. This shows one key point: The West has ignored one unavoidable reality, something the Western leaders have overlooked so far.

The strategic mistake the West has made comes from its miscalculation of the way it should deal with growing Islamism. The West has played a [dangerous] game which has eventually threatened the security of Europe.

In recent years the Europeans have tried to stem the spread of Islam by frightening people from Islam. To reach their goals, they have launched a media campaign and presented a violent and scary reading of Islam [and identified its followers as violent and dreadful]. What they’ve done is known as Islamophobia about which hundreds of articles have been penned.

By the same token, scores of films, TV series and propaganda packages including graphic designs, caricatures and far-from-reality reports which center on Islamophobia were made with which the readership is sufficiently familiar.

By launching such poisoned media blitz, they expected to see people turn their back on Islam and the spread of Islam halted. Unfortunately their propaganda campaign did work to a great extent and somehow slowed down the growth of Islamism in Europe.

But in practice, these poisoned propaganda bred yet another incident: criminals and murderers embraced the fake Islam the West propaganda machine had introduced.

[…]

Following the release of images featuring the details of crimes committed at the hands of Takfiri groups in Syria and Iraq, the European citizens who had been interested in such groups started to [leave their homeland to] join the [terror] groups. Perhaps today we would not have witnessed incidents like what played out in Paris, if the European leaders had done something to bring back their nationals [after they were recruited by ISIS] instead of adopting a double-standard approach to terrorism.

To put it simply, I should say that Europe has no way out but to choose one of these two options sooner or later:

First, Europe has to accept the continuation of Islamophobia and reverse propaganda which will lead to the recruitment by the Takfiri groups of criminals and killers, and as a result the repeat of terror attacks in Paris and Turkey.

Second, Europe should admit its past propaganda mistakes and introduce the real Islam, something which will bring to an end the joining of violence seekers to the Takfiri groups. As a matter of course, when the real Islam is introduced to nations, Islamism will grow among people in Europe because the genuine Islam by itself is a messenger of peace and friendship among nations.

It is worth mentioning that the central theme and the original content of Islam are so much attractive that the entire Arabian Peninsula warmly welcomed Islam after the holy Muslim Prophet set out his mission and the divine faith was rapidly promoted in the world. It all happened in a short period of time when there was no Internet or other forms of communications.

If seems logical if the European leaders inevitably try to protect the lives of their citizens and ensure the security in their continent by choosing the second option: introduction of the real Islam. [They are expected to make a good choice], but the Zionist lobby and its deep-rooted enmity toward Islam is highly unlikely to let the European leaders make such a decision.

Man kicks habit, employs former peers

Mohammad-S-0

Mohammad Saghafi owns a mattress company in which former drug addicts account for up to 90 percent of staff.

By his own account, Mohammad began smoking at the tender young age of nine. At 12 he first experienced opium and was a regular meth user between 2001 and 2009. Today is at the helm of a high-flying company.

The following is the translation of a report Mehr News Agency has filed on the successful entrepreneur:

It was after kicking the drug habit that Mohammad Saghafi started a new life. Expanding the small workshop his brother owned was the most momentous happening in his life. “Soon after quitting drugs, I busied myself with work. In a short period of time, the workshop’s staff of 10-156 workers swelled to 150. In two years, the once-small workshop joined the list of the country’s top mattress brands. We launched a furniture line too.”

Staff is what distinguishes their plant from others. “More than 90 percent of workers in the plant have a past like me: those who were at the end of their rope because of addiction. I did what I did because we were in the same boat.”

Mohammad has been clean for six full years. He works full time running the business which employs former rough-sleeping addicts. He leads a very happy life with his wife and three daughters.

 

 

Iran, Turkmenistan sign 9 memorandums of understanding

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Iran and Turkmenistan have signed nine memorandums of understanding for the expansion of cooperation in different fields.

The agreements were signed in Tehran on Sunday in the presence of President Hassan Rouhani and his Turkmen counterpart Gurbanguli Berdymukhamedow, who arrived in the capital earlier in the day for the third summit of the Gas Exporting Countries Forum (GECF).

Iran’s Minister of Health Hassan Ghazizadeh Hashemi and his Turkmen counterpart, Nurmuhammet Amannepesow, inked an agreement to boost bilateral cooperation in the health sector.

Iran’s Minister of Communications and Information Technology Mahmoud Vaezi and his Turkmen counterpart, Bayramgeldi Owezow, signed an agreement for the expansion of postal services between the two countries.

The director of the World Service of Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB), Mohammad Akhgari, and head of Turkmenistan’s state-run radio and television, Maksat Altayev, inked an agreement to boost cooperation in the field of media.

Under the agreement, the two countries will exchange radio and television products, produce new items, and participate in media events.

The other agreements covered power transfer, sports, transportation and housing.

Migratory birds arrive in northern Iran (PHOTOS)

Migratory birds0

Over 4,000 migratory birds call the Cheshmeh Kileh River in the northern town of Tonekabon, in Mazandaran Province, their winter home.

The migratory birds arrive from Siberia in autumn to spend the winter in northern Iran which has milder weather.

The following images of the migratory birds have been released by mizanonline.ir: