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Iran has six demands from Saudi government: Vice president

Aminzadeh

Vice-President for Legal Affairs Elham Aminzadeh said Saturday that the Saudi government should allow the screening of the films and photos of the September 24 Mina catastrophe in line with the International Customary Law.

Aminzadeh told a press conference that the Department for Legal Affairs at the Presidential Office had held several sessions since Friday and that on Saturday there was a meeting with representatives of international humanitarian organizations and international jurors.

She said first of all, the Saudi government should take responsibility and prove that it had taken all necessary measures to prevent the tragedy.

She said that the sizable death toll indicated that the Saudi government did not take preventive measures; secondly, negligence of standards for relief and rescue operations should be substantiated.

Thirdly, payment of damages, including blood money and other spiritual reparations to the victim families should be considered. What comes next is the punishment of those responsible for the tragedy. The Saudi government must apologize to the governments and nations who suffered casualties in the tragic event and finally, it should give guarantees that such incidents won’t repeat in the future.

Aminzadeh said that the six demands will be pursued in the Iranian and Saudi courts as well as international tribunals.

“In the fact-finding committee, the representatives of different countries and international entities like the Organization of the Islamic Cooperation should be present,” she added.

She said there is yet one more model for the formation of a fact-finding committee: The model is the one formed after the assassination of [former Lebanese Prime Minister] Rafik Hariri in Lebanon in which the UN was involved. The UN can also form the fact-finding committee.”

When asked about how the case can be internationally followed up when the Saudi government has not approved international conventions, Aminzadeh said that Saudi Arabia is a signatory to many international treaties as well as a tourism international treaty which considers a lot of rights for foreign nationals.

She said that a Hajj pilgrim, heading for the House of God, is an ordinary tourist as well, adding that the rights envisaged by the tourism treaty and responsibility of the governments for safety of foreign nationals guarantee safety of foreigners by the host government.

She said that according to the World Health Organization Charter, all countries have a duty to guarantee the health of their people and that of foreign nationals and if they fail to do so, the case will be brought to the international tribunals.

“We are not empty-handed about legal provisions to sue the Saudi government for failure to honor the international responsibility formulated by the International Law Commission in 2001. In addition, we have bilateral security agreements and documents, and the security pact signed by the two governments.”

Rafsanjani calls for formal inquiry into human tragedy in Saudi Arabia

Rafsanjani

Chairman of the Expediency Council Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani on Saturday called for a formal inquiry into the deaths of 465 Iranian Hajj pilgrims in the Mina tragedy.

Speaking at a council session, Rafsanjani said that two painful events took place in Mecca this year which left a lot of pilgrims from several Islamic countries dead and hurt sentiments of all Muslims.

He recalled sufferings of the bereaved families and said that respective officials must help the families go through the hard time.

Rafsanjani said that the funeral procession for the victims must be held formally so that people can pay their last respects to the pilgrims died in the tragedy.

He said that the government tapped into an effective foreign policy to promote international and regional interactions and hoped that such a policy will serve the national interests.

[…]

Iran sends letter to Parliamentary Union of OIC over Mina disaster

Iran-Croatia

Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani has said that the Islamic Republic has sent a letter to the Parliamentary Union of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (PUIC), urging it to follow up on the September 24 tragedy in Mina, Saudi Arabia, which led to the deaths of hundreds of pilgrims including many Iranians.

During a press conference with his Croatian counterpart Josip Leko in Tehran Larijani said Saturday he has written a letter to the PUIC, adding that the issue is currently being pursued there.

[…]

Larijani also urged immediate repatriation of the remaining bodies to Iran.

The parliament speaker also called for the adoption of necessary measures to prevent reoccurrence of such incidents.

The Croatian official, who is in Iran at the head of a delegation, also extended condolences to Iran over the tragic event.

Fact-finding mission

President Rouhani Saturday urged the formation of a fact-finding committee to shed light on the main causes of the incident.

Rouhani, who was speaking at the repatriation ceremony, said that the Iranian government would press ahead with its efforts to determine the cause of the Mina tragedy and would inform the nation on the results.

Saudi Arabia loath to raise Mina death toll

Saudi Arabia is defiantly refusing to raise its official overall death toll from the Mina crush despite the rise in the death tolls by nationalities.

