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Data: Iran’s non-oil exports rise 8.3 percent

Iran Trade

The spokesperson for the Trade Promotion Commission of Iran’s House of Industry, Mine and Trade, Rouhollah Latifi, said on Sunday that Iran exported $17.5 billion worth of non-oil goods in the four-month period, marking an 8.3 percent growth compared to the same period last year.

Breaking down the figures in the four months, he said the highest growth was 14 percent in the Iranian month of Khordad (May 21 to June 20), when the country’s non-oil exports amounted to $663 million.

Latifi expressed hope that the incoming administration of President Massoud Pezeshkian would continue the current growth rate.

Creating proper ground for continuous and inexpensive transportation, more active economic diplomacy, greater cooperation between the state and private sectors, facilitating financial exchanges, removing foreign exchange barriers inside and outside the country, and pushing the country to produce more value-added goods are some of the proposals by Latifi which he said could lead to further increase in exports.

Beirut flights cancelled or delayed amid fears of Israeli military operation against Hezbollah

Lufthansa, Swiss and Eurowings of the Lufthansa Group have decided to suspend their flights from and to Beirut up to and including Aug. 5 due to the current developments in the Middle East, according to a group spokesperson.

Air France and low-cost carrier Transavia France have also suspended their flights between Paris and Beirut due to the “security situation” in Lebanon, a spokesman for the companies stated on Monday.

Lebanon’s Middle East Airlines (MEA) also announced disruptions to its schedule were related to insurance risks.

The rocket strike in the Golan Heights on Saturday has added to concerns that Israel and the powerful group could engage in a full-scale war.

Israel’s security cabinet on Sunday authorised the government to respond to the attack. Hezbollah denied any responsibility for the rocket strike, the deadliest in the occupied territories since the start of the war in the Gaza Strip.

Beirut airport’s flight information board and flight tracking website Flightradar24 show Turkish Airlines also cancelled two flights overnight on Sunday.

Turkey-based budget carrier SunExpress, Turkish Airlines subsidiary AJet, Greek carrier Aegean Airlines, Ethiopian Air and MEA have also cancelled flights scheduled to land in Beirut on Monday, Flightradar24 shows.

Beirut-Rafic Hariri International Airport is Lebanon’s only airport. It has been targeted in the country’s civil war, and previous fighting with Israel, including in the last war between Hezbollah and Israel in 2006.

On Sunday, MEA said it had delayed the departure of some flights set to land in Beirut overnight. Additional delays to flights landing on Monday were then announced due to “technical reasons related to the distribution of insurance risks for aircraft between Lebanon and other destinations”, MEA added.

Lufthansa has already suspended night-time flights to and from Beirut for July due to “current developments” in the Middle East.

Hezbollah and Israel have been exchanging deadly fire since early October last year, shortly after Tel Aviv launched a genocidal war against the Gaza Strip following a surprise operation by its resistance groups. The group has vowed to keep up its retaliatory attacks as long as Israel continues its Gaza war.

Hezbollah officials have repeatedly stated they do not want a war with Israel while stressing that they are prepared in case it occurs.

UN says only 14% of Gaza not under Israel’s evacuation orders

Gaza War

In a post on his X account, Lazzarini said the Israeli regime issues evacuation orders forcing people to flee every other day.

These orders have created “havoc” and “panic” among the people of Palestine in Gaza, he added.

Quite often, Gazans are given a few hours to pack whatever they can and start all over again, “mostly on foot or on a crowded donkey cart for those who can afford it.”

“Almost everyone in Gaza has been impacted by these orders. Many were forced to flee on average once a month since the war began nine months ago,” Lazzarini wrote.

A man recently told the UNRWA teams that Israel had forced him to flee twice within 10 hours, he said.

The UN official emphasized that the Palestinian people continue to search for safety as the most precious and the most nonexistent thing.

He added: “This evacuation tactic only brings more misery, fear and suffering for people who have nothing to do with this war.”

