Tag: Iran

  • I won’t wait forever for Iran’s response on nuclear deal – Biden

    I won’t wait forever for Iran’s response on nuclear deal – Biden

    U.S. President Joe Biden, on Thursday, said that the country would not wait forever for Tehran’s response on returning to a 2015 nuclear deal.

    He made the statement following a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid.

    The U.S. and Iran have been holding indirect talks in an attempt to revive the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) agreement under which Iran limited its nuclear programme in return for relief from economic sanctions.

    “We’ve laid out for the leadership of Iran what we’re willing to accept in order to get back into the JCPOA.

    “We’re waiting for their response. When that will come, I’m not certain, but we are not going to wait forever.’’

  • Drama as Saudi athlete is disqualified for kick to Iranian opponent’s head

    Iran’s Sajad Ganjzadeh won the men’s +75kg kumite Olympic gold in karate after high drama at the famed Budokan arena on Saturday.

    Tareg Hamedi of Saudi Arabia was leading 3-0 in under 10 seconds but was then disqualified for a kick to the head of Ganjzadeh.

    The Iranian was knocked out and was taken away on a stretcher, and the judges decided the kick did not demonstrate adequate control.

    Ganjzadeh recovered later to get his medal.

    “I don’t exactly know what happened. I know that I was behind, and I was trying to catch up, and just by the end of it I remember that just after the hit, I was on the stretcher,” he said.

    “When I woke up, when I was getting treated, I remember my coach telling me, ‘you won’. That’s all I remember.

    “Overall my health is fine. I had a very severe pain in my head, I had a very bad headache. I’m glad to win this medal, but I’m also sorry for my opponent for what happened.”

    Egypt’s Feryal Abdelaziz also won the women’s +61kg kumite gold, beating European and world champion Iryna Zaretska of Azerbaijan 2-0.

    Karate is making its debut at the Tokyo Games.

  • Iran’s new hardline president rules out meeting U.S. President

    Iran’s new hardline president rules out meeting U.S. President

    Iran’s newly elected President Ebrahim Raisi has declined the opprtunity t0 meet U.S. President Joe Biden.

    During the first news conference after his election win, he said he could not imagine meeting Biden, as he ignored the 2015 nuclear deal by supporting “inhuman sanctions” against the Iranian population.

    “Biden has to lift the sanctions first to make the United States look credible again in Iran.’’

    The 60-year-old won Friday’s presidential elections with 60 per cent of the vote as the top candidate of the hardliners camp.

    After most competitive candidates were weeded out by the electoral body, Raisi stood practically unopposed for election.

    Participation was at a record low at below 50 per cent, which observers said was a move to boycott the election.

    Raisi, an arch-conservative cleric who is close to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and is accused of human rights abuses, is set to be inaugurated in August.

    Negotiations have been going on for weeks on reviving the 2015 nuclear deal which has been in tatters since former U.S. President Donald Trump pulled the country out of the accord in 2018.

    However, it has not shown signs of breakthrough after six rounds of talks in Vienna and it remains unclear how Raisi’s win would affect them.

  • Iraq issues arrest warrant for Trump over killing of Iran’s General Soleimani

    Iraq issues arrest warrant for Trump over killing of Iran’s General Soleimani

    An arrest warrant was issued Thursday for outgoing U.S. President Donald Trump in connection with the killing of an Iranian general and a powerful Iraqi militia leader last year, Iraq’s judiciary said.

    The warrant was issued by a judge in Baghdad’s investigative court tasked with probing the Washington-directed drone strike that killed Gen. Qassim Soleimani and Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, the court’s media office said. They were killed outside the capital’s airport last January.

    Al-Muhandis was the deputy leader of the state-sanctioned Popular Mobilization Forces, an umbrella group composed of an array of militias, including Iran-backed groups, formed to fight the Islamic State group.

    Soleimani headed the expeditionary Quds force of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps.

    The arrest warrant was for a charge of premeditated murder, which carries the death penalty on conviction. It is unlikely to be carried out but symbolic in the waning days of Trump’s presidency.