Egyptian Minister of Health Ahmed Emad El-Din said Saturday that the number of Egyptian pilgrims killed in the incident has risen to 126. The Egyptian official also said that 110 Egyptian pilgrims still remain missing nine days after the tragedy.

This comes as Pakistan and Indonesia have also reported more deaths from the Saudi disaster.

Indonesia reported on Friday that 91 of its pilgrims died in the incident while saying that 38 of its citizens remain missing after the disaster in Mina. Pakistan also says that 57 of its pilgrims died in the crush and others remain missing.

Iran to take back satellite from Italy

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Iran is to reclaim a satellite seized by Italy due to sanctions imposed on Tehran over its peaceful nuclear program.

Talks are underway with Rome on the returning of the Iranian Mesbah Satellite, Head of the Iranian Space Organization Mohsen Bahrami said.

“Because of sanctions, the Iranian Mesbah Satellite has been held under seizure by Italy for three years now, and [currently] we are engaged in talks to take the satellite back,” said the top space official.

He said the satellite was designed and developed over 10 years ago in cooperation with an Italian company. However, he added, the satellite, which was at the disposal of Italy for its final test, did not get the chance to be launched into space due to sanctions.

He said the satellite was originally supposed to be launched into space by Russians and then Indians, but “this did not happen because of sanctions, and Mesbah Satellite has not been launched [into space] yet.”

One cannot say when the negotiations with the Italian side might bear fruit, said Bahrami, adding If Iran can take back the satellite and it becomes ready for launch, Tehran will follow up on its previous talks with such countries as Russia and India which are capable of launching satellites.

He further noted that Iran has no plans to launch satellites during the current Iranian year (ending March 2016).

Iran’s Zarif highlights ECO continued support for int’l efforts to ensure peace

Dr

Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif asked the Economic Cooperation Organization members to renew their commitment to supporting the national, regional and global efforts to achieve lasting peace, stability and prosperity in the ECO region.

The full text of the statement is as follows:

 

Statement by:

H.E. Dr. Javad Zarif

Foreign Minister of the Islamic Republic of Iran

at the

Extraordinary Session of the Council of Ministers

of the Economic Cooperation Organization

New York, 2nd October 2015

 

In the name of God, the most Compassionate, the most Merciful

Mr. Secretary General,

Distinguished Fellow Ministers,

Excellencies,

Ladies and Gentlemen,

Allow me at the outset to express my deep gratitude to all colleagues for participating in this Meeting despite their heavy schedules in New York. I wish to congratulate and welcome H.E. Mr. Halil Ibrahim Akcha, the new Secretary General of the Economic Cooperation Organization and wish him every success.

Distinguished Colleagues,

Almost two years have passed since we last met in Tehran in November 2013, during the 21st Meeting of the ECO Council of Ministers. In this period, a number of developments have taken place within the Organization including the holding of RPC Meetings and Sectoral Ministerial Meetings, implementation of certain joint projects, formulation of the new vision for ECO during 2016-2025, and appointment of our new Secretary General and Deputy Secretaries General.

 

Since our last Ministerial Meeting, tangible progress has been made in the transport sector. The ECO new railway corridor connecting Iran, Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan was officially inaugurated by the Presidents of the three member-states on 3rd December 2014 in Inche-Boroon, and is expected to be a convenient and cost-effective route for cargo transportation with a view to boosting and facilitating the regional and international trade and transit cooperation.

Moreover, strengthening regional cooperation in the field of energy through, inter alia, making efforts for the establishment of the ECO Regional Electricity Market, has been an important achievement within the Organization. In this context, the first trilateral meeting between Iran, Turkey and ECO secretariat was held in September 2014 in Ankara. We are of the view that there is a strong need for the establishment of the ECO Regional Electricity Market and invite Member States to take necessary steps to facilitate this process. We also believe that the idea of establishing a Trust Fund for financing high priority ECO regional energy projects, which was raised during the Third ECO Ministerial Meeting on Energy/Petroleum in March 2013 in Tehran, needs special attention.

Dear Friends,

More than two decades of collective attempts have resulted in varying degrees of maturity and success in different layers and areas of regional cooperation within ECO region. The Organization has been successful in forging a range of cooperation frameworks. However, we are still away from full realization of objectives of our Organization.

