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Iranian Navy has no plans to leave the Gulf of Aden: Commander

Irans-Navy-Commander-Rear-Admiral-Habibollah-Sayyari1

Iranian naval patrols aimed at ensuring security for commercial vessels in the Gulf of Aden will continue, Commander of the Iranian Navy Rear Admiral Habibollah Sayyari said Saturday, adding Iran won’t allow any country to board its vessels without any sound reason.

On April 25, Tasnim News Agency quoted the top commander as saying Iran’s naval presence in regional waters is in line with international rules and regulations and aimed at ensuring safe navigation for commercial vessels, denying American and Saudi allegations that Iran is sending weapons to Yemeni fighters.

He went on to say his forces have received no warning from American vessels in the region and that the presence of Iranian squadron in the Gulf of Aden has nothing to do with Saudi attacks on Yemen.

Rear Admiral Sayyari said as a result of Iran’s presence in the region more than 2,700 Iranian tankers or commercial vessels have made safe journey in regional waters. “We have engaged pirates on close to 200 occasions. Three pirates have been arrested and handed to judicial authorities.”

Iranians commemorate centennial of Armenian genocide (PHOTOS)

Iranian Armenians3

Hundreds of Iranian Armenians gathered outside the Turkish embassy in Tehran on Friday to commemorate the centennial of the massacre of the Armenians during World War I by the Ottomans.

A special memorial service was also held in Tehran for up to 1.5 million ethnic Armenians who are said to have been massacred one century ago.

The following are images of the two events filed by different news agencies:

International show-jumping competition in Iran (PHOTOS)

horse-jumping

A first international equestrian tournament for jockeys aged between 14 and 18 was held in Chitgar Park, Tehran, on April 24.

Snapshots of the show-jumping event by the Islamic Republic News Agency:

Traditional collection of wheat ears and chaff (PHOTOS)

wheat and chaff

Locals in Lamerd, Fars Province use traditional methods to collect ears and chaff of wheat.

 

 

Iran, P5+1 start drafting sanctions removal: Araghchi

Araghchi

A senior Iranian nuclear negotiator says Iran and P5+1 have started drafting the text of mechanisms related to the removal of sanctions imposed on Tehran over its peaceful nuclear program.

Speaking to Press TV following meetings with representatives of P5+1 in the Austrian capital city of Vienna on Friday, Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister for Legal and International Affairs Abbas Araghchi said that the US negotiating delegation gave the Iranian nuclear team “very useful” explanations regarding the removal of anti-Iran sanctions.

“This time we only worked on the question of sanctions but the fact is that we had worked on other issues some months ago; I think in July last year. We have already [drafted] some parts of our text. We had already done some drafting in the past, but then it was stopped because we had no solution on major issues. Now we have solutions in almost all issues. What we have to do is to write down these solutions in form of a draft of an agreement. We have also started now from the sanctions and we will go to other issues next time,” he said.

He added that the American and European negotiators resolved some ambiguities regarding the lifting of sanctions.

Noting that drafting has begun on the issue of sanctions, Araghchi said the US team “gave us explanations [about removal of sanctions] which were very useful.”

He said there were also positive talks about a resolution passed by the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee, which will be discussed on the Senate floor next week and is intended to give US Congress a final say over a possible nuclear accord with Iran.

“Some remarks by officials in the US created lots of question marks, and also the act by the Congress to introduce a new bill … [which] actually added to this complicated situation. We had very good discussions especially with the US delegation asking them to clarify their position regarding sanctions, to clarify what is going on in the Congress and I think the explanations by the US delegation was very useful,” he said.

The Iranian deputy foreign minister further noted that the negotiating sides have made steady, but slow progress, adding, “We are working on a dispute settlement mechanism for possibility of violations.”

“We are working on a dispute settlement mechanism the details of which are still under consideration. We do attach great importance to the possibility of violation of commitments by either side, especially from the other side, who has unfortunately not a good record on implementing its commitments. We will certainly have a dispute settlement mechanism according to which if any violation would occur, if any misunderstanding emerges, we will go to that mechanism and try to resolve that before we come to a situation to terminate the agreement,” the Iranian deputy foreign minister explained.

Araghchi continued by saying, “Now we have started to work on the draft of the JCPOA. Obviously at the beginning we need to talk about the frameworks and format of such a draft. We have made some progress but very slowly.… The focus of our discussions this time was on the question of sanctions and we tried to start drafting by in fact the question of sanctions and the related issues.”

“It is a very difficult job to reach a realistic agreement by June but we are hopeful. We think if all parties are serious, which they are, we can conclude these discussions and talks before the end of June. This is quite possible and we think the agreement is at reach, but of course at any time … unpredictable events may cause problems in the way, but if we go in a normal pace we can finish the job,” he concluded.

Representatives of Iran and P5+1 held intense talks in the Austrian capital in the third day of their latest round of negotiations over the Islamic Republic’s nuclear program.

The talks in Vienna are aimed at drafting the text of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) according to the parameters set through a mutual understanding reached in the Swiss city of Lausanne on April 2.

In the morning, Iran’s deputy foreign ministers Abbas Araghchi and Majid Takht-e Ravanchi met with their Russian and Chinese counterparts.

At the same time, experts from negotiating parties held a concurrent meeting. The expert meeting was focused on the mechanism for removal of anti-Iran sanction.

Later in the afternoon, Iranian deputy foreign ministers sat for negotiations with representatives of three European countries, France, Germany and the UK followed by another meeting with the US Under-Secretary of State for Political Affairs Wendy Sherman and EU political director, Helga Schmid.

The new round of the talks between representatives of Iran and P5+1 – the United States, Russia, China, France, Britain, and Germany – lasted three days with the aim of drafting a nuclear accord.

The talks are scheduled to resume on the sidelines of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty review conference in New York on April 27.A senior Iranian nuclear negotiator says Iran and P5+1 have started drafting the text of mechanisms related to the removal of sanctions imposed on Tehran over its peaceful nuclear program.
Speaking to Press TV following meetings with representatives of P5+1 in the Austrian capital city of Vienna on Friday, Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister for Legal and International Affairs Abbas Araghchi said that the US negotiating delegation gave the Iranian nuclear team “very useful” explanations regarding the removal of anti-Iran sanctions.
“This time we only worked on the question of sanctions but the fact is that we had worked on other issues some months ago; I think in July last year. We have already [drafted] some parts of our text. We had already done some drafting in the past, but then it was stopped because we had no solution on major issues. Now we have solutions in almost all issues. What we have to do is to write down these solutions in form of a draft of an agreement. We have also started now from the sanctions and we will go to other issues next time,” he said.
He added that the American and European negotiators resolved some ambiguities regarding the lifting of sanctions.
Noting that drafting has begun on the issue of sanctions, Araghchi said the US team “gave us explanations [about removal of sanctions] which were very useful.”
He said there were also positive talks about a resolution passed by the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee, which will be discussed on the Senate floor next week and is intended to give US Congress a final say over a possible nuclear accord with Iran.
“Some remarks by officials in the US created lots of question marks, and also the act by the Congress to introduce a new bill … [which] actually added to this complicated situation. We had very good discussions especially with the US delegation asking them to clarify their position regarding sanctions, to clarify what is going on in the Congress and I think the explanations by the US delegation was very useful,” he said.
The Iranian deputy foreign minister further noted that the negotiating sides have made steady, but slow progress, adding, “We are working on a dispute settlement mechanism for possibility of violations.”
“We are working on a dispute settlement mechanism the details of which are still under consideration. We do attach great importance to the possibility of violation of commitments by either side, especially from the other side, who has unfortunately not a good record on implementing its commitments. We will certainly have a dispute settlement mechanism according to which if any violation would occur, if any misunderstanding emerges, we will go to that mechanism and try to resolve that before we come to a situation to terminate the agreement,” the Iranian deputy foreign minister explained.
Araghchi continued by saying, “Now we have started to work on the draft of the JCPOA. Obviously at the beginning we need to talk about the frameworks and format of such a draft. We have made some progress but very slowly.… The focus of our discussions this time was on the question of sanctions and we tried to start drafting by in fact the question of sanctions and the related issues.”
“It is a very difficult job to reach a realistic agreement by June but we are hopeful. We think if all parties are serious, which they are, we can conclude these discussions and talks before the end of June. This is quite possible and we think the agreement is at reach, but of course at any time … unpredictable events may cause problems in the way, but if we go in a normal pace we can finish the job,” he concluded.
Representatives of Iran and P5+1 held intense talks in the Austrian capital in the third day of their latest round of negotiations over the Islamic Republic’s nuclear program.
The talks in Vienna are aimed at drafting the text of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) according to the parameters set through a mutual understanding reached in the Swiss city of Lausanne on April 2.
In the morning, Iran’s deputy foreign ministers Abbas Araghchi and Majid Takht-e Ravanchi met with their Russian and Chinese counterparts.
At the same time, experts from negotiating parties held a concurrent meeting. The expert meeting was focused on the mechanism for removal of anti-Iran sanction.
Later in the afternoon, Iranian deputy foreign ministers sat for negotiations with representatives of three European countries, France, Germany and the UK followed by another meeting with the US Under-Secretary of State for Political Affairs Wendy Sherman and EU political director, Helga Schmid.
The new round of the talks between representatives of Iran and P5+1 – the United States, Russia, China, France, Britain, and Germany – lasted three days with the aim of drafting a nuclear accord.
The talks are scheduled to resume on the sidelines of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty review conference in New York on April 27.

Iran’s dependence on oil hitting record low: Rouhani

Rouhani-Iran

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani says the country’s dependence on oil revenues will drop to its lowest level ever in the current Iranian year (which began on March 21).

Addressing commanders of police and security forces in Tehran on Saturday, Rouhani said that his administration succeeded in fulfilling its commitments over the past two years despite financial problems caused as a result of sanctions imposed on the country over its nuclear program and a slash in oil prices.

He added that some neighboring countries have hatched a plot to reduce oil prices, but their move has backfired on them.

The Iranian president noted that his administration has also managed to increase the budget for the country’s development over the past two years.

Iran holds the world’s fourth-largest proven crude oil reserves and the second-largest natural gas reserves.

Oil prices have nearly halved since the summer of 2014, and currently stand slightly above 60 dollars per barrel.

Rouhani further said poverty and unemployment are major causes of insecurity in society and called for eradicating them.

He added that all Iranian citizens are equal before the law, saying, “Civil rights are the same for all. All are Iranians and equal to the law.”

Rouhani emphasized that all those who are residing in Iran, including tourists, enjoy safety thanks to efforts by the Iranian police personnel.

He called on the police to cooperate with the administration in achieving economic prosperity and progress.

The president went on to say that it is not the police’s responsibility to enforce Islam, but that the force should implement the law. Otherwise, police will get mired in mental trouble and will entangle people in trouble too, the president added.

In comments aimed at police officials, the president said, “Try to see all people as equals and treat them equally in order to raise you favorability in society. This can also earn you divine consent and public satisfaction”.

Disputes can be solved through negotiations: Larijani

US, reactionary allies behind ISIL crimes in Iraq: Larijani
US, reactionary allies behind ISIL crimes in Iraq: Larijani

Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani said in Shahrud on Thursday that negotiations will iron out ambiguities in nuclear issue.

Addressing a ceremony to commemorate 1,027 martyrs, Larijani said it is for 10 years that Iran faces Western adventurism in the nuclear issue despite its demand to settle disputes through talks.

He said Westerns should admit they had made a mistake and Iran does not deserve getting treated this way.

He went on to say that nuclear talks are complicated, needing maximum care.

Iran blasts Saudi obstruction of aid to Yemen, plane interception

Iran Foriegn ministery

Iran’s Foreign Ministry has summoned Saudi Arabia’s chargé d’affaires in Tehran to express its protest over Riyadh’s interception of an Iranian aid flight to war-wracked Yemen.

Saudi Arabia’s most senior diplomat in Tehran was summoned on Friday after Saudi fighter jets prevented an Iranian plane, which was carrying medical aid, from entering the Yemeni airspace.

This is while the Iranian Red Crescent Society (IRCS) had obtained the necessary permission to fly in the Oman-Yemen route and send a plane in coordination with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in order to fly Yemeni patients back to Iran and distribute medical aid to the injured in the impoverished Arab country, an Iranian Foreign Ministry official said.

He added that the Saudi fighter jets intercepted the Iranian plane and forced them to return to Iran.

The official described the move as a blatant interference in Yemen’s internal affairs and said the Islamic Republic would proceed with its efforts to help the Yemeni people and treat those wounded in the Saudi aggression against Yemen.

In another development, Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister for Arab and African Affairs Hossein Amir Abdollahian has reprimanded Saudi Arabia for refusing to allow the delivery of humanitarian aid to the Yemeni people who sustained injuries during the kingdom’s airstrikes on its impoverished neighbor.

“Saudi Arabia does not help with efforts to deliver humanitarian aid and transfer of injured Yemenis for treatment,” Amir Abdollahian said in a telephone conversation with President of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) Peter Maurer on Friday.

The Iranian official called on the international community to take stronger action to dispatch humanitarian aid to Yemen, given the deteriorating human situation in the impoverished Arab country.

He added that Saudi Arabia has continued its military campaign against the country.

The senior Foreign Ministry official noted that two Iranian airplanes carrying humanitarian aid and medicine as well as the injured Yemenis, who have been treated in Iran, left for Yemen over the past two days after obtaining legal permission, but they were forced to turn back following Saudi Arabia’s “illegal interference.”

The official once again expressed the Islamic Republic’s readiness to cooperate with international organizations and send humanitarian aid and medicine to the “defenseless” Yemeni people.

Maurer, for his part, said the ICRC has made great efforts to deliver aid to the Yemeni people and held close consultations with Saudi Arabia after the announcement of the end of war in Yemen.

The ICRC president, however, added that the distribution of aid in Yemen requires the complete end of military operation in the crisis-hit country.

He noted that the ICRC is seeking a secure way to channel aid to Yemen and transfer the injured.

The phone conversation came after Saudi fighter jets intercepted an Iranian airplane with humanitarian aid to Yemen and prevented it from entering the Yemeni airspace.

Saudi Arabia launched its aerial campaign against Yemen on March 26 – without a United Nations mandate – in a bid to undermine the Houthi Ansarullah movement and to restore power to the country’s fugitive former president, Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi, a staunch ally of Riyadh.

On April 21, Riyadh announced the end of the first phase of its unlawful military operation, which claimed the lives of nearly 1,000 people in 27 days. However, airstrikes have continued with Saudi bombers targeting different areas across the country.

The Saudi aggression against Yemen has claimed the lives of more than 100 children over the past month, according to the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).

Nature Bridge in Tehran; the awarded structure of 2015

Nature Pedestrian Bridge

Nature Pedestrian Bridge designed by Iran’s Diba Tensile Architecture Company has been picked as a 2015 winner in the category of Highways and Bridges along with four other structures by the Architizer A+ Awards.

The international competition is the definitive global architectural and product award program –90-plus categories and over 300 judges – which tries to introduce structures contributing to the enhancement of quality of life.

The bridge is designed to improve access for pedestrians in Tehran between two public parks, which are divided by a highway.

This bridge is a place to linger rather than just to pass, so there are seating areas and green spaces on all parts of the bridge, also restaurants on either side of the lower level, to have enough facilities to encourage walkers to stay on it.

Photos of the bridge by Tehran Picture Agency:

Ansar al-Forqan political leader killed: intelligence source

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Iran’s deputy-Intelligence Minister for home security has said their forces killed the political leader of a terrorist group in south-eastern province of Sistan and Baluchistan.

The intelligence official said that the clandestine operations by intelligence forces on Wednesday in the province was productive against terrorist groups, where Hesham Azizi, also known as ‘Abu Hafas al-Baloushi’ the political leader of Ansar al-Forqan and his two companies had been killed.

The intelligence official also said that Ansar al-Forqan received logistic and financial support and guidance from an ‘Arab-Western’ conspiracy axis to spread insecurity, violence, assassinations and blast in south-eastern regions; “hard work and clandestine surveillance and intelligence operations of their foreign as well as domestic activities provided our agents information conducive to destroy and kill an important member of the group, with some other members managing an escape, however tracked and arrested in southern provinces,” he said.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran’s security strategy is to restore sustainable security in the region; in this path, it would not tolerate even the smallest destabilizing player; we warn that only close cooperation of countries in the region would help meet the security challenges rampant in the Middle East,” the source said.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran keeps the right for itself to address the issue in the international security institutions; our sustainable security is a product of cooperation of different parties inter alia, local people, religious leaders, and local government officials; assassination, attack on government centers and military posts have been the major terrorist acts by al-Forqan group,” said the intelligence source.

As for the speculations in the media that a Jaish al-Adl member had also been killed, the intelligence official said that the Jaish member Saeid Torkman Zehi, also known as Molla Ma’adh, the group’s spokesman, had been killed in Karachi, Pakistan, in his house on April 8. The source also added that the same day, Torkman Zehi had taken the responsibility for killing 8 Iranian border guards the day before.