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Rafsanjani expresses deep concern about human tragedy in region

Rafsanjani

Chairman of Expediency Council Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani on Sunday expressed deep concern about the ongoing human tragedy in regional states, especially Yemen, Syria, Iraq, Egypt, Lebanon, Palestine, Bahrain, Afghanistan and Pakistan.

He said that the humanity shoulders a grave responsibility in the face of the current bloodshed in the region.

He said that the Islamic Republic of Iran encourages the belligerent parties to stop bloodshed and mass killing and take their disputes to the negotiating table.

Ayatollah Rafsanjani acknowledged that nuclear issue has become a dispute between Iran and global powers.

He criticized opponents of the nuclear talks and said that the democratically-elected Government of Moderation is involved in negotiations to resolve problems and disarm the enemies of the Islamic Republic of Iran by ending the propaganda campaign against the nuclear program.

He said Islamphobia, Shiaphobia and the campaign against Iran are the result of certain wrong policies of the former government over the past several years.

He said that he believes in benefits of the policy of détente pursued by the Iranian governments in post-war era and reconstruction of infrastructure through engagement with the outside world.

Ayatollah Rafsanjani lauded President Hassan Rouhani’s policy of moderation and said the landslide victory for Hassan Rouhani in the presidential election two years ago indicated public interest in the policy of the interaction and moderation.

Iran, Greek governments keen on cultural-artistic ties

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Greek Ambassador to Tehran Giorgos Ginatis on Sunday held talks with Minister of Culture and Islamic Guidance Ali Jannati on ways of expanding cultural and artistic ties.

Ali Jannati told Giorgos Ginatis that the two countries have cultural commonalties and extensive artistic capacities and should develop cultural ties.

He said that Iran and Greece enjoy longstanding political and cultural relations and have signed cultural contracts as far back as 60 years ago.

Jannati said that under the contract, the two countries had to hold cultural events at least every two years, but, the contract is currently not implemented.

He said that many Greek philosophers have inspired philosophy in Iran and that Tehran and Athens have developed traditional understanding in light of philosophy, the common interest of the Iranian and Greek scholars.

Jannati said that the Islamic Republic of Iran is willing to develop tourism cooperation with Greece.

Jannati said that the international peace and security has been subject to the threat posed by extremism which in some cases hides behind Islam and that any campaign against such danger and the deviated thoughts needs international cooperation.

Greece ambassador Giorgos Ginatis said that Iran and Greece have influenced the international community and the new culture minister of Greece intends to expand cultural ties with the other states.

The ambassador condemned extremism and barbaric acts of IS terrorist group.

He added that religion and faith are instruments to bring the human communities closer to each other, not for creating a wall of mistrust between nations.

Iran determined to continue nuclear talks: Velayati

velayati

A senior Iranian official says the Islamic Republic is determined to continue negotiations with six world powers over its nuclear program, expressing optimism about a positive outcome of the talks.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran is determined to proceed with nuclear negotiations and is highly hopeful that these talks would end in positive and favorable results for Iran,” Ali Akbar Velayati, a top advisor to Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei, said in a meeting with Jordanian media crew in Tehran on Sunday.

He, however, emphasized that Iran would never bow to “any imposition” in the nuclear talks.

The official said Iran’s refusal to allow inspection of its military sites and agree to interrogation of Iranian nuclear scientists are the two conditions set by the Islamic Republic in the talks with world powers.

On May 20, Ayatollah Khamenei said Iran would not allow any inspections by foreigners of its military sites.

[…]

Velayati expressed hope that the ongoing talks between Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council – the United States, France, Britain, Russia and China – plus Germany would bear fruit before June 30, the deadline set by the two sides for a final deal.

He, however, cast doubt on the outcomes of the talks if the US makes excessive demands.

Iran and the P5+1 group of countries are seeking to finalize a comprehensive deal on Iran’s nuclear issue. The two sides have been working on the text of the potential deal ever since they reached a mutual understanding on its parameters in the Swiss city of Lausanne on April 2.

