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A man who’s put in a lifetime to clean up the environment

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This is the story of a man who has spent 23 years of his life on cleaning up the environmental waste. Javad Gharib – a man in Lorestan Province – returns to nature, literally, each day to handle the abandoned waste.

Mehr News Agency on July 26 published a report on Gharib – a retiree and a nature lover – and his routine over the past 23 years. The following is a brief translation of the report:

Every day in the early hours of morning, Javad sets out for nature – forests and mountains – on his moped and returns home late in the afternoon with a sackful of waste. This is a daily routine for Javad, a retired employee of a drugstore in Borujerd and a nature lover.

He’s been appreciated by the agencies involved in environmental affairs, and the [thank-you] cards he carries in his pocket prove that he has been given credit for his labor of love. Still, those cards are not enough to show Javad Gharib’s genuine efforts [and pure love for Mother Nature and its cleanliness].

Javad puts it simply: that nature is a [divine] blessing, but man is not grateful enough for his blessings; that the environment has a right [to healthy existence] and its right should be respected.

Javad asks all people to help the environment and do their share of protecting the environment. He reminds people that when they head for nature, they should not forget one thing: they are expected not to disturb the calm of the environment in return for the serenity they find in the environment.

Fahraj Mosque in central Iran (PHOTOS)

Mosques in Iran; Cultural Havens with Impressive Architecture

Fahraj Mosque, the oldest Muslim house of worship in Iran, is the only ancient mosque across the Muslim world whose structure has remained intact.

The mosque located in a namesake town in Yazd Province was built about 1,400 years ago.

Images of the ancient mosque released online by shabestan.ir:

It takes a lot of guts to earn your keep up there in the sky

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Most people show a natural degree of fear when exposed to heights, but to some, acrophobia [fear of heights or high places] is totally meaningless.

Many high-rise buildings or skyscrapers have large expanses of windows or glass walls, but who is supposed to clean them and how? Sky cannot be a safe workplace, but there are people who make their living up there in the air.

It is hard to believe that a young girl hangs by a thread, literally, to clean windows of high-rise towers. It is also unthinkable that a young girl is left hanging in the air as she goes ahead with her window cleaning job.

To go up and down in the air is a stressful and dreadful job that even men can hardly accept to do, but Tina, a young Iranian girl, has the guts to take care of that, showing no fear or anxiety whatsoever.

Tina says she used to be a rock climber [who has repeatedly climbed up, down or across natural rock formations or artificial rock walls]. For the past two years she has been employed by a company which cleans the windows of towering buildings in Tehran.

Tina says she feels no fear when she’s doing her job [window washing]. The tallest buildings she has so far dangled from are the twin towers in Tehran (27 stories).

The following are the pictures Jamejamonline (http://sara.jamejamonline.ir) has recently released showing Tina cleaning the windows of a tall university building helped by one of her colleagues:

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Text of the Vienna accord should be taken back to talks with P5+1

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A hardline Iranian MP says that the text of the Vienna accord – like any other laws and regulations which are legally binding in the country – should have been pieced together in English and Farsi versions and signed by both sides so that no word or phrase would be interpretable.

Hamid Rasaei [a principlist MP who is an ardent supporter of former President Ahmadinejad] made the statement in a letter to President Rouhani, saying that there are some problems with the way the Farsi version of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) has been submitted to the Islamic Consultative Assembly.

The current text cannot be reviewed in parliament and the Supreme National Security Council, Fars News Agency on July 28 quoted him as writing in the letter. The following is the translation of the opening and closing parts of Rasaei’s letter:

To Dr. Rouhani

The esteemed president of the Islamic Republic of Iran

The [JCPOA] text pieced together by your representative and P5+1 will be reviewed by the Islamic Consultative Assembly in coming weeks in line with the Constitution and the laws of the land. Since you view yourself as a jurist and this document [Vienna accord] as a legal text, there are some basic problems – as far as the esteemed government’s directives are concerned – to which you are expected to offer well-reasoned and legally acceptable responses. That is on top of numerous form- and content-related defects in the document that do not uphold the rights of the Iranian people.

You know that the English and Farsi versions of the text compiled by Mr. Zarif and P5+1 [representatives] was submitted to the parliament speaker on July 20, but the chamber’s Presiding Board sent back the translated version to the Foreign Ministry on the same day due to translation-related problems the Foreign Ministry has since admitted to.

Following complaints by MPs, the chair of the session announced today (Tuesday July 28) that the case has been followed up and that a new translated version has been given to parliament. Whether or not the new version is problem-free can be judged after it is compared with the original text.