    The decision to issue the warrant “was made after the judge recorded the statements of the claimants from the family of Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis,” according to a statement from the Supreme Judicial Council. The investigation into the killings is ongoing, the court said.

    The killings sparked a diplomatic crisis and strained U.S.-Iraq ties, drawing the ire of Shiite political lawmakers who passed a non-binding resolution to pressure the government to oust foreign troops from the country.

    Iran-backed groups have since stepped up attacks against the American presence in Iraq, leading to threats by Washington to shutter its Baghdad diplomatic mission.

  • Iran seeks warrant to arrest Trump over killing of Soleimani a year ago

    Iran seeks warrant to arrest Trump over killing of Soleimani a year ago

    Tehran has applied to Interpol for an international arrest warrant for U.S. President Donald Trump in connection with the murder of the Iranian top general Qassem Soleimani a year ago.

    Iran’s justice spokesman Gholam Hossein Ismaili disclosed this on Iranian state television on Tuesday

    “In this regard, we have filed a ‘red notice’ at Interpol against 48 people, including Trump, U.S. commanders, and Pentagon representatives as well as U.S. troops in the region,” Ismaili said.

    There is constructive cooperation with neighbouring Iraq on the issue, the spokesman added.

    Interpol, founded in 1923, coordinates policing operations for its 194 member states.

    A country can use the “red notice” to request other countries to track down and arrest a person.

    On Jan. 3, 2020, on Trump’s instructions, the U.S. Army killed Soleimani, who was on a visit to Iraq with a rocket attack near Baghdad airport.

    The influential Iraqi militia leader Abu Mahdi al-Mohandes, the deputy head of Iraq’s Hashd al-Shaabi militia, was also killed.

    Soleimani was the commander of the elite Quds Force, part of an elite unit of the Iranian armed forces.

    He coordinated the activities of militias loyal to Iran in Iraq and other countries.

    President Hassan Rowhani called Soleimani a national hero and he has become a legend in the region after his assassination by the U.S.

    Tehran will avenge his murder “in due course” and at the same time take legal action against Trump and the Pentagon, Rowhani said.

  • Iran dismisses Trump’s tweet that Tehran behind attack on U.S. Embassy in Baghdad

    Iran dismisses Trump’s tweet that Tehran behind attack on U.S. Embassy in Baghdad

    Iran’s Foreign Minister on Thursday dismissed U.S. President Donald Trump’s allegations that Iran was behind the recent rocket attack on the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad.

    “Putting your own citizens at risk abroad won’t divert attention from catastrophic failures at home,’’ Foreign Minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, tweeted.

    Trump, without giving evidence, said on Twitter on Wednesday that the rockets that landed in Baghdad’s heavily fortified Green Zone on Sunday, in an attack targeting the U.S. Embassy, were from Iran and “we hear the chatter of additional attacks against Americans in Iraq’’.

    “Some friendly health advice to Iran: If one American is killed, I will hold Iran responsible. Think it over,’’ Trump said.

    The Iraqi military blamed the attack, which caused some minor damage, on an “outlaw group.”

    Top U.S. national security officials agreed on Wednesday on a proposed range of options to present to Trump aimed at deterring any attack on U.S. military or diplomatic personnel in Iraq, a senior administration official told Reuters without describing the content of the options or say whether they included military action.

  • ‘We don’t care who becomes U.S. president’

    ‘We don’t care who becomes U.S. president’

    Iran does not care who will take the office in Washington in the upcoming U.S. presidential election in November, Iran’s Foreign Ministry Spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said on Monday.

    What matters is “Washington should reverse its hostile policies against Tehran,” Khatibzadeh told Tasnim news agency.

    “The UN Security Council Resolution 2231 and the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (the JCPOA),” should be honoured by the U.S., Khatibzadeh was quoted as saying.

    Besides, Washington should admit its mistakes of policies vis-a-vis Iran, stop the “economic war and terrorism” against Iran, return to its JCPOA commitments, and make up for the damage caused by its withdrawal from the Iranian 2015 nuclear deal, he stressed.