In the third decade of its expansion, cooperation within ECO can bring about meaningful benefits to all Member States. This requires the continued and enhanced support lent to ECO by all its Members.

Along the line of strengthening the ECO integrity through wider inclusiveness and enhanced ownership, there is a need to explore, and remain open to needed regulatory, institutional, budgetary and other changes within the Organization. The envisaged reform is a common responsibility of the Membership and the Secretariat alike, which entails mandates to be given by the Council of Ministers.

Allow me to conclude by recalling a number of relevant issues to the Organization which require greater attention by Member States:

–          First, the Economic Cooperation Organization provides a unique opportunity for the Member States and the whole Region. However, ECO in the third decade of its expanded cooperation needs a series of reform measures. We need to explore the possibility and scope of the required reforms and make necessary decisions accordingly. Any reform process shall be built on the experience gained from the last two decades with a view to enabling ECO to respond to the needs and requirements of Member States and the Region as a whole.

–          Secondly, based on the deliberations of Member States during the 25th RPC Meeting in Tehran, the Secretariat initiated formulation of a new ECO Vision for the period 2016-2025. We are currently in the process of considering the first draft and later finalizing recommendations for the ECO Vision 2016-2025. In view of the rapid socio-economic, political and scientific developments taking place at the regional and global levels, we need to define our Vision in a manner to enhance regional cooperation and economic development. To this end, we should develop and implement strategies in the next decade in such areas as energy, transport and transit, trade, management of region’s resources, human development, environment, and natural disaster risk management. In this context, the “2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development” can be utilized as a roadmap. We shall opt for real measures to implement this ambitious agenda. We believe that the agreed principles of “country ownership” and “common but differentiated responsibilities”, with an emphasis on the development orientation of the three pillars, should remain the cornerstones of our common endeavors.

–          Thirdly, there is a strong interdependence between peace and development; peace and stability are essential for realizing the genuine goals of sustainable development and welfare of our countries and peoples. We should recommit ourselves to continue supporting the national, regional and global efforts to achieve lasting peace, stability and prosperity in our region.

–          Finally, we need to be mindful of the global efforts aimed at addressing the challenges facing the international community. In doing so, we should give priority to the immediate needs and concerns of our region and its people. To that end, benefiting from relevant international and regional organizations need to be taken into consideration and cooperation with those which have already established relations with ECO should be strengthened.

Dear Colleagues,

We have a full agenda that we need to cover this morning as scheduled and agreed. Our task has been facilitated by a special meeting of the Council of Permanent Representatives, acting as the Senior Officials Meeting, which was convened in Tehran on 20th September 2015, and reviewed comprehensively the agenda in front of us. I count on every delegation’s support and cooperation to enable us to conclude our work in a smooth and successful manner.

Thank you for your attention.

Tehran police trying to break up illegal gathering outside parliament

Worriers

Tehran Police Chief Brigadier General Hossein Sajedinia on Saturday went, in plain clothes, to the site of a sit-in outside parliament and asked protesters – opposed to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action Iran has inked with world powers – to bring their illegal gathering to an end and leave.

The Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) on October 3 published a report on Tehran police’s efforts in dealing with the illegal gathering of the so-called Worriers. The following is the translation of the report:

The general met with the organizers of the illegal gathering outside the Iranian parliament and urged them to peacefully end their assembly soon to avoid any possible confrontation.

The police chief told the protesters that the Supreme Leader wanted to see the gathering ended. He talked with a staffer at the Supreme Leader’s Office on the phone and asked him to convey the Leader’s view to the organizers of the gathering.

After talking with a senior member of the Leader’s Office, Ammar Ammarloo, the protester who initiated the sit-in against JCPOA, said that opposition to this gathering is the view of the Leader’s office, not the view of the Leader himself, thus announcing the protest will carry on.

Eyewitnesses quoted General Sajednia as threatening that police would seriously deal with the illegal gathering which has disrupted traffic and caused obstruction in the area if the protesters did not break up.

Reports have also indicated that Masoud Mirkazemi, an MP who represents Tehran, Shahr-e Rey, Shemiranat and Eslamshahr in the Islamic Consultative Assembly, joined the protesters and voiced his objection to the implementation of JCPOA and defended the gathering.

