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Visually-impaired Iranian sprinter wins silver at 2024 Paralympics

Safarzadeh finished second, clocking 55.39 seconds, just behind Cuba’s legendary sprinter Durand Elias Omara, who clinched the gold with a time of 53.59 seconds.

Bronze medals were awarded to Boturchuk Oksana from Ukraine and Perez Lopez from Venezuela.

Safarzadeh, along with 24-year-old para-athlete and shooter Seyed Mohammadreza Mirshafiei, were the flag bearers for the Iranian contingent during the opening ceremony of the Paris 2024 Paralympics.

She had previously won gold at the 2024 World Para Athletics Championships held in Japan in May, where she set a new Asian record by completing the women’s 400m T12 in 57.56 seconds.

Her silver medal has brought Iran’s total medal tally at the Paris Paralympics to 12, including 2 gold medals, 7 silver medals, and 3 bronze medals.

Iran has sent 65 athletes, competing in 10 sports, to the Paris Paralympic Games.

Iran sitting volleyball team beat Germany, advance to semifinals of Paralympic Games, Paris

The sitting volleyball matches at the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games continued on Tuesday, with the quarterfinals held at the North Arena sports hall in Paris. The Iranian national sitting volleyball team faced Germany.

In this match, which had a crowd in favor of the opponent, Germany was competitive from the very first set, but gradually the Iranian team took control and asserted their dominance, ending the first set with a score of 25-16 in their favor.

In the second set, Iran displayed their strength and won decisively with a score of 25-13. Iran’s dominance continued in the third set, which also ended with a 25-16 victory for Iran.

Ukraine threatens Mongolia with “consequences” for not detaining Putin

Putin’s visit to Mongolia is his first to a member state of the ICC since the Hague-based court issued a warrant for his arrest in March 2023. The warrant obliges the court’s 124-member states to detain Putin for extradition should he set foot on their soil, but Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said before the trip that Moscow “has no concerns” that “our friends from Mongolia” would act on the court order.

After Putin touched down smoothly, Ukrainian Foreign Ministry spokesman Georgy Tykhy took to social media to complain.

“The Mongolian government’s failure to carry out the binding ICC arrest warrant for Putin is a heavy blow to the International Criminal Court and the international criminal justice system,” he wrote on X.

“Mongolia allowed the indicted criminal to escape justice, thereby sharing responsibility for his war crimes. We will work with partners to ensure that this has consequences for Ulaanbaatar,” he added.

The ICC could formally condemn Mongolia for failing to enforce the warrant. However, it lacks the authority to impose fines, sanctions, or any other penalties. It also lacks any mechanism of enforcing its own warrants, relying on member states to choose whether to obey them.

Neither Russia nor Ukraine are signatories to the Rome Statute, the 1998 agreement that established the court. Ukraine’s parliament ratified the statute last month, but included a clause stating that it would not recognize the court’s jurisdiction over cases involving Ukrainian nationals.

The ICC issued the warrant in March 2023, accusing Putin and Russian Children’s Rights Commissioner Maria Lvova-Belova of the “unlawful deportation” of children from “occupied areas of Ukraine”. Moscow rejected the accusations as absurd, pointing out that its forces were evacuating civilians from a combat zone where they faced imminent danger from Ukrainian artillery and drone strikes.

Iran summons Australia’s envoy over homosexual content

The Iranian Foreign Ministry

The message was posted on the embassy’s Instagram page.

The head of the regional division at the Iranian Foreign Ministry who summoned the envoy, severely rapped the move by the Australian embassy, describing it as having “norm-breaking content”.

The Iranian official said the post published by the Australian embassy runs counter to the Iranian and Islamic culture, customs and manners. He also called on the envoy to correct the situation and refrain from repeating such moves in future.

Elsewhere, the Iranian Foreign Ministry official said the move is against international legal rights and the Vienna Diplomatic Convention regarding the behavior of the diplomatic envoys.

The Australian ambassador, in turn, affirmed that the move was not done on purpose to target the values of the Iranian people and society.

McConville added he would convey the concerns and stances of the government of the Islamic Republic of Iran to Canberra.

In the Instagram post, the Australian embassy said they seek to create an environment in which everyone particularly LGBTQ+ are protected.

Iranian president breaks protocols again, engages warmly with the public in Mashhad

Defying usual security protocols, the President was seen enjoying watermelon and juice among the people, creating a rare and informal atmosphere.

In a particularly notable moment, the President stopped his security detail from intervening when a woman approached him to express her concerns directly. He listened attentively to her grievances, demonstrating a personal and engaged approach.

Despite repeated mentions of strict protocols by his officials, it appears the president has yet to fully adapt to the standard security limitations, preferring instead to maintain a closer connection with the people.

These images and reports of the president’s actions in Mashhad have quickly gained attention online:

Piazza appointed Iranian men’s National Volleyball team’s coach

Italian volleyball coach Roberto Piazza

The head of Iran’s Volleyball Association announced that Piazza, among the top 12 coaches in the world, was picked from among several candidates after a thorough study.

The decision came after the Iranian team’s disappointing results in the 2024 Olympic Games, which demoted it to 17th place in the FIVB World Ranking.