    Earlier, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Zarif also said that “it is not important for us who will win the upcoming election in the U.S., but it is important for us to see Washington rectify its approach towards Tehran.”

  • At Least 140 medical workers die of COVID-19 – Ministry

    At Least 140 medical workers die of COVID-19 – Ministry

    At least 140 doctors and other health workers have died of COVID-19 in Iran since the start of the pandemic, Health Ministry spokeswoman Sima Lari said on Wednesday.

    “Our country has been fighting against the coronavirus pandemic for about five months. The medical staff made continuous efforts to take control of this disease, continuing to treat patients.

    “About 5,000 our doctors and medical personnel contracted COVID-19. Unfortunately, 140 of them died,” Lari said, as broadcast by the IRINN channel.

    According to her, Iran has registered 199 COVID-19 fatalities over the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of coronavirus-related deaths to 13,410.

    More than 264,500 cases of COVID-19 have been registered in Iran since the start of the pandemic.

    Earlier in the day, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani admitted that the country was currently facing a second wave of the outbreak, adding that Iran will overcome this crisis thanks to a collective effort.

    Over the past month, the epidemiological situation in the country has worsened, both in terms of the average daily infection rate and the number of coronavirus-related deaths.

  • BREAKING: Iran secures warrant, requests Interpol to arrest Trump

    Iran has issued an arrest warrant and requested the Interpol to help arrest and detain President of the United States (US), Donald Trump.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Iran’s prosecutor, Ali Alqasimehr made this known on Monday, as reported by the state-run IRNA news agency.

    According to Alqasimehr, Iran issued the arrest warrant for Trump and 30 others it believed carried out a drone strike that killed General Qassem Soleimani in January.

    The Tehran prosecutor reportedly told IRNA news agency that Trump and the 30 others are to face “murder and terrorism charges”.

    Alqasimehr was also quoted as saying that Iran requested a “red notice” be put out for Trump and the others.

    While Alqasimehr did not name the 30 others, he stressed that Iran would continue to pursue Trump’s prosecution even after his presidency ends.

    The development underscores the heightened tensions between Iran and the US since Trump unilaterally withdrew America from Tehran’s nuclear deal with world powers.

    The US killed Soleimani, who oversaw the Revolutionary Guard’s expeditionary Quds Force, and others in the January strike near Baghdad International Airport.

    It came after months of incidents raising tensions between the two countries and ultimately saw Iran retaliate with a ballistic missile strike targeting American troops in Iraq.

  • Taking analgesics for another person’s headache – Owei Lakemfa

    By Owei Lakemfa.

    The last of five Iranian ships carrying petroleum products to Venezuela berthed safely this week after repeated United States (US) threats to militarily stop them. The first ship, Fortune, had arrived on Saturday May 23, escorted by Venezuelan Navy to ward off possible American attacks. It was followed by the vessels, Bella, Bering and Clavel.

    Apart from threatening the ships as they sailed from Iran, America had dispatched destroyers, littoral combat ships, Poseidon maritime planes and Air Force surveillance aircraft off the Venezuelan coast ostensibly to check drug smuggling but making it clear it could use them against the Iranian ships.

    But Iranian President Hassan Rouhani had warned: “Any pirate-like action by the U.S. Navy against the Iranian fuel shipments to Venezuela would trigger a harsh response.”

    The US was willing to spark off an international conflagration on the bizarre basis that it does not approve trade between the two sovereign countries. Secondly, the Americans claim that since they have imposed sanctions on both countries, they have lost the legitimate right to trade even between themselves. Thirdly, it says the Iranian supply of petroleum products to Venezuela amounted to an intervention in that country which is against its 19th Century Monroe Declaration under which US rejects outside intervention in the Western Hemisphere, a region it regards as its “backyard” This, the Trump administration says, gives it the right to militarily attack the ships. The Commander of U.S. Southern Command, Admiral Craig Faller in buttressing this inane position claimed Iran’s objective was to “gain positional advantage in our neighborhood in a way that would counter U.S. interests.”

    Fourthly, America says it is angry that Iran is trying to help Venezuela restart its 310,000 barrel-per-day Cardon refinery, a claim Iran denies. But what is criminal in Venezuela working to end fuel shortages and bringing relief to its people?

    Fifthly, the US childishly wails that the petroleum products were stolen by the Iranian government from the Iranian people and given illegally to Venezuela. If this weird claim were true, how is it America’s business? How is it in America’s place to cry for Iranians who in the first place have not reported their oil stolen? How can it be America’s business to take analgesics for the headache it claims Iranians have? If America were a human beign, I would have suggested its sees a psychiatrist because its actions and postulations do not make any sense.

    Elliott Abrams, the U.S. Special Representative to Venezuela – the elegant title given to the man charged with overseeing the overthrow of the democratically elected government of President Nicholas Maduro – says American is opposed to the fuel supply because: “You have two pariah states finding that they are able to exchange things they need for things they have.”

    Mr. Abrams, an ex-convict might have been chosen for that role because he has a sordid past of being lawless and having little or no regard for human lives. He was appointed in January, 2019, thirty years after exiting the American State Department.

    In December 1981, American-trained special units of the Salvadorian military entered the village of El Mozote and massacred almost 1,000 men, women and children. When the massacre became public knowledge, the American Senate decided to probe it. The CNN in its January 26, 2019 report quoted the Human Rights Watch Report of the massacre which said Abrams at the Senate hearings “artfully distorted several issues in order to discredit the public accounts of the massacre,” insisted the numbers of reported victims were “implausible” and “lavished praise” on the military battalion behind the mass killings.

    The Reagan administration from August 20, 1985 to March 4, 1987, sold arms to Iran which was ostensibly under American sanctions, and used the money to fund Nicaraguan terrorist campaigns which included blowing up civilian ships at that country’s ports, and killing civilians especially in the rural areas.

    When the US Congress probed what became known as the Iran-Contra Scandal, Abrams lied to Congress. In order to escape multiple felony counts, he agreed to a guilty plea and was sentenced to two years probation and 100 hours of community service. The President George Herbert Walker Bush government later granted him pardon.

    The American establishment in resurrecting such a man three decades later, is a clear statement that the American interests in Venezuela is neither democracy nor human rights, but Venezuela oil and gas which it has been unable to exploit since the election of Hugo Chavez twenty two years ago.

    The Venezuelan refineries might not start running soon, and these Iranian supplies might soon be depleted necessitating more purchases which the Iranians might oblige. So, soon, there might be another round of American threats to go to war because two sovereign countries decide to buy and sell legitimate goods to each other.

    It is this type of incomprehensible diplomacy America displayed in warning Coronavirus-wracked countries not to accept medical aid from Cuba. With 1.87million infections, 421,000 recoveries and 108,000 deaths, as at Wednesday, America has clearly been unable to withstand the virus onslaught. So it has been in no position to assist other countries. In contrast, tiny Cuba with its sophisticated healthcare system built on prevention and community-based fights against viruses, is able to send medical personnel to fight Covid-19 in countries like Italy, South Africa, Jamaica, Grenada, Venezuela, Nicaragua and Suriname. In fact, it is trying to keep up with aid requests from 22 countries. But in a curious move, the American State Department issued a statement demanding countries to reject Cuban medical aid claiming that it is “an abusive programme” that engenders “end labour abuses” in Cuba. No country has responded to the odd American request as they are more interested in saving the lives of their people than be distracted by an administration locked in queer Cold War battles.

    A major headache of the American government might be campaigns by appreciative groups calling for the 2020 Nobel Peace Prize to be awarded to Cuba’s Henry Reeve International Medical Brigade which is fighting Covid-19 in various countries.

    America had exhibited a similar diplomatic attitude when it asked African countries to reject Chinese development loans which have favourable repayment terms and spread in contrast to those of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Ironically, while Africa’s total loan from China is less than $140 Billion, the US alone is owing China $1.1 trillion.

    The US is a busybody interfering in the internal affairs of various countries, dabbling in many issues it has no direct, and sometimes even indirect stake. All the while, it claims to be all-knowing and omnipresent across the globe and even the planetary system. The universe will be a better place if the US stops playing god in world affairs.