It came after Tehran governor general and governor’s office announced that the gathering outside the building of the Islamic Consultative Assembly in protest at the JCPOA implementation lacks any permit and thus is illegal.

There was an increased police presence around parliament on Saturday morning with law enforcement units cordoning off nearby streets. The illegal sit-in in opposition to the implementation of JCPOA was staged last week after a few people gathered outside parliament. The protest sit-in is still continuing.

In another development, provocative flyers were distributed in the University of Tehran – the venue of the capital’s Friday prayers – on Friday among worshippers.

 

Worriers

 

Supreme Leader pardons prisoners on auspicious occasions

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Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei has pardoned or commuted prison terms of 630 of convicts sentenced by the public, revolutionary and military courts.

The amnesty was made at the request of the Judiciary Chief Ayatollah Sadegh Amoli Larijani and was accepted by the Supreme Leader on the occasion of the auspicious occasions of al-Adha and Ghadir-e Khom.

Ghadir-e Khom is the valley in the neighborhood of holy Mecca where Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) introduced Imam Ali (AS) as his successor during his last Hajj pilgrimage.

The Clause 11 of the Constitution’s Article 110 has given the Supreme Leader authority to pardon prisoners.

The Amnesty does not apply to all convicts, especially those who have been sentenced for their role in armed struggle against the Islamic Republic, armed robbery or organized crime, drug-trafficking, rape, arms smuggling, abduction, bribery and embezzlement.

Q&A: Iran’s top science official strives for a Silicon Valley spirit

Sattari

The journal Science has conducted an interview with Iranian Vice President for Science and Technology Dr. Sorena Sattari on the sidelines of the 70th session of the United Nations General Assembly. The Islamic Republic News Agency published a translated version of the interview on October 3. The following is the original interview that sciencemag.org posted online:

During his two years in office, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has filled his cabinet with Ph.D.-trained technocrats. One of the youngest is Sorena Sattari, the vice president for science and technology. A mechanical engineer by training, Sattari, 43, has been a forceful proponent of yoking science more tightly to the economy and says he would like to imbue Iran with an “entrepreneurial spirit.” His Innovation and Prosperity Fund has handed out $600 million in low-interest loans to 1650 technology startups and to other firms seeking to branch out in new directions.

He has not turned his back on basic research, however. He cites as “a point of pride” for his country the $30 million Iranian National Observatory, a world-class, 3.4-meter optical telescope that is expected to see first light in four or five years. Backers credit him with helping get the long-delayed project back on track earlier this year (Science, September 4, p. 1042). Sattari spoke with Science last week on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly. This interview has been edited for brevity and clarity.

Q: Your father, Mansour Sattari, was commander of the Iranian Air Force during the Iran-Iraq war. That was a difficult time to come of age.

A: I spent a lot of time on Air Force bases during the war. Before the revolution [in 1979], Iran had one of the most advanced air forces in the world. But when U.S. military advisers left the country during the revolution, we realized we didn’t understand the technology. I think that’s why Saddam Hussein attacked us. He thought we would survive only three months. Iranian pilots were flying aircraft that weren’t reliable because they weren’t maintained well. But we learned how to stand on our own feet. Two days before [the] war ended, we had our last air combat with Iraq. For the first time, we shot down a MiG-29. We used an F-14 aircraft with an Iranian missile. We learned how to build new weapons. That was the start of the Iranian missile program. It was a result of international sanctions.

Q: The war and sanctions hardened the Iranian psyche.

A: The war was difficult, but what was harder was what went on under the skin of society. Many women lost their husbands, and parents lost their sons. Sometimes I get scared when the phone rings at night, because I think it must be very bad news. That fear comes from those times.

Q: Your father died in a military plane crash in 1995. Did you think to follow his path into the military?

A: My father didn’t want me to go into the military and didn’t ask me to. He was martyred when I was 22.

Q: You had just finished your master’s degree in mechanical engineering at Sharif University of Technology.

A: After I lost my father, I had to take care of my family. I left school and started working in the oil and gas ministry. After I collected enough money for my family, I went back to Sharif and completed my Ph.D.