Piazza, 56, will be the head coach of the Iranian men’s national volleyball team until the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

The veteran coach took up coaching in 1990 and has a history of coaching several national teams, including those of the Netherlands, from 2019 to 2024, and Qatar in 2016. He has also served as the assistant coach of the Russian national team from 2009 to 2010, besides steering many clubs in the world.

Official: Illegal import of iPhones costs Iran $900mn

Abdolmahdi Asadi told Tehran-based ISNA news agency that the government’s refusal to officially register iPhone 14 and 15 in Iran has wasted hundreds of millions of dollars in backchannels.

He also warned in case the new administration of President Massoud Pezeshkian does not remove the ban, the loss of foreign currency will soar to 1.3 billion dollars after iPhone 16 is released later this year.

There has been no official explanation on the reason behind the ban, but there are speculations suggesting that the restriction was made out of concerns that the phones can be used to connect to the Starlink satellite internet service and help Iranians bypass the government’s restrictions on accessing the internet. However, experts have refused the argument on technical grounds.

Asadi said there are unconfirmed reports that the Iranian minister of industries is in favor of removing the ban and opening the legal path to import the popular phones.

iPhones account for over a third of Iran’s mobile phone imports, according to unofficial data.

Poll: 92% of Iranians want high-quality foreign cars, even at cost of binning 3mn jobs at home

The opinion poll, conducted on Monday in a live television program named Plus One, broadcast by the state-run IRIIB, touched on the thorny issue that has touched many raw nerves inside the country over the low-quality automobiles produced by mainly the two giant manufactures, Iran Khodro and Saipa.

This edition of the program put a magnifying glass on the cars produced in Iran and asked the audience if they choose “imports of high quality foreign cars” or “employment of three million people in the automobile industry and the related industries.”

The result of the survey showed that more than 92 percent of people’s priority is to import quality cars.

Currently, Iranians have very few options when it comes to buying a car. They have to choose between domestically-produced cars, notoriously known as ‘chariots of death’, which ironically come at high prices or buy used foreign cars, exports of which were banned in 2018, at least three times higher than the international price tags.

Chinese automobiles, which are viewed skeptically in the Iranian market over their lower quality compared to European, Japanese and South Korean cars, are also assembled in Iran but cost the users an arm and a leg.

Israel looking for ‘imaginary victory’ in Gaza: Hamas

Izzat Al-Rishq, a member of Hamas’s political bureau, was commenting on a speech by Netanyahu during which he insisted on keeping the Gaza-Egypt border area known as the Philadelphi Corridor under the Israeli army’s control, claiming it is necessary for achieving the war on Gaza’s goals.

“Netanyahu’s statements are the speech of a desperate person who is looking for an imaginary victory that he has not succeeded in marketing to his audience after 10 months of his Nazi war against our people in the Gaza Strip,” Al-Rishq said.

He “confirms with his statements that he is the one obstructing the exchange deal and the cease-fire agreement”, Al-Rishq continued.

He added that any delay in his “approval and commitment to what was reached on July 7 (in a cease-fire proposal) means putting the lives of more prisoners at risk,” referring to the recent deaths of six Israeli captives in Gaza, saying “Netanyahu bears responsibility for the lives and safety of the prisoners held by the resistance.”

Netanyahu had reaffirmed his intention to maintain Israeli troops in the Philadelphi Corridor.

“If we withdraw, we won’t (be able to) return there — not for 42 days and not for 42 years,” Israel’s Channel 12 quoted him as saying at a Cabinet meeting.

He was referring to the first 42-day phase of a proposed Gaza cease-fire and hostage swap deal with Hamas.

Netanyahu claimed that the Philadelphi Corridor, a demilitarized area on the border between Gaza and Egypt, is a “lifeline” for Hamas.

Contrary to his insistence on the Philadelphi Corridor, his Defense Minister, Yoav Gallant, called Sunday for the immediate convening of the Security Cabinet to reverse its decision to keep forces in the corridor.

Israel estimates that more than 100 hostages are still being held by Hamas in Gaza, some of whom are believed to have been already killed.

For months, the US, Qatar and Egypt have been trying to reach an agreement between Israel and Hamas to ensure a prisoner exchange and a cease-fire and allow humanitarian aid to enter Gaza. But mediation efforts have been stalled due to Netanyahu’s refusal to meet Hamas’s demands to stop the war.

Israel’s ongoing war on the Gaza Strip has killed nearly 40,800 Palestinians, mostly women and children, and injured over 94,200 others, according to local health authorities.

An ongoing blockade of the enclave has led to severe shortages of food, clean water and medicine, leaving much of the region in ruins.

Israel faces accusations of genocide for its actions in Gaza at the International Court of Justice.

Iran marks National Day Against British Colonialism

Born in 1882 in the southern Iranian port city of Bushehr, Rais- Ali organized popular resistance against British forces after the invasion of Iran in 1915 and etched his name in history as an Iranian independent fighter and anti-British colonialism activist.

After British forces took over Delvar, Rais-Ali’s uprising in nearby Tangestan lasted for nearly seven years in order to secure Iran’s independence.

The national hero was shot dead by a traitor on September 2, 1915, at the age of 33, when his forces were staging a counterattack against the invading British forces.

Rais-Ali’s house in Delvar has been transformed into a museum displaying some of his personal items and historic documents, along with various types of guns.