What is more important than whether the Foreign Ministry’s translation of the text is correct or not in the eyes of parliament, the Supreme National Security Council and other oversight bodies, especially the elite in society, is the lack of a Farsi translation agreed to by Iran and P5+1. It is important to know whether the other parties to the talks (P5+1) make the same things out of the English text that we get from its Farsi translation.

In international law, this problem has always existed between countries when they ink agreements in different languages. Accordingly, each country’s laws entail rules and regulations – in line with domestic and international law – that prevent its rights from being trampled upon on this unfair international stage.

[…]

The Islamic Consultative Assembly and the Supreme National Security Council cannot express their legal views on the Iran nuclear deal. So the negotiating team is expected to once again put forward its final translation of JCPOA in talks with P5+1 after it has gone through the legal channels. If the Farsi and English versions are both approved, they [the two texts] can be sent to decision making centers of parties to the talks for final confirmation.

If not, it will be violation of law, and on top of that, there will be no guarantees that the decision adopted in the Iranian parliament is implemented, because the other side will act based on how it interprets the English text.

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30

Iranian Newspapers Headlines
Iranian Newspapers Headlines

The Iran visit of French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius and the meetings he held, among others, with President Hassan Rouhani and Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and his extension of an invitation to the Iranian president to visit Paris dominated the front pages of Iranian newspapers on Thursday. Also on the cover of dailies was the confirmation by Afghan officials of the death of Taliban Leader Mullah Omar.

 

Ettela’at: “We need to make up for past failures to seize opportunities,” President Rouhani said at a meeting with visiting French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius.

He further said that the cooperation stipulated in the Vienna accord should set the stage for trust-based relations of the future.

The French President has invited President Rouhani to visit Paris.


 

Abrar: Foreign Minister Zarif has vowed to expand political dialogue with France.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30

 


 

Abrar-e Eghtesadi: Iran seeks to purchase Russian aircraft!

Abrar-e Eghtesadi: The volume of liquidity has increased 4.4 percent.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30

 


 

Afkar: The chief of staff of the Iranian armed forces has described Turkish attacks on Kurds fighting IS terrorists as a strategic blunder.

Afkar: A member of parliament’s Industries Committee has stressed the need for imports of modern mining and industrial technology in the post-sanctions era.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30

 


 

Aftab-e Yazd: Only 20 people attended a gathering to protest the Tehran visit of French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius.

Aftab-e Yazd: “Settlement of the nuclear issue was one of my dreams,” said Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.

“We need to be vigilant to make sure that distractors do not create obstacles in the path of political wisdom Iran is treading,” the chairman of the Expediency Council further said.

Aftab-e Yazd: The case involving the missing oil derrick will soon be tried in court.

[It comes after revelations that an oil derrick Iran purchased when Ahmadinejad was in power was never delivered to Iran.]

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30

 


 

Amin: “That IRIB [state radio and TV organization] has been neutral in its coverage of nuclear talks is more like a joke,” said Sadegh Zibakalam, a renowned political analyst.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30

 


 

Arman-e Emrooz: President Rouhani’s approach won’t change.

Fifty-two MPs have called for the impeachment of the interior minister.

Arman-e Emrooz: The chairman of the Expediency Council has likened the Vienna accord to a political earthquake in the world.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30

 


 

Asrar: American tourists on their way to Iran

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30


 

Ebtekar: “One of the reasons I filed my candidacy for presidential elections [more than two years ago] was to settle the nuclear case,” Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani said as he praised the nuclear deal.

[Rafsanjani was disqualified by the Guardian Council and didn’t make the final list of candidates.]

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30

 


 

Etemad: A decision will be made in the case of governors who do not see eye to eye with the Rouhani administration in two months’ time.

Etemad: The French rapprochement

President Hollande has invited President Rouhani to visit Paris.

The French foreign minister has said that respect and resumption of ties are the messages of his Tehran visit.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30

 


 

Farhikhtegan: A member of parliament’s Support for National Production Committee has said that the committee has filed a complaint with the Judiciary against former President Ahmadinejad for his failure to abide by laws requiring official support for national production.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30

 


 

Hemayat: Fabius has denied that France has been playing the role of bad cop in nuclear talks with Iran.

Hemayat: “The UN Security Council resolution on Iran’s defense capabilities is not acceptable,” Ali Akbar Velayati, an advisor to the Supreme Leader, told reporters.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30


 

Iran: The Supreme National Security Council has started reviewing the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30

 


 

Jomhouri Islami: France has called for expansion of ties with Iran.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30

 


 

Kar va Kargar: Some 1 million high-income individuals have been taken off the list of people who receive monthly cash subsidies.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30

 


 

Kayhan: Review of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), maybe some other time!

At a very sensitive juncture, MPs have left for a summer recess.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30

 


 

Rah-e Mardom: Prominent Hollywood actors have joined the ranks of individuals who support a nuclear deal between Iran and P5+1.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30

 


 

Saheb Ghalam: “The Iranian people and parliament will keep a close eye on the P5+1 countries’ implementation of the Vienna accord,” Iranian Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani said.

Saheb Ghalam: The stage will be set for Iran’s exports of LNG.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30

 


 

Sharq: Tehran Municipality is at work!

Tehran Municipality put up signs on billboards across the capital against a person who was the official guest of the country!

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30

 


 

Taadol: “A new chapter of cooperation between Iran and Total will open in development of [Iranian oil and gas] fields,” the Iranian oil minister said after meeting the French foreign minister.

 

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on July 30

 

 

Highlights of Ettela’at newspaper on July 30

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 “We need to make up for past failures to seize opportunities,” President Rouhani said at a meeting with visiting French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius.

He further said that the cooperation stipulated in the Vienna accord should set the stage for trust-based relations of the future.

The French President has invited President Rouhani to visit Paris.

 “Implementation of the nuclear deal paves the way for wider cooperation between Iran and France,” Foreign Minister Zarif said [at a news conference after meeting his French counterpart in Tehran].

 “Some 10 million Iranians are suffering from hypertension,” the deputy health minister said.

Dr. Ali Akbar Sayyari further said that smoking, being overweight, heart attacks and strokes are to blame for more than 70 percent of all deaths in Iran.

He added that the nutrition of some 19 million Iranians is far from healthy.

 The Afghan president has said that Taliban ringleader Mullah Omar has died.

The Taliban kingpin is said to have died of TB more than two years ago.

In another development, the leader of the largest anti-Shiite gang in Pakistan was killed in a shootout with police.

 “Iran and France will cooperate in the field of green technology,” the director of the Environment Protection Organization said.

The French petrochemical companies are to have a stronger presence on the Iranian market.

 Iranian students have finished fifth in the International Chemistry Olympiad.

Students from 75 countries competed for glory in the event. China, Russia, the US and Romania claimed the four top spots in the final standings of the Olympiad.

 Damascus has said that Turkey is directly to blame for the blood spilled in Syria.

In other news, an Israeli drone strike in Syria left three people dead.

 

Iranian oil minister, France’s Fabius confer on cooperation on energy

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Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh and France’s visiting Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius explored avenues for the two countries’ cooperation in energy field.

During the meeting in Tehran on Wednesday, the two sides highlighted the necessity of boosting oil and gas cooperation between Iran and France with Fabius indicating his country’s willingness to take part in Iran’s petrochemical projects.

Speaking to reporters after the meeting, Fabius said Paris seeks to restore its historical ties with Iran and become an “important trade partner for Tehran.”

Also, Zanganeh told reporters he and Fabius highlighted the necessity of boosting oil and gas cooperation and the French side has indicated its keen interest in taking part in Iran’s petrochemical projects.

He also noted his ministry is planning to open “a new chapter” in cooperation with the French energy giant, Total, for the development of Iranian oil fields.

Upon his arrival in Tehran, Fabius announced that a “very important” delegation of French businessmen will pay a visit to Tehran in the near future.

He declared that the economic delegation will include several French companies and is scheduled to arrive in Iran in September.

Fabius’s remarks came as he arrived in Tehran two weeks after finalization of the text of a nuclear pact between Iran and major world powers that put the spotlight on the Islamic Republic.

Turkey attacks on anti-ISIL Kurds strategic mistake: Iran commander

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A top Iranian general has slammed as a “strategic mistake” Turkey’s recent attacks against Kurdish forces, who are fighting against the ISIL Takfiri terror group.

Chief of Staff of the Iranian Armed Forces Major General Hassan Firouzabadi made the comments on Wednesday, warning that the Turkish military’s recent attacks against anti-ISIL Kurdish forces facilitate the access of Takfiri extremists to Turkey’s frontiers.

He said Turkey should be worried about its own nation in the face of ISIL’s “satanic conduct” and those supporting the terror organization, including the “Zionists and the United States.”

Firouzabadi’s comments come after Turkish tanks reportedly shelled four Kurdish-held villages in northern Syria late on Sunday, injuring four fighters of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG.(

Ankara had claimed that its offensive on the northern parts of Syria was solely aimed at undermining ISIL, a Takfiri group which controls territories there and in neighboring Iraq.

However, in a statement on Monday, the YPG said: “Instead of targeting IS (ISIL) terrorists’ occupied positions, Turkish forces attack our defenders’ positions. We urge [the] Turkish leadership to halt this aggression and to follow international guidelines.”

The senior Iranian military official further criticized Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar for providing support to Takfiri terrorists, stressing that such a policy will “sooner or later” backfire and endanger their own security.

Firouzabadi further advised Ankara, Riyadh and Doha not to count too much on their “alliance with ISIL,” stressing that the Takfiri terror group eyes ruling the entire Islamic countries, and that the three Muslim states are no exceptions.

Turkey recently launched airstrikes allegedly against the bases of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in northern Iraq as well as ISIL positions in Syria after a deadly bomb attack which left 32 people dead in the southwestern town of Suruc, across the border from the Syrian Kurdish town of Kobani.

This is while the Takfiri militants operating in Syria have long enjoyed the support of Turkey as well as its Western and regional allies, including Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

Many media reports have recently said that Ankara actively trains and arms the militants in Syria, and also facilitates the safe passage of would-be foreign terrorists into crisis-hit areas.

In a report published last Sunday, The Guardian quoted an unnamed senior Western official as saying that evidence on direct dealings between Turkish officials and ranking ISIL members was “undeniable.”

Environmental issues discussed between Iran, France

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A meeting was held between Head of Iran’s Department of Environment Masoumeh Ebtekar and French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius during which environmental issues were discussed.

Speaking in a press conference after the meeting, the Iranian official said she and Fabius conferred on ways to cooperate in the field of green technology.

“Our bilateral meeting today was also focused on the two countries’ cooperation on environmental issues and negotiations related to climate change,” she added.

Ebtekar further said that a conference on the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change will be held in Paris in December, noting that climate change has inflicted great losses on Iran, especially through dwindling water resources, increased temperature, and the haze problem.

Fabius’s visit came two weeks after Tehran and 5+1 (Russia, China, the US, Britain, France and Germany) reached a conclusion over the text of a comprehensive 159-page deal on Iran’s nuclear energy program.

The comprehensive nuclear deal between Iran and the six powers (dubbed as Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action or JCPOA) would terminate all nuclear-related sanctions imposed on Iran after coming into force.

Iran’s Irreversible commitments will deliver a blow to national interests

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A Tehran MP has warned that Iran’s acceptance of defense restrictions translates into the collapse of a thick wall which can ward off yet another war against the Iranian nation.

Ahmad Tavakoli said this in remarks aimed at fellow MPs in parliament on Tuesday as he elaborated on the demands of the parties to nuclear talks and on the Iran nuclear deal and UN Resolution 2231. The following is the translation of part of a report Tavakoli’s website (alef.ir) released on his speech in parliament:

The West’s demands

The West, led by the US, imposed sanctions – an unprecedented move in world history – through the UN Security Council, the US administration and Congress as well as the European Union, seeking to – in their own words – cripple Iran and force it to totally discard uranium enrichment and send everything even the bolts and nuts of its centrifuges to the United States. It is quite clear that such a demand ran counter to the related [international] treaties and we all know that the West’s acquisitive demand was not met.

The West claimed that Iran was seeking to develop an A-bomb, saying that the country should let the IAEA inspect all suspected [nuclear] sites to verify Iran’s assertion that it deems development of nuclear weapons as religiously banned. Under such an excuse, the West had also called for inspection of Iran’s military sites as well.

Iran, which was confident [that it had done nothing wrong], fully accepted the inspection of nuclear facilities, so this Western demand was met with Iran losing nothing. As for military sites, the Iranian negotiating team agreed to a limited inspections regime. Iran and the UN nuclear agency agreed on part of such a secret mechanism. It is now impossible to assess how many concessions Iran has given as far as inspection is concerned, because the information available is sketchy.

The West asked Iran to act based on what we say – there is a religious ban on the development of atomic weaponry – maintain materials, equipment and measures which are in keeping with a peaceful nuclear program and stop, close down, move or export the rest, or even change the processes. Accepting a number of these demands conforms to the country’s interests; in fact, the acceptance by the Iranian nuclear team resembles a case in which something worthless is offered for charitable purposes.

Other demands, especially those commitments which are irreversible, will pose grave threats to Iran’s national security and interests. It is still unclear whether unjust sanctions will be lifted and whether people can feel a sense of relief in their lives.

Iran’s demands

The West’s recognition of Iran’s right to enrichment was the main demand of the Iranian government and nation. This right has been openly recognized in the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) and Resolution 2231. This victory – as Dr. Zarif correctly put it – which is the fruit of all [Iranian] governments and the resistance by the Iranians has been achieved on the back of the martyrs’ blood and the Supreme Leader’s support and guidance. There is no denying that the painstaking and praiseworthy efforts of the negotiating team also played a role.

Iran also demanded all sanctions be lifted in parallel with Iran starting to honor its commitments. Why did we insist – and still insist – that sanctions should be immediately removed? Because the unjust sanctions have been imposed on Iran to paralyze its economy. They [the Western countries] failed to achieve their unholy objective thanks to Iran’s resistance, but the national economy and people’s pocketbooks took a hit from several angles.

First, trade and banking sanctions resulted in a high inflation rate and a deep recession thanks to costly imports. Second, oil sanctions shrank the government’s revenues and the coffers of the National Development Fund as well as the country’s foreign exchange reserves. This left an adverse impact on the government’s efforts to offer services [to people] and decreased the non-state sector’s investment potential and hard currency resources which were needed to support national production.

Third, the sanctions also heightened the risk of future uncertainty, reduced [foreign] investment [in Iran] and caused capital flight. According to my uncalculated estimate, these factors – combined – account for one-third of the problems Iran is grappling with, and domestic factors are to blame for the better part of poverty and unemployment in Iran. One-third is not small, is it?

Do JCPOA and Resolution 2231 meet Iran’s legitimate demand for termination of sanctions? To begin with, Iran is expected to implement all 39 commitments – which have been enshrined in Article 15 of Annex V – within the next six months, the IAEA verifies and reports Iran’s measures [to the West] and then the West will begin to suspend, not lift, the sanctions. With regard to the agency’s unfair behavior, is there any guarantee that they [the Western countries] will not seek excuses not to suspend the sanctions – let alone lift them?

The UN Security Council has apparently cancelled its previous six resolutions against Iran by adopting Resolution 2231, but the Resolution’s Articles 11 and 12 have openly talked about the automatic reversibility of the sanctions following a US note or claims about Iran’s violation of one of its commitments without calling for [enough] evidence. This has also been approved of by Iran’s negotiators. Given the Western side’s animosity [toward Iran] and its history of untrustworthiness, how likely do you think the sanctions are to be removed and result in improvement of people’s lives? There are many instances like this in these two documents, I regret to say. As things stand, can one say with certainty that one key demand – removal of sanctions which the Iranian government and nations were rightfully seeking to achieve – is achievable?

It is said that Iran reserves the right of reversibility. If so, what will happen? All sanctions will snap back into place and talks will be back to square one, there is a big difference, though. They will be back into the starting point, but what about Iran which has lost part of its bargaining power such as enriched [uranium] stocks, removal of the core of the Arak reactor, etc.? Iran would not be able to negotiate from a position of strength.

What should be done?  

Before we lose our bargaining power, we need to act prudently and force the untrustworthy West to lift, not suspend, the unjust sanctions so that the pain the Iranian people are feeling because of sanctions can be eased. To that end, we should abide by the Supreme Leader’s wise order which has been repeated in recent weeks in different wordings: “The text [of JCPOA] should be reviewed carefully as it goes through the planned legal channels; in case of its approval, we need to be watchful about and prevent the possible violations, by the other side, of the document”.

Under our Constitution (Articles 77 and 125), parliament and government are the legal channels JCPOA and the UNSC Resolution should go through for approval. They are expected to go out of their way to guarantee that Iran’s right to enrichment is recognized and people’s demand for the removal of sanctions are met. Implementation of JCPOA is what the government is calling for. This [implementation of JCPOA] will not materialize unless Iran acts constitutionally: the passage of a bill in the Cabinet, submission of the bill to the Islamic Consultative Assembly, and its adoption in parliament followed by the Guardian Council’s confirmation.

According to [part of] the Constitution’s Article 176, the Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) can only make policies which should secure the Leader’s approval [Determining the defense and national security policies within the framework of general policies determined by the Leader]. The SNSC is not allowed to pass executive obligations unless the Supreme Leader acts on his religious powers and the Constitution’s Articles 57 and 110 and tasks the SNSC with passing executive obligations. The Leader delegated the task to the legal channels, refraining from issuing a state edict.

Over the past 23 months, the American side has repeatedly said that military option is on the table. A question arises here as to why this threat has yet to be carried out. If Iran’s defensive capabilities have been – for sure they have been – a key factor in preventing a military offensive, what will acceptance of restrictions like what has been included in Resolution 2231 earn the country: peace and security or war and insecurity?

I want to warn you that accepting any defense restrictions translates into the collapse of a thick wall which can ward off yet another war against the Iranian nation.