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Iran UN mission says punishing Israel for Haniyeh assassination, Gaza ceasefire among Tehran’s priorities

Hamas Ismail Haniyeh

The Iranian Mission at the UN headquarters in New York issued the statement on Wednesday while responding to a question that whether Tehran would reverse its plan to take revenge on Israel for its violation of the country’s sovereignty and territorial integrity if Hamas reached a ceasefire deal with the Zionist regime.

We have pursued two priorities simultaneously: first, establishing a durable ceasefire in Gaza and the withdrawal of the occupiers from this territory; second, punishing the aggressor for assassinating Haniyeh, preventing the recurrence of the Israeli regime’s terrorist aggression, and making the Zionists regret embarking on such a trajectory, the statement read.

Hamas and Iran have accused Israel for Haniyeh’s killing in Tehran last week. Iran has promised to retaliate, threatening “harsh punishment” for Israel. But the United States and other Western countries have been calling for de-escalation.

Haniyeh’s assassination came amid the regime’s October-present war on Gaza, which has so far claimed the lives of at least 39,600 Palestinians, mostly women, children and adolescents.

Interim FM: Iran should retaliate against Israel’s assassination of Haniyeh

Addressing an emergency ministerial meeting of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, Bagheri said Iran has always made maximum efforts to prevent further escalation of tension and conflict in the region, and that now it has no option but to respond to the aggression to deter future attacks.

“Currently, in the absence of any appropriate action by the Security Council against the aggressions and violations of the Israeli regime, the Islamic Republic of Iran has no option but to use its inherent right to legitimate defense against the aggressions of this regime.”

“Such action is necessary to prevent further aggression by this regime against the sovereignty, citizens, and territory of the Islamic Republic of Iran and it will be carried out at the appropriate time and in a proportionate manner,” he added.

The minister said the months-long genocide in Gaza and the assassination of Haniyeh are examples of the terrorist crimes of the Zionist regime in the region and beyond.

“These crimes once again proved that the foundation and life of the occupying regime of al-Quds are based on terror, crime, aggression, violation of peace, creating insecurity and instability in the region, warmongering, and genocide,” he added.

Bagheri described the Haniyeh assassination as “a blatant violation of the national sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Islamic Republic of Iran, a serious threat to regional and international peace and security, and a severe violation of the fundamental principles of international law and the United Nations Charter”.

The Iranian minister called on the United Nations Security Council to fulfill its responsibility regarding such a horrific crime and provide the grounds for the prosecution and punishment of the perpetrators and instigators of these crimes.

Bagherii said the responsibility of the US as the main supporter of the Israeli regime in committing this horrific crime should not be overlooked, as the regime could not have carried out it without the consent and intelligence support of the US.

Elsewhere in his remarks, the diplomat stated the Organization of Islamic Cooperation faces a serious test in the face of the widespread and horrific crimes of the Israeli regime against the Palestinian nation and its aggressive attacks on other countries in the region, including Lebanon, Yemen, and Syria.

The minister added the organization’s actions in response to this situation must be comprehensive and decisive to protect the Palestinian nation and land and the collective interests of the Islamic Ummah.

”The organization must once again declare its firm support for the Palestinian cause and firmly emphasize that the only solution to the current crisis in the region is to address its root causes, namely the illegal occupation of Palestine and decades of oppression and crimes against the people of this land.”

“Without ending the occupation and realizing all their rights, especially in determining their destiny and establishing an independent Palestinian state in all of this land with Al-Quds as its capital, it will not be possible.”

He stated the OIC must also reiterate that resistance against occupation using all means, including armed struggle – which has been affirmed and emphasized in dozens of United Nations General Assembly resolutions – is the inherent right of every nation under foreign occupation, and therefore the Palestinian nation, including Palestinian resistance groups, fully enjoys such a right.

The minister concluded his remarks by emphasizing that at a time when Zionist leaders openly try to justify the deliberate killing of millions of Palestinians in Gaza by starving them, the serious solidarity and practical support for the Palestinian nation is of utmost importance and urgency.

”Undoubtedly, this is a human, Islamic, and moral duty. Today, the Islamic Ummah, especially the women and children of Palestine under occupation and bombardment in Gaza, and the pure souls of about 40,000 Palestinian martyrs in Gaza are watching us. We must act responsibly and decisively in fulfilling this crucial duty.”

Biden admin faces lawsuit over sanctions against Israeli settlers regarding West Bank violence

Israeli settler

The plaintiffs, who filed the lawsuit in Amarillo, Texas, are composed of two NGOs, Texans for Israel and the Israeli nonprofit, Regavim, as well as two dual US-Israeli citizens who live in the West Bank.

The defendants named in the lawsuit include the US Department of Treasury; US Department of State; Department of Homeland Security; Office of Foreign Assets Control; Financial Crimes Enforcement Network; and their department chiefs, including Secretary of State Antony Blinken and US Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen.

In February this year, Biden filed an executive order allowing federal agencies to impose financial sanctions and visa restrictions against individuals who attack or intimidate Palestinians and destroy or dispossess Palestinians of their property.

In the order’s preamble, Biden says the “high levels of extremist settler violence, forced displacement of people and villages, and property destruction has reached intolerable levels and constitutes a serious threat to the peace, security, and stability of the West Bank and Gaza, Israel, and the broader Middle East region”.

“These actions undermine the foreign policy objectives of the United States, including the viability of a two-state solution and ensuring Israelis and Palestinians can attain equal measures of security, prosperity, and freedom”, he continued.

In the order, he further calls for a “national emergency” to deal with the threat.

In the lawsuit, the group argues that Biden’s executive order violates the plaintiffs’ free-speech rights under the US Constitution and illegally interferes with the exercise of their religious beliefs, providing a blanket sanctioning of Israelis who disagree with Biden’s policies.

“Texans for Israel’s support for Judea and Samaria settlements – by hosting speaking events or donating to Israeli advocacy groups – is an exercise of its First Amendment rights,” Israeli lawyer Eugene Kontorovich, who has been supporting the plaintiffs, wrote in a Wall Street Journal opinions article.

Texans for Israel, Kontorovich details, “provides charitable support to Jewish farmers and communities” in the occupied West Bank and organises speaking tours to Texas to “educate Americans about the importance of Jewish presence in the Holy Land”.

The extensive appropriation of land and the appropriation and destruction of property required to build and expand settlements in the occupied West Bank is illegal under international law as defined by Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention.

Kontorovich further argues that the executive order sweeps perfectly legal conduct and “unconstitutionally chills its free speech”.

The group also argues in its lawsuit that under Biden’s order, Jews living in the West Bank might wrongfully be subject to sanctions even though the individual or organisation may never have engaged in any violent or destructive activity related to those policies.

Biden’s executive order comes amid a dramatic upsurge in settler violence, violent raids by the Israeli military, and mass arrests in the occupied West Bank that have run parallel to Israel’s ten-month-long war on the Gaza Strip.

According to recent data by the United Nations office for the coordination of humanitarian affairs, settler attacks on Palestinians have increased in 2023 to their highest levels since the UN began recording this data in 2006.

More than 600 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli raids in the occupied West Bank since the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October and the war on the besieged enclave. Meanwhile, thousands of Palestinians have been arrested, according to Palestinian prisoner groups.

Settlement construction itself has hit new records since October, with some 490,000 Israeli settlers living in the West Bank alongside some three million Palestinians.

A recent report by Human Rights Watch says that “Israeli settlers have assaulted, tortured, and committed sexual violence against Palestinians, stolen their belongings and livestock, threatened to kill them if they did not leave permanently, and destroyed their homes and schools”.

Growing settlement expansion and increasing financial support for settlements by the Israeli government have also greatly undermined any viability of a two-state solution.

The Biden administration has imposed sanctions on different individuals and entities involved in violence in the West Bank over the last months.

On 1 February, sanctions were imposed on Israeli settler Yinon Levi, who led a group of Israeli settlers that assaulted Palestinian civilians and burned their properties and agricultural lands.

Last month, the US blacklisted Lehava, an umbrella group for Israeli settlers, which it described as the “largest violent extremist organisation in Israel” with more than 10,000 members.

Iran’s Pezeshkian blames US, Europe for double standards on Israeli crimes

Pezeshkian Macron

French President Emmanuel Macron called his Iranian counterpart on Wednesday to ask Tehran to show self-restraint in the wake of the Israeli assassination of Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh.

In response, Pezeshkian emphasized that Iran considers efforts to establish global peace and security and the avoidance of war as its basic principles, but will not remain silent on the violation of its national security and interests (and will act) within the framework of international law.

The Iranian president noted that the Zionist regime seeks to ignite war in the region by committing crimes against Gaza and assassinating the head of the political bureau of Hamas, who was in Tehran as a guest.

Pezeshkian further lashed out at the US and other Western governments for sponsoring the Zionist regime’s genocidal crimes and acts of terror instead of condemning them.

He reiterated that Iran reserves the right to an appropriate response to the Israeli regime.

“With a contradictory and dual approach, the US and Western countries support a regime that does not honor any international law and regulation and has not refrained from taking any criminal act in the region,” the Iranian president noted, adding the unfortunate paradox is that the Westerners call on the countries that have been victims of Israeli crimes to exercise self-restraint and avoid retaliatory response.

If the US and other Western governments are truly trying to prevent regional war and insecurity, they will have to prove their intention by halting support and arms sales to the Zionist regime and forcing Israel to stop genocidal attacks on Gaza and agree on a ceasefire, Pezeshkian told Macron.

Haniyeh, who was in Tehran to attend the new Iranian president’s swearing-in ceremony, was martyred in an Israeli operation in the early hours of July 31.

Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei has warned the Israeli regime of a “harsh response” for Haniyeh’s assassination, calling it the Islamic Republic’s duty to avenge the Palestinian resistance leader’s blood.

Iranian taekwondo athlete Nematzadeh accepted at Tehran University without entrance exam

The university president Mohammad Moghimi said in a statement on Thursday Nematzadeh’s request for being approved as a university student has been accepted.

Nematzadeh won a bronze medal in the 49-kg category at the Paris 2024 Olympics after defeating her Saudi rival Dunya Abutaleb 2-0 on Wednesday.

She is the second Iranian woman to win an Olympic medal in the country’s history.

After winning the bout, Nematzadeh asked the Iranian president to facilitate her approval as a university student without an entrance exam, as she was preparing for the Olympics.

The president of Tehran University explained that the educational regulations of the Iranian Ministry of Science allows medal winners to study at university without an entrance exam.

US and UK ambassadors to skip Nagasaki bombing memorial after Israel disinvited

The Russian and Belarusian ambassadors have also been excluded from the event this Friday by Japanese authorities.

The Nagasaki Peace Memorial Ceremony is intended to mark the 79th anniversary of the US atomic bomb attacks on Nagasaki and Hiroshima that killed tens of thousands of Japanese civilians, with many more later dying from radiation poisoning.

The attacks in August 1945 preceded Japan’s unconditional surrender to the US and the end of the Second World War.

Julia Longbottom, the UK’s ambassador to Japan, told local reporters that Israel is exercising self-defence in Gaza and should not be treated in the same way as Russia for its invasion of Ukraine.

In late July, the UK dropped its objection to an International Criminal Court application for arrest warrants targeting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for war crimes and crimes against humanity.

The American embassy announced that Rahm Emanuel, the US ambassador, does not want to politicise the Nagasaki event by attending.

Emanuel, who was White House chief of staff from 2009 to 2010 under Barack Obama, was born to an Israeli father who was at one point a member of Jewish paramilitary group Irgun.

It is understood that Emanuel will attend a separate memorial service for the victims at a temple in Tokyo, while the US consulate will send a different representative to the Nagasaki event instead.

Nagasaki’s mayor, Shiro Suzuki, said last week that Israel was not invited to the memorial event because of “the risk of unexpected incidents during the ceremony”.

“I would like to emphasise that this decision was not based on political considerations, but rather on our desire to hold the ceremony to commemorate the victims of the atomic bombings in a peaceful and solemn atmosphere, and to ensure that the ceremony goes smoothly.”

But Gilad Cohen, Israel’s ambassador in Tokyo, hit back on Monday, accusing the mayor of “inventing” security concerns.

“I am really surprised by him hijacking this ceremony for his political motivations.”

Cohen added that Iran has been invited to the ceremony, stating the move was the “opposite message that should be sent to the free world and to civilisation”.

The Israeli ambassador attended a memorial event in Hiroshima on Tuesday.

Nagasaki’s mayor said on Thursday it was “unfortunate” that US and British ambassadors have refused to attend the ceremony marking the 1945 atomic bombing of the Japanese city because Israel was snubbed.

But he defended the decision not to invite Israel to Friday’s annual event, repeating that it was “not political” but to avoid possible protests related to the Gaza conflict.

“It is unfortunate that they have communicated to us that their ambassadors are not able to attend,” Suzuki told reporters.

“We made a comprehensive decision not for political reasons. We want to conduct a smooth ceremony in a peaceful and solemn environment.”

During Israel’s ongoing war on Gaza, multiple ministers and officials have advocated using a nuclear bomb on Gaza, turning the enclave into a “slaughterhouse” and “erasing the besieged strip from the face of the earth”.

South Africa has argued these statements are evidence of genocidal intent in its ongoing case at the International Court of Justice accusing Israel of genocide in Gaza, a charge which Israel denies.

The death toll in Gaza since October 2023 has topped 39,600, with more than 91,700 wounded and an estimated 10,000 missing, likely dead and buried under rubble.

According to the medical journal Lancet, the death toll could exceed more than 186,000 when all war-related deaths are taken into account.

Health officials report that around 70 percent of the victims in Gaza are children and women.

Iran’s 19-year-old Mobina Nematzadeh wins Taekwondo bronze at Olympics

Nematzadeh, 19, beat Saudi Arabia’s taekwondo athlete 2-0 in the bronze-medal match.

She had defeated Michelle TauIn 2-0 from Lesotho in round of 16 and Adriana Cerezo Iglesias of Spain, the 2020 Tokyo Olympics silver medalist and 2023 world bronze medalist, 2-0 in quarterfinals but lost to China’s Guo Qing in the semifinals.

Thailand’s Panipak Wongpattanakit won the gold medal, beating Guo Qing, who claimed silver.

Nematzadeh became the second woman in history to have won a medal for Iran in Olympics.

Kimia Alizadeh had won a bronze medal for Iran in the taekwondo 57 kg weight class at the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

Iranian wrestler grabs country’s first gold medal at Olympics

Saravi defeated his Armenian opponent 4-1 in the final match of the 97-kilogram weight category late Wednesday.

Cuban Gabriel Rosillo and Kyrgyzstan’s Uzur Dzhuzupbekov won bronze medal in the weight class.

Iran’s Greco-Roman wrestler Amin Mirzazadeh had already won a bronze medal in the 130 kg on Tuesday night.

Ukrainian soldiers crossed into Russian territory

Russia Ukraine War

A report from one Russia military blogger suggested Ukrainian forces had advanced northwards, possibly as far as nine miles (15km) from the border, along a highway north of the border village of Sverdlikovo and near a major natural gas transmission hub, but this could not be verified.

Official and unofficial Russian sources reported that a force of several hundred soldiers had crossed a lightly defended part of the border on Tuesday morning, in what appears to be one of the largest incursions into Russia since the war began in February 2022. Russia’s defence ministry announced on Wednesday that the attack was being neutralised.

It had claimed Russian forces had repelled the raid on Tuesday, but acknowledged at lunchtime on Wednesday that fighting was ongoing. It added they had used air and missile strikes and artillery fire against the invaders, inflicting hundreds of casualties and knocking out tens of armoured vehicles.

In televised remarks at the start of a meeting with members of the Russian government, Putin described the raid as a major provocation. He later met Russia’s top military figures. The chief of general staff, Valery Gerasimov, told Putin that Russian forces were battling Ukrainian forces near the border and would push them back to the border.

The acting governor of Kursk oblast, Alexei Smirnov, said he had introduced a state of emergency in the border region, though it was unclear what measures that entailed. Several thousand civilians were evacuated from frontline areas and 300 people were housed in temporary accommodation overnight.

Authorities in Ukraine’s northeastern Sumy region, just across the border from Kursk, also announced they were evacuating about 6,000 people.

Ukrainian officials have remained quiet as the incursion has developed, anxious perhaps not to appear triumphant or give away too much information about their intentions.

Russia announced the attack began at about 8am on Tuesday morning, when Ukrainian troops crossed the border between the villages of Nikolayevo-Daryino and Oleshnya, with the apparent intention of heading north and east.

The attack is most likely to be an attempt by Ukraine, whose defences are stretched on the eastern Donbas front, to divert some Russian forces to defend a part of the frontline that has been largely inactive since early 2022.

Critics in Ukraine, however, argue that such assaults serve no long-term military purpose. Anti-Kremlin Russian groups launched attacks from Ukraine into Belgorod and Kursk regions in March, but were repelled with no strategic gain.

Information is scant, but this time the operation appears to be an attack by Ukraine’s military rather than Russian opposition groups. Russia said it was led by Kyiv’s 22nd mechanised brigade.

Fighting was taking place in and around the town of Sudzha, about 6 miles from the border. A local Russian Telegram channel released a short video showing bombed out rural homes, which it said demonstrated the “situation today”.

The main operational gas pipeline into Europe runs near Sudzha, where a metering station monitors the reduced Russian supplies to countries such as Austria and Hungary. Ukraine has allowed gas to continue flowing through the pipeline as part of a contract that expires at the end of 2024.

Other online speculation suggested that a target of the incursion could be the Kursk nuclear power plant, but the facility is 35 miles from the border and a long way from what a force of several hundred – or thousand – would be capable of.

Russia has been pouring soldiers into Ukraine. Its force in the country is estimated at about 520,000, two to three times the size of the original invasion. Ukraine, meanwhile, is finding it challenging to mobilise fresh recruits and is being pushed back in certain parts of the eastern front, particularly the central Donbas towards Pokrovsk.

Commenting on the attack, Putin stated that the incursion was yet another large-scale provocation undertaken by Ukraine, which he stressed has again resorted to indiscriminately targeting civilians.

Ukrainian forces “are conducting indiscriminate fire from various types of weapons, including rocket weapons, at civilian buildings, homes and ambulances”, Putin added at a government meeting on Wednesday.

Turkey submits request to join ICJ genocide case against Israel over Gaza war

ICJ

Turkey had announced in May that it had decided to join the case – formally known as submitting a declaration of official intervention – and would make the necessary legal preparations.

Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan said it had made the formal request on Wednesday.

“The international community must do its part to stop the genocide and exert the necessary pressure on Israel and its supporters,” Fidan wrote on X.

“Turkey will make every effort to do so,” he added.

The court will make the final decision of admission to the case.

South Africa brought its case against Israel in December, accusing it of state-led genocide in the besieged enclave.

In January, the ICJ ordered Israel to refrain from any acts that could fall under the Genocide Convention and to ensure its troops commit no genocidal acts against Palestinians.

Israel has repeatedly dismissed the case’s accusations of genocide as baseless, arguing in court that its operations in Gaza are self-defence and targeted Hamas fighters who attacked Israel on Oct. 7 last year and killed 1,200 Israelis and foreigners in a single day.

In 10 months of subsequent warfare, more than 39,600 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza, hundreds of thousands displaced, and most of the enclave laid to waste as a humanitarian crisis has unfolded.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan stated in January that Turkey was providing documents for the case at the ICJ, also known as the World Court.

Hamas has welcomed Turkey’s decision to join South Africa’s genocide case against Israel at the ICJ.

“We call on the countries of the world, especially the Arab and Islamic countries, to take an immediate step in also joining the case brought before the ICJ,” Hamas said in a statement, adding that it was vital to work towards establishing a “united front” to end Israel’s occupation and its threat to the region’s peace and security.

Turkey became the seventh country formally seeking to join the case at the UN top court after Colombia, Nicaragua, Spain, Libya, Palestine and Mexico.