Zionists after tarnishing image of Judaism

The Iranian chief executive met with rabbis from the Neturei Karta religious group, which opposes Zionism and calls for the dismantling of Israel, on Wednesday.

“Zionists seek to tarnish the image of Judaism. This is while we believe that the Jews are different from Zionists,” Raeisi said, appreciating the group’s mission of differentiating between their religious faith and Zionism.

“We have no problem with Judaism and Torah,” the president said, noting that the Jews are free to practice their religious duties in Iran.

“Our problem is with Zionists,” Raeisi said and opined that the Islamic Republic opposes oppressing people under the guise of whatever religion.

“It is for this reason that we do not consider the [Takfiri terrorist group of] Daesh to be Muslim…the atrocities that Daesh perpetrated are not approved by any Muslim…”

For his part, one of the rabbis appreciated the freedom that the Islamic Republic has offered the Jewry in the country, and asserted that “Zionism has nothing to do with our religion and belief.”

MNA/Press TV

Israel closes Gaza crossings again, hinders Palestinians' access to work

The Israeli regime has sealed crossing points with the besieged Gaza Strip, preventing thousands of workers from getting to their jobs in the occupied Palestinian territories and further exacerbating the humanitarian situation in the impoverished enclave.

Israeli authorities on Wednesday confirmed that the Erez crossing into Gaza was closed and said it would be re-opened “in accordance with situational assessments.”

The move stops more than 18,000 Palestinians from crossing for work, depriving the blockaded territory’s ailing economy of around $2 million a day, according to local economists.

The closure, which follows a ban on exports from Gaza earlier this month, will add pressure to an economy already under strain due a blockade imposed by Israel and Egypt.

“We are too afraid the crossing won’t open anytime soon and I go back to living in poverty and need,” media outlets quoted one Gaza father of five, who has been sleeping at the Palestinian side of Erez crossing since Sunday evening.

Ayman Abu Krayyem, the spokesman of Gaza Ministry of Labor, said that as a result of the closure thousands of workers have been stranded in the blockaded territory since the ban.

“Those are losing 3.2 million shekel ($842,000) a day. These are important money by which they could help their families and improve their economic conditions…. This is a collective punishment,” said Krayyem.

The latest closure comes as protests backed by Hamas and other Palestinian resistence groups have been held for days, against issues ranging from the treatment of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails to descecration of the al-Aqsa Mosque compound by extremist settlers.

Israeli occupation forces have killed three Palestinians during a raid in the occupied West Bank, and another Palestinian protester in a separate incident in Gaza since Tuesday.

The Jordan-run Islamic Waqf Department, which is in charge of al-Aqsa Mosque affairs, said in a statement that Israeli forces had permitted the provocative settler incursion.

The regime soldiers also assaulted Muslim worshipers and tried to forcibly evacuate them from the al-Aqsa Mosque courtyard, it noted.

Israeli settler incursions into al-Aqsa Mosque and violence against Palestinians have been on the rise since the far-right extremist cabinet of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu took office last December.

Israeli blockade keeps wreaking havoc on Gaza

Tel-Aviv’s move to shut down the crossings will further complicate living conditions in the impoverished enclave. The Israeli blockade has wreaked havoc on the economy of Gaza and worsened its humanitarian conditions.

On Monday, the World Bank said restrictions imposed by the Israeli regime and the worsening economic condition in the besieged Gaza Strip and the occupied West Bank hinder the Palestinians’ access to healthcare.

Devastated by 16 years of the Israeli blockade and recurrent military attacks, Gaza’s healthcare system faces immense challenges, with the entry of vital medical supplies, equipment and medications severely restricted by the regime.

Algeria calls for UN vote on granting Palestine full membership

Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune has called on the United Nations (UN) to hold a special session to vote on granting full state membership to Palestine. 

The call came in a speech by Tebboune during the opening session of the UN General Assembly, which officially began on Tuesday.

He called for a special session to be held at the UN on conducting a vote granting full membership to Palestine.

The Algerian president also singled out Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territories as a leading cause of regional instability.

He went on to say that Algeria supports the 2002 Arab initiative to end the occupation of Palestinian territories, “which is a fundamental cause of instability in the region.”

Tebboune further called on the UN to issue a resolution protecting the two-state solution and ending the Israeli occupation.