“The people of Gaza are not pinballs or chess pieces, they are people,” Lazzarini stated.

Last Tuesday, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in the occupied Palestinian territories announced that the Israeli military had ordered the evacuation of, or designated as “no-go zones” more than 80% of the besieged Gaza Strip.

Israel launched the war on Gaza on October 7 after the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas waged the surprise Operation Al-Aqsa Storm against the occupying entity in response to the Israeli regime’s decades-long campaign of bloodletting and devastation against Palestinians.

Tel Aviv has also blocked water, food, and electricity to Gaza, plunging the coastal strip into a humanitarian crisis.

Since the start of the offensive, the Tel Aviv regime has killed more than 39,300 Palestinians and injured over 90,800. Thousands more are also missing and presumed dead under rubble.

Iran says has reined in Daesh infiltrators from Syria

Daesh

Esmail Khatib said on Monday the stray Daesh militants from Syria have been nabbed with the planning by the security apparatuses and the cooperation between them including the interior ministry, intelligence ministry as well as police and armed forces.

He explained, “Following the incidents in Syria and after the subsiding of the militancy in the country, naturally, we had to deal with the wandering Daesh militants who were pushed towards us with the financial support of some countries that are hostile to Iran.”

The intelligence minister also said several elements linked to the terrorist group, who were responsible for clashes with Iranian security forces on the border, have recently been arrested.

France arrests teen for online threats against Israel’s president: Report

French Police

The suspect, who resides in the commune of Ivry-sur-Seine just south of Paris, made hateful remarks on X (formerly Twitter) early this week, calling for a “mercy attack” on the Israeli president, the investigators have found.

Anti-terrorism operatives spent several days trying to find the suspect, eventually tracking him down to Isere, near Grenoble, where he has been on vacation. The teenager was taken into custody and has reportedly already admitted to making the threat.

“It is illusory to believe that since you can hide behind a nickname, you cannot be found,” a source close to the investigation said.

Separately, French authorities have launched an investigation into death threats allegedly received by at least three Israeli athletes participating in the Paris Olympics, local prosecutors said on Sunday.

The alleged threats came after the personal data of a number of athletes was leaked online on Friday. The authorities are currently working to remove the information from the internet, prosecutors added.

Negotiators say Netanyahu softened position on Gaza for sake of ceasefire: Report

Gaza War

On Friday, Egyptian broadcaster Al Qahera News reported, citing a senior source, that Egypt, the United States, Qatar and Israel would hold a meeting in Rome on Sunday on a truce in the besieged enclave.

Israeli officials told the newspaper that Netanyahu was the main reason for “Israel’s hardened stance at the Rome talks”. According to the daily, Netanyahu’s maneuverability is limited by his right-wing government, in which some officials oppose the truce. According to the sources, Israel wants to maintain military checkpoints along the strategic Gaza highway to prevent Hamas from smuggling weapons into the blockaded territory.

On Friday, Hamas spokesman in Lebanon Walid Kilani told Sputnik that the movement rejected Israel’s new conditions for a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip, which had been put forward by Netanyahu. Earlier on Friday, media reported that Tel Aviv was seeking changes to the truce plan, which would complicate a final deal with Hamas. Israel was reportedly demanding that displaced Palestinians be screened when returning to the northern part of the coastal enclave after the truce began.

Another stumbling block was Israel’s demand to retain control over the Gaza border with Egypt. This point did not suit the Egyptian authorities.

Israel and Hamas resumed indirect negotiations on a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip in July, which is conditional on the release of Israeli hostages from Hamas’ captivity. The talks were at a standstill for more than a month after US President Joe Biden announced a new plan to resolve the conflict on behalf of Israel. Biden announced in late May that Israel had proposed a ceasefire deal, but despite Hamas leadership responding favorably an agreement was never reached and Netanyahu pledged to continue the war until Hamas was destroyed.

Israeli negotiators and mediators have held several rounds of talks in Qatar’s Doha and Egypt’s Cairo in recent weeks, but no breakthrough has been achieved.

Flouting a United Nations Security Council resolution demanding an immediate ceasefire, Israel has faced international condemnation amid its continued brutal offensive on Gaza since an Oct. 7 attack by Hamas.

More than 39,300 Palestinians have since been killed, mostly women and children, and over 90,800 injured, according to local health authorities.

Over nine months into the Israeli onslaught, vast tracts of Gaza lie in ruins amid a crippling blockade of food, clean water and medicine.

Kremlin says Putin ready to meet with Iran’s Pezeshkian in October

Kremlin

“The Iranian side has an invitation and we hope that the new president comes to the summit. We will be happy to see him, and President Putin is getting ready for the upcoming meeting,” the Kremlin official said.

Earlier, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Andrey Rudenko told TASS that Moscow and Tehran had put the finishing touches on a comprehensive cooperation treaty, setting the stage for the signing of this historic document.

In turn, IRNA reported that Iran’s new president told his Russian counterpart in a telephone conversation about his readiness to sign this treaty at the Kazan summit in October.

US raises Ukraine war in talks with India

Russia Ukraine War

The US official met with his Indian counterpart at a gathering of the so-called ‘Quad’ nations – Australia, India, Japan and the US – in Tokyo on Sunday. During the discussion, Blinken “underscored the importance of realizing a just and enduring peace for Ukraine consistent with the UN Charter”, the State Department announced.

The meeting came ahead of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s proposed visit to Ukraine later this month, the details of which are currently being finalized, according to an official cited by The Hindu daily newspaper.

The trip is seen as an attempt to balance New Delhi’s ties with the West, which was reportedly frustrated by Modi’s meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow earlier this month. Russia was chosen as Modi’s first bilateral visit after he assumed office for a third term.

After the meeting with Blinken, Jaishankar noted on X (formerly Twitter) that bilateral ties are progressing “steadily”, but did not mention Ukraine.

The Ukraine conflict did feature in a joint statement released after the Quad foreign ministers’ meeting in Tokyo, which expressed “deepest concern” over the hostilities and their “terrible and tragic humanitarian consequences”.

The ‘Quad’ is an informal grouping largely seen as a Washington-led initiative aimed at balancing China’s influence in the Indo-Pacific.

India has so far refused to condemn Russia or downgrade ties over the Ukraine conflict, despite pressure from the West. Jaishankar has repeatedly stated that New Delhi aims to balance its ties with both the West and Moscow, also stressing that peace can be achieved through dialogue and diplomacy. Last month, New Delhi refused to sign the final document of a Swiss-hosted ‘peace summit’ on Ukraine, to which Russia was not invited.

During his visit to Moscow, Modi again stressed that there is no “peace on the battlefield” and that solutions “can only be found through dialogue”.

Ukraine’s President Vladimir Zelensky reacted angrily to Modi’s meeting with Putin, which he described as a “devastating blow to peace efforts”. New Delhi reportedly summoned the Ukrainian ambassador over the remarks.

Modi’s visit to Russia came under similar scrutiny in Washington. US State Department official Donald Lu told a congressional hearing last week that the White House had been disappointed by the “symbolism” and “timing” of Modi’s visit. Senior officials in the administration of President Joe Biden were also “frustrated” that the visit coincided with a NATO 75th anniversary summit in the US capital, the Washington Post reported.

Responding to the criticism, New Delhi told the West to recognize the reality of multipolarity, and that countries have “freedom of choice” in terms of their engagements on the global stage.

Israel says it struck Hezbollah sites deep inside Lebanon

Israel Fighter Jet

The Israeli military said on Sunday its jets bombed weapons depots and infrastructure belonging to Hezbollah in Bekaa Valley in eastern Lebanon, in Shabriha and Burj al-Shemali near the southern city of Tyre, and the villages of Kfar Kila, Rab el-Thalathine, Khiam and Tayr Harfa.