Iran condemns suicide bombing at Nigerian mosque

afkham

Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Marziyeh Afkham has strongly denounced Saturday’s suicide attack on a mosque in Nigeria that claimed the lives of 26 worshippers.

Afkham also expressed sympathy with the bereaved families of the victims as well as the Nigerian government and nation.

She further referred to Tehran’s principled policy of rejecting violence, extremism, and terrorism, and stressed the necessity for countering the inhumane phenomenon.

Twenty-six people were killed and 28 others injured on Saturday afternoon in a suicide bomb attack inside a mosque in Maiduguri, the capital and largest city of Borno state, Nigeria.

It occurred while worshippers were inside the mosque, hours after the extremist group Boko Haram launched a rocket-propelled grenade attack on Maiduguri.

According to residents and military sources, the assault damaged at least five homes and killed 13 people.

The attacks came a day after the inauguration of President Muhammadu Buhari, who swore to crush the terrorist group and move the command center for military operations away from the capital Abuja to Maiduguri.

ISIL kidnaps 500 children in Iraq’s Anbar, Diyala: Officials

isis

Iraqi local and security authorities say members of the Takfiri terrorist group, ISIL, have abducted 500 children in two provinces of Iraq.

Farhan Mohammed, a member of the Provincial Council in Iraq’s al-Anbar Province, said on Saturday that, in a time span of more than a week, ISIL extremists carried out several raids in the towns of al-Rutbah, al-Qa’im, Anah and Rawa, during which they kidnapped 400 children.

Mohammed added that the abductees have been taken to ISIL bases elsewhere in Iraq and neighboring Syria and are being trained to carry out acts of terror under the terrorist group’s commands.

Meanwhile, the police chief of the eastern province of Diyala, Lieutenant General Kasim al-Saidi, said ISIL militants kidnapped some 100 children in the province to use them as bombers.

A similar move by ISIL took place in April. Back then, ISIL stormed a number of schools in al-Qayyarah, al-Shura, Badoush and al-Baaj neighborhoods of the northern Iraqi city of Mosul. About 120 schoolchildren were kidnapped in the city, which is located about 400 kilometers (248 miles) north of the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, and has been under the control of ISIL since June 2014. The fate and whereabouts of the children are unknown.

ISIL terrorists have perpetrated atrocious crimes and terrorized all communities, including Shiites, Sunnis, Kurds, and Christians during their onslaughts in Iraq.

Units of Iraqi army soldiers and volunteer fighters have been engaged in joint operations to liberate militant-held regions in the country.

Iran determined to continue nuclear talks: Velayati

Velayati-Jordan journalists

A senior Iranian official says the Islamic Republic is determined to continue negotiations with six world powers over its nuclear program, expressing optimism about a positive outcome of the talks.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran is determined to proceed with nuclear negotiations and is highly hopeful that these talks would end in positive and favorable results for Iran,” Ali Akbar Velayati, a top advisor to Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei, said in a meeting with Jordanian media crew in Tehran on Sunday.

He, however, emphasized that Iran would never bow to “any imposition” in the nuclear talks.

The official said Iran’s refusal to allow inspection of its military sites and agree to interrogation of Iranian nuclear scientists are the two conditions set by the Islamic Republic in the talks with world powers.

On May 20, Ayatollah Khamenei said Iran would not allow any inspections by foreigners of its military sites.

[…]

Velayati expressed hope that the ongoing talks between Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council – the United States, France, Britain, Russia and China – plus Germany would bear fruit before June 30, the deadline set by the two sides for a final deal.

He, however, cast doubt on the outcomes of the talks if the US makes excessive demands.

Iran and the P5+1 group of countries are seeking to finalize a comprehensive deal on Iran’s nuclear issue. The two sides have been working on the text of the potential deal ever since they reached a mutual understanding on its parameters in the Swiss city of Lausanne on April 2.

Discrimination against people of color have been institutionalized in America

Michelle Alexander - Copy

A US lawyer says there is a striking difference between the black population serving time in prisons in the US State of New York and the white inmates.