Presently, Palestine’s status at the UN is that of a “non-member observer state,” which was upgraded from an “observer entity” in 2012.

However, for Palestine to achieve full UN membership, it needs approval from the UN Security Council, followed by a vote in the UN General Assembly.

Palestine applied for full UN membership in 2011 but failed to get the necessary support in the UN Security Council, which is dominated by the US-led Western states, Israel’s key backers. 

Senior Palestinian officials from Palestinian Authority have urged the international community to recognize an independent Palestinian state on the 1967 borders with East al-Quds as its capital and demanded an all-out support for its full membership in the United Nations.

Observers say the so-called two-state initiative is fading and being violated systematically by Israel and its Western allies, and it has become fairly difficult to implement it.

In June, the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas said statements by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu regarding the occupying regime’s plans to eliminate the Palestinian people’s aspirations for an independent state confirm Israel’s “fascist” nature.

Elsewhere in his remarks, the Algerian president called for reforms within the UNSC, highlighting its inefficiency in maintaining international peace and security and in preventing the use of force.

He also pointed to the “historical injustice” suffered by Africa and underscored the need for the continent to have representation in the council.

Tebboune also took the opportunity to voice Algeria’s stance on the crisis in Niger. He expressed solidarity for the restoration of constitutional order and a peaceful political resolution. The president opposed any foreign military intervention in the situation.

Niger witnessed a military coup on 26 July, led by General Abdourahamane Tiani, the former commander of the Presidential Guard, who ousted President Mohamed Bazoum.

 

Palestine’s Islamic Jihad sets up new brigade to confront Israeli forces


The Islamic Jihad in Palestine sets up a new brigade to fight Israeli occupiers in the West Bank.

The Islamic Jihad movement in Palestine has formed a new brigade to confront Israeli forces in the occupied West Bank.

The new battalion, formed under the name of Tulkarm, will be based in a Palestinian refugee camp in its namesake city, according to a Wednesday report by Al-Alam news network.

The Tulkarm Brigade will be an extension of Islamic Jihad’s Al-Quds Brigades which operates across the occupied West Bank, a spokesman of the battalion said, adding that the battalion’s main mission will be to defend the Tulkarm Camp against the Israeli aggression.

“The Tulkarm battalion has been formed to respond to the crimes of the Zionists in the Tulkarm Camp … We tell the occupiers that we are ready to respond to their aggression,” said the unidentified spokesman.

Tulkarm is located to the northwest of the occupied West Bank and its refugee camp has seen a ramp-up in raids by Israeli military forces since last year.

That comes as part of a larger pattern of attacks by Israeli forces and settlers on Palestinians across the occupied West Bank over the past 16 months.

A main reason for the flare-up in violence is Israel’s continued construction of settlements in the West Bank, an area which it illegally captured and occupied after the 1967 war with the Arabs.

Violence has also worsened in the Palestinian territories in recent months as the far-right Israeli cabinet continues to implement provocative measures at al-Aqsa Mosque, the third holiest Muslim city, mainly by allowing extremists to storm the compound. 

The death toll of Palestinians in the occupied Palestinian territories and Gaza has surpassed 200 this year. Most of these deaths occurred in the West Bank. This makes 2023 the most lethal year for Palestinians in the West Bank since 2005, when the United Nations started to record fatalities.

The previous record was in 2022, when 150 Palestinians were killed, including 33 minors, according to the United Nations.

Iran, Oman emphasize boosting coop. in industry, mining

Abbas Aliabadi, Iran’s Minister of Industry, Mining, and Trade on his trip to Oman, met and held talks with the Minister of Energy and Mineral on Wednesday.

In the meeting, which was held with the presence of the head of the Oman Investment Organization, the two sides emphasized strengthening cooperation in the industrial and mining sectors.

The volume of trade between Iran and Oman in 2022 increased by 41% and reached $1.887 billion compared to 2021.

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Decoding Biden's initiative for expansion of UNSC

The US support for the expansion of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), whose task is to maintain global peace and security was among the topics that the US President addressed during his speech.  Reforming the UNSC has been also requested by other members of the United Nations in recent years.

Currently, the UN Security Council has five permanent members enjoying veto power and 10 non-permanent members. The chairmanship of this council is periodic and its duration is one month, and the head of the delegation of each country is known as the head of this council. Russia, China, the USA, the UK and France are the five permanent members of the Security Council with veto power.

The non-permanent members of the Security Council are elected by the United Nations General Assembly, which is based on the participation of the members of this organization in maintaining global peace and security and other goals of the organization, as well as equitable geographical distribution. In other words, 10 non-permanent members of the Security Council are elected by the General Assembly for a two-year term.

A couple of months ago in June 2023, the Washington Post reported that Joe Biden’s administration is trying to prepare a plan for the expansion of the UN Security Council, based on which 6 more permanent members will be added to the council of course without having the right to veto.

According to the report by the Washington Post, the Joe Biden administration is consulting with the member states of the United Nations to get their support for the Washington proposal.

Numerous conflicts and wars around the globe in the past decades show that the current structure of the UN Security Council is not very effective and the council has not been able to fulfill its main mission, which is to maintain global peace and security. Therefore, reforming the structure of the UNSC is necessary and important to establish global peace and security.

In the meantime, the attention of UN member states to several points will be very important in determining their fate and the world community:

1- The possible future reforms and changes in the Security Council and other international commercial and financial organizations should not be superficial so as to provide the world powers, particularly the US with new opportunities to secure their own interests like what happened after the end of World War II.

2- The current world orders in different fields are unfair and ineffective. Understanding this fact and facing US unilateralism and using the dollar as a weapon against its rivals, many countries have started to create parallel organizations such as BRICS and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization to secure their own interests.

3- It should be determined what effect the addition of new members without having the right of veto can have on the effectiveness of the UNSC and preventing unilateralism at the world level. What is clear is that much of the chaos and conflicts in the world in the past decades have been created by the unilateralist policies and actions of the US and its veto-powered allies.

4- It should be determined how fair the distribution of these 6 new seats will be among the new members, for example, will there be a permanent seat for many voiceless nations of the world, including Muslims and the people of West Asia?

5- It is important for other countries of the world to be vigilant and not to let the US bring its allies into the international decision-making bodies like the UNSC under the cover of reforms in order to stabilize and legitimize its own position by taking the leadership of reforms in international institutions.

6-Reforms in international structures should not become a tool in the hands of the US to contain its current global competitors and rivals by giving a concession to an ally country in one specific part of the world by supporting its entry into the Security Council.

7- It should be noted that the reforms considered by the US should not be a tool and cover to weaken the rising international institutions and organizations such as BRICS and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, etc., which in the future will challenge the US dominance and hegemony on the world economy, trade and security.

In conclusion, reforming the structure of the Security Council and other international institutions is necessary and inevitable, but the international community should be vigilant. They should not let the Americans, by taking the initiative again, use this issue as a tool and approach to secure their own global dominance and interest at least for more than another 50 years at the cost of other nations. Countries should be careful that the US is trying to bribe some countries by supporting their permanent membership in UNSC (of course without veto right) in different parts of the world not only to legitimize its actions and measures but also to use these new members as a tool to contain its main rivals and weaken newly established organizations like BRICS and etc to its own benefit. 

Finally, it is worth noting that the US has already supported the addition of Germany, Japan and India as new permanent members, and France and the UK have also supported permanent seats for Germany, Japan and India, plus Brazil and at least one African country.  

Protesters rally in Times Square against Netanyahu in New York

Demonstrators staged rallies in Times Square in protest against the Israeli cabinet’s extremist policies outside prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s hotel, after he arrived in New York to meet with world leaders.

Early on Tuesday, hundreds of Israeli activists and members of the Jewish community in New York organized rallies as they gathered outside Netanyahu’s hotel in Manhattan’s Upper East Side, according to Israeli media reports.

Larger rallies also took place at noon in Times Square to protest Netanyahu’s visit to the US for the 78th session of the UN General Assembly and his meetings with President Joe Biden and other world leaders.

“The fight against Bibi is one of the biggest fights for democracy in the world,” said Lior Hadary, an Israeli protester in New York, referring to Netanyahu by his nickname.

“It’s similar to the fight against Donald Trump here…I believe this is one frontier in the same battle, the battle of democracy against populism, against dictatorship.”

Protest organizers in New York have scheduled events throughout the week and the rallies will continue until Saturday during Netanyahu’s meeting with Biden and the premier’s speech at the UN.

On Sunday, thousands took to the streets in several locations across the occupied Palestinian territories for the 37th consecutive week of anti-regime protests.

The protests have been a fixed weekly event since January when Netanyahu announced an overhaul scheme, which seeks to rob the regime’s Supreme Court of the ability to invalidate the decisions made by the politicians.

Proponents of the overhaul say it helps redistribute the balance of power between the politicians and the judiciary.

Its opponents, however, accuse Netanyahu of trying his hand at a power grab. They say the premier, who is on trial in three corruption cases for receiving bribes, fraud, and breach of trust, is also attempting to use the scheme to quash possible judgments against him.

Netanyahu’s far-right cabinet has already passed one of the scheme’s bills through the Knesset, which stripped the court of its power to strike down the cabinet’s decisions or appointments on the basis of being “unreasonable.”

Syrian Army heavily targets terrorist positions

The attacks of the Syrian army came in response to the terrorists’ encroachments on the de-escalation areas in the northwest of the country.

News sources announced that a number of terrorists’ cars and their passengers were damaged in these attacks.

Other sources also announced that the Syrian army targeted Al-Nusra positions in the western Rif of Aleppo.

Since the defeat of the ISIL terrorist group in December 2017 in Syria by the Resistance fighters and the Syrian army, the US-backed SyrianDemoxcratioc Forces occupied many parts in the east and northeast of Syria. They continued to kill Syrian people and steal their property like in the era of ISIL.

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Ronaldo thanks Iranians for incredibly warm welcome

Ronaldo, who was warmly welcomed by enthusiastic fans upon his arrival in the Iranian capital city of Tehran, played almost the full match in the 2-0 win.

Following the match, Ronaldo expressed his joy about the result on his Instagram account.

Extending his gratitude to the people of Iran, Ronaldo wrote, “A very special thank you to the fans and to all the Iranian people who have made this visit so special for us. Such an incredibly warm welcome!”

Ronaldo thanks Iranians for incredibly warm welcome

Al Nassr marked Cristiano Ronaldo’s debut in the AFC Champions League with a 2-0 away victory against Persepolis here in Tehran’s Azadi Stadium in Group E of the 2023/24 edition on Tuesday.

AMK/PR

Saudi Arabia hails positive peace talks with Yemenis

The Saudi Foreign Ministry supported a political solution to the Yemen conflict in a statement released on Wednesday, after the Yemeni team, along with an Omani mediator, returned to Sana’a following five days of talks with Saudi officials in Riyadh.

The ministry said it welcomed “the positive results of the serious discussions regarding reaching a road map to support the peace path in Yemen.”

Riyadh, it added, “continues to stand with Yemen and its brotherly people and … encourages the Yemeni parties to sit at the negotiating table to reach a comprehensive and lasting political solution … under the supervision of the United Nations.”

The Yemeni delegation arrived in Saudi Arabia last week. It was the first such official visit to the kingdom since the war broke out in 2015.

Reports said the Saudi-appointed Presidential Leadership Council (PLC) in Yemen and the UAE-backed Southern Transitional Council (STC) had no role in the Riyadh negotiations.

The Yemeni delegation met with Saudi Arabia’s Defense Minister Prince Khalid bin Salman Al Saud.

In an X post, Prince Khalid said that during the meeting he had “emphasized the Kingdom’s support for Yemen and reaffirmed our commitment to promoting dialogue among all parties.”

According to a report by Reuters, informed sources said some progress has been made on the main sticking points, including a timeline for the withdrawal of foreign troops from Yemen and a mechanism for paying public wages.

They also noted that there would be more talks “soon” after consultations.

Ali al-Qhoom, a member of Ansarullah’s Political Bureau, said the Riyadh talks were “serious and positive” and that “there will be a new round.”

Saudi Arabia and a number of its allies, including the United Arab Emirates, launched the war to restore power in Yemen to the impoverished country’s Western- and Riyadh-allied government.

The former Yemeni government’s president, Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi, resigned from the presidency in late 2014 and later fled to Riyadh amid a political conflict with Ansarullah. The movement has been running Yemen’s affairs in the absence of a functioning administration.

The war and a concomitant siege that the Saudi-led coalition has been imposing on Yemen has, meanwhile, caused the death of tens of thousands of Yemenis and turned the entire country into the site of, what the United Nations has described as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

MNA/PressTV