Q: In December 2013, Iran put a monkey named Fargam [“auspicious”] into orbit and safely brought him back to Earth. What’s next for the space program?

A: We will have to change how we manage the space program, both the technology side and the business side. We’re hoping that with [the] help of foreign companies, we can commercialize the program.

Q: Iran and Russia are talking about jointly developing remote-sensing satellites for environmental monitoring. Does this represent a deepening of scientific ties?

A: We are now becoming very serious in our relationship with Russia. We have formed for the first time a joint commission on science and technology cooperation, which is much higher level than our economic joint commission. It’s headed by the deputy prime minister of Russia and myself. For the first time, science and technology is driving the relationship between our countries.

Q: You said recently that “the most important responsibility” of your vice presidency is changing Iran’s oil-based economy into a knowledge-based economy.

A: Before sanctions, our government got 85% of its revenues from oil. This year, we got less than 25% from oil. But we have not succumbed to this pressure. Resistance is ingrained in our nature; it is in Iranian genes. Our mindset has changed because of the sanctions. Now, we believe in investing in science and technology. Innovation is essential to creating a knowledge economy.

Q: You’ve talked about privatizing Iran’s research institutes. Do you have a concrete plan?

A: I have a mental model. There must be a difference between grants for pure research and support for projects that have potential to become a business. Government funds should be used to expand the boundaries of science. We have wasted a lot of money on institutes that are not contributing to the economy. We thought that we could use oil money to simply buy whatever technology we need. We thought that if we have a building and equipment, we could achieve results. But you have to acquire expertise. In many of our institutes, frankly, we need a new way of thinking.

Q: In a speech at the University of Tehran in October 2013, President Rouhani pledged to increase academic freedom at Iranian universities. Are conditions improving?

A: It’s unprecedented for an Iranian president to walk in and out of a university and talk to students without some sort of protests. We never experienced this before. It shows how supportive the majority of university students are of his policies. The university atmosphere has become much better compared with the past. Iran is becoming more open. If the United States wants to create a serious scientific relationship, this is the time.

Q: This summer you were appointed to the Supreme Council of Cyberspace. One of its tasks is to accelerate the launch of a national intranet. What is the purpose of this network?

A: Many countries are building similar networks. It will increase the speed and security of information transfer. And this does not have political intentions behind it.

Q: The council also is supposed to pay special attention to “cleaning and securing” the nation’s cyberspace, and promoting Islamic and Iranian norms. Iran now blocks Facebook, Twitter, and other social media websites. Will achieving the council’s goal mean more aggressive Internet censorship?

A: The Internet has a good face and a bad face. In the Middle East we have lots of challenges. For example, we have [the Islamic State group] recruiting on the Internet. It’s very scary to see what’s happening in the region. We want to make sure our data hubs remain in Iran. We don’t want messages to go out of the country and then come back in. We want more security.

Q: According to the Supreme Council of the Cultural Revolution’s master plan for science, “the revival of the great Islamic civilization” is “contingent upon all-out progress in science.” What does that mean?

A: It means that we want to be the superpower of science and technology in the region. And we also want to be No. 1 in the Islamic world as well.

Q: Who is No. 1 now?

A: Overall, Iran is No. 1. [Smiles.] Now, we are aiming for the whole world.

FM Zarif meetings in New York

Zarif

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and Arab League Secretary General Nabil Al-Arabi in a meeting on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York on Friday discussed the recent developments in the Middle East region.

They also emphasized the need for cooperation to settle regional crises, particularly those in Syria and Yemen.

Also on Friday, Zarif met with US Secretary of State John Kerry on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly meeting.

The two sides discussed ways to implement the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

It was their second meeting after the nuclear deal struck in Vienna on July 14, 2015, which led to the conclusion of JCPOA.

Zarif and Kerry’s first meeting was held on September 26.

Iran welcomes home bodies of Mina victims (Photos)

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A ceremony was held in Tehran on Saturday to welcome the return to Iran of the bodies of 104 Iranian pilgrims killed in the Mina incident some ten days ago. Heads of the three branches of government, the Supreme Leader’s chief of staff as well as state and military officials were present in the ceremony which was held at the capital’s Mehrabad Airport. The Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) has released the following images of the homecoming of the bodies of Iranians died in the Mina crush: