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President Pezeshkian stresses Iran not pursuing nukes, war

“We are not pursuing nuclear weapons. Our dear Leader of the Islamic Revolution [Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei] has issued fatwa against it,” he told foreign ambassadors and envoys in Tehran on Thursday.

“Even those who think they can push this country toward nuclear weapons cannot do so because the doctrine of the Islamic Republic of Iran does not, under any circumstances, accept the mass killing of innocent people,” Pezeshkian added.

Iran’s nuclear doctrine is based on Ayatollah Khamenei’s fatwa categorically banning the production, possession and stockpiling of nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction.

Pezeshkian said verifying the peaceful nature of Iran’s nuclear program is not difficult.

“Whenever inspectors (from the International Atomic Energy Agency) have wanted, they have come and inspected. They can come and inspect a hundred more times. When we have no such intention, they should not keep saying every day that Iran is pursuing nuclear weapons.”

Such baseless claims against Iran, Pezeshkian stated, come from the occupying regime of Israel, an entity that “has violated the sovereignty of all nations in the region—yet human rights advocates claim it is merely defending itself.”

“Who displaced the people of Gaza from their homes and turned them into refugees? A displaced person has to to defend themselves. Any free human being, when deprived of their rights, will inevitably stand up. The world will only see peace when those who claim to uphold human rights respect them regardless of ethnicity, race, or religion.”

Addressing the ambassadors of Islamic countries, Pezeshkian stressed that “Iran seeks sincere relations for the mutual exchange of experiences.”

In 2015, Iran proved the peaceful nature of its nuclear program to the world by signing the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) with six world powers.

However, Washington’s unilateral withdrawal in 2018 and its subsequent re-imposition of sanctions against Tehran left the future of the deal in limbo.

In 2019, Iran started to roll back the limits it had accepted under the JCPOA after the other parties failed to live up to their commitments.

Iran Interior min.: Unauthorized foreign nationals have taken many job opportunities, expulsion is inevitable

Afghanistan refugees in Iran

Addressing the status of foreign nationals in the country, Momeni noted that unauthorized immigrants have been repatriated following an agreement with the International Organization for Migration.

However, he acknowledged that some of those expelled attempt to re-enter the country.

To address this challenge, the government has prioritized three key measures: reinforcing physical and electronic border security, enforcing stricter immigration laws, and imposing tougher labor regulations to minimize the re-entry of deported individuals, he added.

He emphasized that in addition to repatriating unauthorized foreign nationals, strict actions will be taken against employers who hire them.

The government aims to ensure that labor opportunities remain available for Iranian citizens by strictly regulating employment policies.

Momeni reiterated Iran’s historical and cultural ties with neighboring countries but stressed that due to the country’s current circumstances, the expulsion of unauthorized foreign nationals is unavoidable.

Momeni affirmed that identifying and deporting these individuals remains a top priority.

Unofficial sources say 10 million Afghan refugees are in Iran.

Israel’s West Bank aggression displaces 26k from Jenin and Tulkarm camps

Farha Abu al-Haija, a member of the Popular Committee in Jenin Camp, said 17,000 people have been forcibly expelled from the Jenin camp, home to over 24,000 registered Palestinian refugees.

For the past two weeks, the Israeli army has besieged, invaded and bombed the camp and its surroundings.

The UN agency for Palestinian refugees, Unrwa, has announced that large parts of the camp have been completely levelled in a series of detonations, estimating that at least 100 houses have been destroyed or heavily damaged.

On Sunday, Israeli forces simultaneously blew up nearly 20 buildings on the eastern side of the camp after rigging them with explosives, the Palestinian state news agency reported.

Israeli forces have prevented movement inside and residents have been forced to flee under shelling and explosions.

Abu al-Haija stated the Israeli army has also expelled families living in the vicinity of the camp, where they also blew up a building composed of 20 flats, leaving 200 residents homeless.

The Palestinian health ministry added Israeli forces have killed at least 70 people in the West Bank since the start of the year.

Abu al-Haija told Middle East Eye that displaced residents have fled the violence to different places in Jenin and its countryside, which have also been affected by the military campaign.

Palestinian families are now hosting up to 20 displaced people in their homes amid a lack of basic amenities such as electricity and water.

“Both the displaced families and the families who are receiving them are financially strapped. Prior to the Israeli military campaign, the camp was besieged by the Palestinian security services for 48 days. People have been without work for three months and have been unable to secure their basic daily needs, including food,” Abu al-Haija said.

Weeks before the Israeli operation, the Palestinian Authority launched a large-scale security campaign in Jenin that involved besieging the city, shooting at unarmed civilians and clashing with local fighters.

Abu al-Haija, who also works with an organisation that provides psychological support to women and children, added that due to the Israeli siege, no one knows the full extent of what is happening inside the camp or the damage being caused.

Jenin’s residents, who have endured repeated military raids for the past two years, say the violence and intensity of the current assault exceeded even the notorious invasion of the camp during the Second Intifada in 2002.

“The families in Jenin are in shock by the magnitude of the raid. It is similar to what happened in Gaza, only this time it’s an area of ​​just one square kilometre,” Abu al-Haija continued.

In parallel with its military operation in Jenin, the Israeli army is also conducting an incursion in the Tulkarm refugee camp, which has so far displaced at least 9,000 Palestinians from their homes.

Displaced residents have sought shelter in halls, clubs and centres in the city of Tulkarm, or in the homes of their relatives.

Suhail Salman, an activist and political figure in Tulkarm, said the Israeli army has been deliberately targeting the fabric of daily life in the camps by destroying civilian infrastructure, residential buildings, cutting off basic services like water and electricity.

Salman emphasised that this tactic aims to attack the right of return for Palestinian refugees, a central issue that has long been a barrier in negotiations between Israel and Palestine.

“The evidence for this is that the genocide in Gaza, the assault on the camps in the West Bank and the attack on Unrwa are all happening simultaneously with the goal of evacuating the camps and creating an uninhabitable environment for the population by halting any development of life within them,” Salman told MEE.

Two Israeli laws went into effect last week that ban Unrwa’s operations in Israel and in “areas under Israeli sovereignty,” as well as prohibiting any contact with the agency. This move has been supported by former US President Donald Trump.

The UN agency, which has been operating without US funding for almost a year, provides aid, health and education services to millions in the Palestinian territories, as well as the millions of Palestinians living in refugee camps in the neighbouring countries of Syria, Lebanon and Jordan.

“The spearhead of this attack on Unrwa is the Americans, and we heard Trump’s latest statements about the displacement of the people of Gaza to Egypt and the people of the West Bank to Jordan. So the process of displacement is ongoing,” Salman added.

Salman believes that the destruction, bombing and sabotage campaign in the West Bank is designed to force camp residents to leave.

The activist stressed the need for Palestinians to put their internal affairs in order and agree on a political programme that would counter Israel’s plans.

“When the Israeli army blew up 20 buildings in the Jenin camp, it was filmed and broadcast on satellite channels. This is a blatant challenge to the whole world and the human rights system,” he said, adding, “It is clear that the world is reformulating itself so that Israel has the upper hand in the region.”

Kurdish militias: Not yet notified of US plan for Syria withdrawal

US Forces in Syria

SDF spokesman Farhad Shami made the comments hours after US media reported on the plan. The armed group – a key ally of the US-led coalition fighting ISIL (ISIS) in the region – controls a large swath of northeast Syria, accounting for about one-third of Syria’s territory.

“Of course, ISIS and other malicious forces are waiting for the opportunity of the US withdrawal to reactivate and reach the state of 2014,” Shami said.

Hours earlier, NBC News reported, citing two unnamed Pentagon sources, that the administration of US President Donald Trump is drawing up plans to withdraw US troops from Syria in either 30, 60 or 90 days.

Trump was directly asked about the prospect of withdrawing troops last week, saying his administration would “make a determination on that”.

“Syria is its own mess. They got enough messes over there. They don’t need us involved in every one,” he added.

Trump, who continually vows an “America First” foreign policy predicated on ending US military engagement abroad, initially pushed for withdrawing US troops from Syria during his first term from 2017 to 2021.

He abandoned the plan amid pushback from within his own administration, with officials warning of a backslide in the anti-ISIL fight and the implications of abandoning Kurdish allies in the region.

But speculation over the future of US troops in Syria again grew following the toppling of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in December by a rebel coalition spearheaded by the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) rebel group. HTS leader Ahmed al-Sharaa has since become the interim leader of Syria.

In the wake of al-Assad’s ousting, former US President Joe Biden’s administration remained adamant that US forces would remain in Syria to prevent a resurgence of ISIL, which controlled large portions of Syria before its territorial defeat in 2019.

In December, the Pentagon said about 2,000 US military personnel remain in Syria. The number is a significant increase from the roughly 900 troops Washington had said were there in recent years. The US first deployed troops to Syria in 2014.

For its part, the Trump administration has publicly vowed to continue to target ISIL fighters across the region. Analysts have also warned that a blanket freeze on foreign aid has cut some administrative and security funding to Kurdish fighters overseeing ISIL prison camps in Syria, further risking instability.

Maximum pressure’ to lead to ‘maximum resistance’: Iran warns US

“So-called ‘Maximum Pressure’ is a failed experience. Repeating that will only yet again compel ‘Maximum Resistance’. Smart people ought to choose ‘Maximum Wisdom’ instead,” Araqchi wrote in a message on X early on Thursday.

“In addition to being a party in good standing to the NPT (Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty) and other global nonproliferation instruments, Iran has already made abundantly clear that ‘under no circumstances will Iran ever seek, develop or acquire any nuclear weapons,’” he said.

“It is not difficult to reach practical assurances that Iran will not have nuclear weapons, provided that objective guarantees are also provided that hostile measures against Iran—including economic pressures and sanctions- will be effectively terminated.”

His remarks came after US President Donald Trump’s move to sign a presidential memorandum re-imposing Washington’s maximum pressure policy on Iran that was practiced throughout his first term.

On Tuesday, Trump promoted new “tough” measures aimed at, what Washington has called, “deterring” Iran from obtaining a “nuclear weapon.”

Trump also signed the presidential memorandum, authorizing stricter illegal actions against Iran, while stating, “They can’t have a nuclear weapon, we’d be very tough if they insist on doing that.”

Washington’s adversarial stance comes despite Tehran’s repeated assurances that its nuclear activities remain in full compliance with international regulations, and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)’s invariable verification of the peaceful nature of the Islamic Republic’s nuclear energy program.

Reacting to Trump’s remarks, Araghchi noted on Wednesday, “If the main issue is that Iran should not pursue nuclear weapons, this is achievable and not a difficult matter.

“Iran’s stance is clear, and it is a member of the NPT, and there is also the fatwa (religious decree) of the Leader, which has clarified the matter for us,” he added.

Pentagon chief says US ‘very long way away’ from deploying soldiers in Gaza

Gaza War

On Tuesday, President Donald Trump proposed that the United States take control of the Gaza Strip, suggesting the area be redeveloped following the demolition of structures damaged during the 15-month Israel-Hamas conflict. He reiterated his earlier stance that Palestinians should be relocated to neighboring countries at those nations’ expense. When questioned about the potential deployment of US troops to facilitate this plan, Trump stated he would “do what is necessary.”

The following day, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth appeared on Fox News to clarify the president’s remarks regarding the possibility of US military involvement in Gaza.

“I think we’re a very long way from that,” the top defense official replied, adding that “robust discussions” between Trump, national security officials and allies would have to precede such a decision.

Israel wants to “finish the job against Hamas” and get the hostages back, and the US will help them do so, Hegseth said.

“What happens after that is a longer conversation… You don’t want to have to use American boots at all if you don’t have to.”

“As he said, think outside the box,” Hegseth said in a nod to Israeli Prime Minister’s statements about Trump’s thoughts on Gaza.

“Recognize that you can, through these sort of discussions… also move the Overton window of what’s possible,” Hegseth added.

On Tuesday, Benjamin Netanyahu praised Trump for his unconventional thinking, adding that the US president’s decision on Gaza could “change history.”

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt has also said Trump will leverage Washington’s partners in the Middle East to fund the rebuilding of Gaza.

“The United States is not going to pay for the rebuilding of Gaza,” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told journalists in a press briefing on Wednesday, fielding questions about the US president’s proposal.

“His administration is going to work with our partners in the region to reconstruct this region,” the spokesperson continued, adding that Trump has not yet committed to sending US troops into Gaza.

When asked if the US is prepared to forcibly evict Palestinians from the enclave, the press secretary responded, “The President is prepared to rebuild Gaza for Palestinians and all people in the region, peace-loving people who want real economic development and opportunity.”

Regarding whether Gazans wishing to remain in the strip would be allowed to do so, Leavitt stated that President Trump is “committed to rebuilding Gaza and to temporarily relocating those who are there.”

The US president has spoken to several leaders of Arab states, and “has made it very clear” and “been very vocal, that he expects our partners in the region, particularly Egypt and Jordan, to accept Palestinian refugees.”

Dozens of British MPs ink motion in parliament condemning Trump’s Gaza proposal

Gaza War

A motion signed by more than 30 MPs from several parties has been tabled in the UK parliament urging the Labour government to take action.

Tabled by Labour MP Richard Burgon, the motion comes after Foreign Secretary David Lammy said Trump is correct that Gaza is “lying in rubble”, while insisting that Palestinians must be able to “live and prosper” in Gaza.

Notably, Lammy stopped short of condemning Trump’s remarks made at a press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday, drawing criticism from opposition politicians.

The parliamentary motion declares: “This House rejects the proposals for Gaza from US President Donald Trump.”

It urges the government to “unequivocally reject” the proposals and “take action to oppose efforts to forcibly displace and ethnically cleanse Palestinians from Gaza”.

The motion also affirms that forcible transfers of people from occupied territories are prohibited under international law, “regardless of their motive”.

Earlier on Wednesday, Green Party MP Ellie Chowns noted that the “forced movement” of the people of Gaza would be “ethnic cleansing”, and demanded that the British government “respond in the strongest terms condemning Trump’s reckless remarks”.

And independent MP Shockat Adam called Trump’s remarks “absolutely appalling”, warning they confirmed fears that “extreme elements” in Israel “want to ethnically cleanse Gaza”.

At the press conference on Tuesday with a grinning Netanyahu, Trump stunned the world by stating: “I don’t know how [Palestinians in Gaza] could want to stay.

“It’s a demolition site. It’s a pure demolition site,” he added.

As of August 2024, Israel had destroyed 80 percent of buildings in Gaza, in what observers noted was as a deliberate policy to ensure that Gaza became uninhabitable for Palestinians.

Trump continued: “If we can find the right piece of land or numerous pieces of land and build them some really nice places, with plenty of money in the area, that’s for sure, I think that would be a lot better than going back to Gaza, which has had just decades and decades of death.”

Iran’s first drone carrier joins IRGC Navy

The event was attended by Major General Mohammad Bagheri, Chief of Staff of the Iranian Armed Forces, and Major General Hossein Salami, Commander-in-Chief of the IRGC.

The drone carrier, named Martyr Bagheri, boasts capabilities such as carrying multiple unmanned flight squadrons, launching and landing unmanned fighter jets, and deploying various reconnaissance and combat drones.

The carrier can also deploy and retrieve various light and fast combat vessels, as well as carry and operate a variety of combat and support helicopters.

It serves as a mobile maritime platform for executing drone and helicopter missions across the oceans.

The drone carrier, with its seafaring capabilities in waters of up to Force 9 (oceans) and an operational range of 22,000 nautical miles (offshore), enables prolonged presence and operations for up to one year without the need for refueling in distant waters.

OPEC unity helps thwart US sanctions threats: Iran president

Pezeshkian told the visiting OPEC Secretary-General Haitham Al-Ghais in Tehran on Wednesday, “I believe if OPEC members act together, the United States cannot impose sanctions against any of them.”

The Iranian president was referring to threats by US President Donald Trump to cut off Iran’s oil exports.