Michelle Alexander, who is an associate professor of law at Ohio State University, a civil rights advocate and a writer, made the comment in an exclusive interview with the Islamic Republic News Agency and added the difference is clearly indicative of discriminatory laws in the US and institutionalized injustice to the people of color.

On May 28, followers of a religious sect held a rally in Brooklyn, the most populous borough in New York City, chanting slogans against injustice done against the black people in New York and other US states. The following is the translation of what Ms. Alexander said in the interview with IRNA on May 29:

The US lawyer said the white people account for more than 66 percent of population in the state of 20 million, but only 3.7 percent of the inmates in the state are white. What is shocking is the fact that the black people make up only 16 percent of the population, but over 49 percent of those behind bars in the state.

The legal scholar disputed claims by US lawmakers and law enforcement on more willingness on the part of African Americans to commit social delinquencies and said that such baseless claims have been used as an excuse to do injustice to the black people, adding that’s why the enforcement of social laws on people of color has failed miserably.

The white people who take and sell drugs outnumber the black people by a large margin, but the percentage of the black people who land in jail on charges of using or selling drugs – even carrying meager amounts – is incredibly higher than the white individuals.

Alexander said that white supremacy has a history of 400-500 years in this country and has been etched as a dominant mentality in people’s minds, adding such a mindset has automatically justified institutionalized discrimination in the US.

She went on to say that such a mindset has turned it into a psycho-social habit and thus people don’t care about how black people are judged. As a result, a majority of the white people use any misdemeanor by the black people as justification for their attitude.

The violent reactions of some African Americans in clinging to their social and civil rights and in opposition to unfair laws have resulted in them being identified as criminals in society, she said.

The only way to get rid of such a mentality which is stronger in the southern states goes through provision of social amenities and elimination of discrimination against the black people.

Michelle Alexander is also the author of 2010’s “The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness,” a book already considered by many to be among the most influential of its time.

Former crown prince opposed Saudi aggression against Yemen

Muqrin bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud

In Saudi Arabia divisions among princes have spilled out even further, with recently-replaced Crown Prince Muqrin bin Abdulaziz releasing a statement to openly oppose his country’s aggression against Yemen.

In the statement the former heir-to-the-throne said that developments in the kingdom have taken a dangerous turn, politically, economically and militarily and that the Saudi people will no doubt pay a heavy price for the aggression against Yemen, the Islamic Republic News Agency quoted [Libya-based] Al-Nabaa TV Channel as reporting.

The following is the translation of an excerpt of the statement:

In the statement the crown prince has said that he let King Salman know about his opposition to such aggression since day one and that he had warned of the economic, military and international relations ramifications of the measure.

Muqrin has further said that his opposition was shrugged off and that the defense minister has made the decision [to attack Yemen] on his own.

Muqrin has also urged members of the Saudi-led coalition [in attacking Yemen] to quit the mission and instead redouble their efforts to ease regional tension.

In conclusion, the prince who has fallen from grace, said he submitted his resignation to the Royal Court himself, urging all devoted people in Saudi Arabia and elsewhere in the world to save the people of the kingdom from being burned in a gloomy future.

Following the prince’s opposition to military action against Yemen, King Salman named Prince Muhamed bin Nayef as his crown prince and his son Muhamad bin Salman as deputy crown prince.

Stand your ground on gasoline decision

Fuel

Tehran University professor Sadegh Zibakalam has – in a letter – supported government’s decision to scrap gasoline subsidies and raise prices at the pump, criticizing the government spokesman for his failure to offer adequate explanation on the decision.

Fararu, a news website, on May 30 released Zibakalam’s letter to Mohammad Bagher Nobakht, who is also the head of the Management and Planning Organization. The following is the translation of the letter:

One question that seems regrettably astonishing about the eleventh government – that is trying to administer justice – is the failure of its officials to stand by the decisions they make.

[Former President] Dr. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad used to display a lot of determination, willpower and guts in taking awkward steps and making unwise decisions. But you and your colleagues in the eleventh government lack one-third or even one-tenth of what he [Ahmadinejad] did when it comes to your wise and prudent decisions.