Israel’s Foreign Ministry on Sunday blamed Hezbollah for the rocket attack on a football ground that killed 12 people.

“Saturday’s massacre constitutes the crossing of all red lines by Hezbollah. This is not an army fighting another army, rather it is a terrorist organisation deliberately shooting at civilians,” the ministry said in a statement.

Hezbollah has “categorically denied” responsibility for the attack. There have been unconfirmed claims that a failed Israeli interceptor missile may have caused the incident.

Iran, Hezbollah’s regional ally, warned Israel against any “new adventure concerning Lebanon” using the Majdal Shams incident as an “excuse”.

“After 10 months of mass killing in the Gaza Strip and mass murder of Palestinian children and women, the apartheid Israeli regime is trying to distract public opinion and global attention from its wide-ranging crimes in Palestine using a fabricated scenario,” Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Nasser Kanaani said in a statement on Sunday, adding that Israel will be responsible for any moves that will further destabilise the region.

United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken stated there was “every indication” that Hezbollah was behind the rocket strike, renewing Washington’s backing for “Israel’s right to defend its citizens from terrorist attacks”.

Speaking at a news conference in Tokyo alongside the US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on Sunday, he said the US does not want to see the conflict escalate following the Majdal Shams incident.

“We are determined to bring the Gaza conflict to a close. It’s gone on for far too long. It’s cost far too many lives. We want to see Israelis, we want to see Palestinians, we want to see Lebanese live free from the threat of conflict and violence,” Blinken continued, adding that the US is maintaining contact with the Israeli government.

In a video message from the site of the attack on Sunday morning, Israeli military chief Herzi Halevi reiterated the claim that an Iranian-made Falaq rocket carrying a 53kg (116 pounds) warhead hit the football field.

“This is a Hezbollah rocket. And whoever fires such a rocket into an urban area wants to kill civilians, wants to kill children,” he stated, adding that the Israeli military is “increasing our readiness for the next stage of fighting in the north” as it keeps attacking the Gaza Strip to deadly effect.

He and other commanders met Druze leaders and community members in the area.

The United Nations, the US and the European Union condemned the attack. The UN and the EU urged all parties to exercise “restraint” to prevent an all-out war, with the 27-member bloc’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell calling for an “independent international investigation”.

More than 350 people, including about 100 civilians have been killed in repeated Israeli attacks on Lebanon since the start of the war on Gaza, according to the UN. Israeli officials say more than 30 people, including 10 civilians, have been killed in attacks originating from Lebanon.

Lebanese Foreign Minister Abdallah Bou Habib has stated a flurry of diplomatic activity is under way to contain an expected Israeli response against Hezbollah.

The United States, France and others were trying to prevent a regional conflict, he said in an interview with local broadcaster al-Jadeed.

“Israel will escalate in a limited way and Hezbollah will respond in a limited way … These are the assurances we’ve received,” Bou Habib added.

Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati has also announced in a statement that “talks are ongoing with international, European and Arab sides to protect Lebanon and ward off dangers”.

Fires continue to burn Iran’s southwestern forests

Wildfires Iranian forests

The Director General of Natural Resources and Watershed Management in Iran’s Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province, Saeed Javidbakht, stated that forest rangers were dispatched to the area immediately upon receiving the report and, together with local forces, have been striving to combat the fire.

Despite their efforts, the operation to control the fire is still ongoing.

He further explained that the fire is spreading in Bahrehana and Chah Talkhab-e Olya due to strong winds and dense vegetation.

Javidbakh noted that the recent spate of wildfires in Basht’s forests and pastures has left the rangers extremely exhausted.

Javidbakht emphasized the need for fresh manpower, adding that extreme heat, difficult terrain, and strong winds are making it challenging to control the fire in these areas.