Pezeshkian said his policy is to deepen brotherhood within OPEC given, as he put it, the significance of the matter in reaching a “common language, perspective, and policy.”

“Sharing experiences and achievements, as well as collective market management, constitute serious areas of cooperation among OPEC members.”

The OPEC chief expressed gratitude for the constructive role of the Islamic Republic in the organization.

Al-Ghais said he has tried to strengthen cooperation among member countries as if they were members of one family, working toward collective interests.

“During my tenure as secretary-general, I have tried to steer OPEC in a direction that ensures the interests of all members while maintaining market stability and sustainability.”

The secretary-general said strengthening the spirit of cooperation is crucial for the future of OPEC, just as the improvement of relations between Iran and Saudi Arabia has enabled OPEC to play a stronger role in the market than before.

UN officials condemn Trump’s Gaza plan

Gaza War

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has shared a post on social media, reaffirming his warning against ethnic cleansing in the Gaza Strip.

“In the search for solutions on Gaza, we must not make the problem worse,” Guterres wrote.

“It is vital to stay true to the bedrock of international law. It is essential to avoid any form of ethnic cleansing.”

Guterres made similar remarks in an address to a UN committee on the rights of Palestinians on Wednesday.

While Guterres did not mention Trump by name, his comments come one day after the American leader said the United States could “take over” and “own” the Gaza Strip and suggested Palestinians could be “permanently” elsewhere.

UN human rights chief Volker Turk was definitive in his response to Trump’s statements, which have sparked outrage across the globe.

“Any forcible transfer in or deportation of people from occupied territory is strictly prohibited,” Turk stated.

Trump announced the plan during a news conference in Washington, DC with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hours earlier, doubling down on his previous suggestion of removing Palestinians from the war-battered enclave. Experts have said that would constitute ethnic cleansing.

In the Tuesday news conference, the president noted the US should “take over” Gaza and launch major redevelopment to turn the territory into the “Riviera of the Middle East”. He also called for moving Gaza’s population to “other countries with humanitarian hearts”.

His announcement was met with shock and audible gasps from those in attendance. It has since been rejected by Palestinian people and leaders.

Neighbouring countries also repeatedly rejected the prospect of large-scale transfers of Palestinians out of Gaza, which has been levelled in a 15-month-long war between Hamas and Israel. At least 62,000 people in Gaza have been killed in the fighting.

In his statement, Turk stressed that instead of Trump’s statements, the international emphasis should now be on reaching an agreement on the second phase of the ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas. Trump has repeatedly claimed credit for sealing that deal, which went into effect on January 19, the day before he took office.

But Israel and Hamas have only agreed to the first 42-day phase of the deal, which remains ongoing. It has seen a pause in fighting and the release of Palestinian prisoners in exchange for the eventual release of 33 captives held in Gaza.

The second phase would see a more complete end to the war and a release of the remaining captives, but Netanyahu has faced pressure from within his own government to resume the fighting.

A third phase is meant to eventually see the reconstruction of Gaza, although no day-after plan has yet to emerge.

“It is crucial that we move towards the next phase of the ceasefire, to release all hostages and arbitrarily detained prisoners, end the war and reconstruct Gaza, with full respect for international humanitarian law and international human rights law,” Turk added.

Speaking at a news conference in Denmark’s capital Copenhagen on Wednesday, Francesca Albanese, the UN special rapporteur on the occupied Palestinian territory, also decried Trump’s plan as “unlawful, immoral and completely irresponsible”.

“It’s incitement to commit forced displacement, which is an international crime,” said Albanese.

International law prohibits the seizure of a sovereign territory without the consent of the controlling government.

Rights experts have said that because the UN’s top court has ruled that Israel is an illegal occupier of the Palestinian territories, Israeli authorities have no right to hand over control of Gaza to a foreign power.

Analysts have also pointed out that as an occupying force, Israel is prohibited from permanently removing Palestinians from the enclave.

Albanese warned if the US president carries on with this plan, “it will make the regional crisis even worse”. She called for world leaders to stake a stand.

“The international community is made up of 193 states and this is the time to give the US what it has been looking for: isolation,” she added.