Payment of [monthly] cash subsidies and a recent decision to raise gasoline prices are perfect examples of the absence of such resoluteness. Personally I do not know of a country and government in which officials have inflicted damage on the nation anywhere close to the havoc Mr. Ahmadinejad caused in Iran’s economy through payment of cash subsidies.

Although the disastrous nature of that decision [distribution of monthly cash subsidies] and its catastrophic impacts on the country’s macro-economy were crystal clear, he implemented the decision – or the enormous disaster, better to say – so resolutely, confidently and decisively that any unaware viewer would imagine that the decision had come on the back of intensive studies by the most outstanding economists and development scholars.

However when your government [the Rouhani administration] faces this historical catastrophe and a question as to what should be done at least about the payment of subsidies for high-income families, you start to stammer instead of saying – loud and clear – that populism was the sole motive behind this unprecedented catastrophe which afflicted this nation the hardest over the course of history.

You announce in the morning that you are about to cut the subsidies of the wealthy; in the afternoon you deny what you said [in the morning]; in the evening you say that Islam does not allow us to glean information on the possessions of citizens, and later in the evening you say yet another thing. And at the end of the month, you put another spoonful of poison in the mouth of Iran’s beleaguered economy by dishing out the monthly allowances – in bulk – to 78 million people. In other words, you lack the valor to bring the curtain down on this economic suicide.

Your recent decision on raising gasoline prices is a similar story. Dear Mr. Nobakht! Not only do governments in almost all countries sell gasoline to consumers at cost price, but they also channel the fuel tax revenues – several times the cost price – into plans to boost the education and health sectors, develop public transport and assist low-income strata in society.

Due to an inefficient state-run economic structure, our country collects no tax revenues from gasoline, nor does it even charge consumers at the pump the gasoline’s cost price. The international price tag on imported gasoline is roughly 55 cents (per liter); excluding the transport fees, government pays around 23 cents in “hidden subsidies” to customers for every liter of gasoline it sells.

In other countries, however, governments at times collect as much as $1.3 in taxes for very liter of gasoline. The first downside of gasoline pricing (as well as that of diesel and other oil derivatives) is the way justice is dispensed. The households that don’t have a car get no share of such subsidies, but those who own a car are given the subsidies anytime they fill up their tanks. The more cars one household owns (read the wealthier they are) they are given more in subsidies.

Violation of justice has not been the only ramification of the unreasonable gasoline pricing. Low prices have encouraged motorists to favor their personal cars over public transport. Low prices also cause heavy traffic congestion and air pollution in cities, and oversee the national wealth going to waste.

When your government takes a wise step in this regard, your attitude in interviews explaining the government’s decision looks as if you have committed a serious crime and acted in bad faith.

Mr. Nobakht! Instead of justifying, explaining or even settling [the controversy over] gasoline price hikes, stand up firm for the wise and rational decision. Have no doubts, gasoline price hikes have been one [if not the only] wise decision you’ve [ever] taken.

Instead of hesitating and talking with people in an apologetic tone, explain to people that low gasoline prices have amounted to a national disaster and that they have been defrauded.

Explain to people that they paid a high price for gasoline prices – despite its apparently low rate – over the years. Clarify for people that low gasoline prices translate into injustice, practicing deception on the lower-income families in society, low pace of public transport development, air pollution in cities, more traffic congestions, and continuation of populist policies for which they [people] have paid a hefty price: risking their health and life.

Mr. Nobakht! Do not doubt that there is no need to sweeten the pill [each time you make a new decision]. At least for one time, try not to play the hero or savior for people and try to let them in on the truth the way it is. Be sure that it will not take you long to realize that you don’t have to sweeten the pill.

Cantor Church in Qazvin (PHOTOS)

Cantor Church

Cantor Church, also known as Bell Tower, is one of the smallest churches in the world. The house of worship was built in Qazvin by the Russian invading forces during World War II.

The courtyard of the church is the final resting place of two Russian nationals: a pilot who was killed when his plane went down during the war and an engineer.

The following images of the church have been released by different news agencies: