Assad to visit China Thursday at Xi's invitation

President al-Assad and President Jinping will hold a Syrian-Chinese summit, the Syrian official news agency SANA quoted the Syrian Presidency as saying in a statement on Tuesday.

The visit will also include a number of meetings and events that will be held by President al-Assad and first lady Mrs. Asma al-Assad in the cities of Hángzhōu and the capital of Beijing, the Syrian government’s statement added.

An official delegation will accompany President al-Assad during the visit comprising Minister of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates, Fayssal Mekdad, Minister of Economy and Foreign Trade, Mohammad Samer al-Khalil, Presidential Affairs Minister Mansour Azzam and Special Adviser at the Presidency of the Republic, Buthaina Shaaban, it further said.

MNA/PR

Turkish parliament not ready to ratify Sweden NATO bid: Erdogan

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan says the Turkish parliament is not prepared to ratify Sweden’s NATO accession protocol since Stockholm has not gone far enough to secure its place in the military alliance.

During a closed-door briefing with journalists in New York on Monday, the Turkish leader said that “terrorists” were demonstrating in the streets of Sweden’s capital despite the European country’s recent amendments to its constitution and laws to better fight terrorism. 

“My parliament doesn’t view this issue positively, they aren’t ready to ratify Sweden’s accession protocol.”

The Turkish leader also told NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg at a meeting on Monday that Sweden’s membership would eventually be on the agenda of the Turkish Grand National Assembly after it reconvenes in October.

For the vote to take place in the parliament, Erdogan, however, said that “Sweden should keep its promises.”

“We don’t have any prejudices in place, but there is an issue that Sweden is not keeping its promises.”

He said Kurdish groups that Ankara considers terrorists “should immediately stop their demonstrations on the streets of Stockholm, and they should stop their activities because seeing this actually happening is going to be very important for the Turkish people.”

Sweden needs Ankara’s consent to join NATO, of which Turkey is an old member. 

Erdogan has conditioned his approval of Sweden’s bid on the nation’s dropping of its support for Kurdish opposition groups that are considered terrorist outfits by Ankara.

To that end, Sweden passed an anti-terrorism law in May that criminalizes membership in terrorist organizations in the country.

Back in July, Turkey, Sweden and NATO struck a joint statement that said Stockholm had changed its anti-terrorist laws, expanded counter-terrorism cooperation against Kurdish opposition groups, and restarted arms exports to Turkey.

At the time, Sweden pledged to present a “roadmap as the basis of its continued fight against terrorism in all its forms.”

Turkish officials reiterated that Sweden needs to submit a roadmap to indicate how it will fight terrorism in the long term. 

Erdogan to discuss Black Sea grain deal 

The Turkish president will also discuss with Stoltenberg his efforts to revive a grain deal that had allowed Ukraine to export its grain via the Black Sea amid the ongoing war with Russia.

The Black Sea deal was brokered by Turkey and the United Nations in July 2022. Russia, however, withdrew from the deal in July this year, saying its conditions for the agreement were not met.

Moscow complained that its agricultural exports faced obstacles and not enough Ukrainian grain was going to countries in need under the grain deal.

Erdogan was a key player in brokering the grain deal. He said in August that the revival of the agreement depends on Western countries keeping “their promises.” 

Iran, Turkey exchange 6 prisoners: judicial official

“The exchange of three Iranian and three Turkish citizens at the Bazargan border crossing was the result of the recent visit of a delegation from the Ministry of Justice of the Islamic Republic of Iran to Ankara and consultations with the officials of the Turkish Ministry of Justice,” according to Askar Jalalian, Deputy Minister of Justice for International Affairs and Human Rights at the Ministry of Justice said on Tuesday.

Saying that Turkey is one of the tourist and travel destinations for Iranian nationals, Jalalian said, “The number of prisoners in that country is increasing.”

“We call on Iranian citizens to observe the laws and restrictions of the destination country before traveling,” he added.

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Iranian inventor wins gold at iCAN 2023 in Canada

Saba Valizadeh Soltanahmadi who won the gold medal at the Competition participated in the scientific event by inventing the safe syringe in the medical equipment class as Iran’s representative.

The iCAN 2023 competition, organized by the Toronto International Society for Innovation and Advanced Skills (TISIAS), aims to encourage inventors and researchers by providing a global platform for scientific competition, serving as a gateway for linking innovative ideas, technologies, and solutions.

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Powerful coalition formed against Zionists in world

The IRGC commander Major General Hossein Salami made the remarks at “A New World” conference, which was held at the IRIB International Conference Center in the north of Tehran on Tuesday.

Saying that the West Asian region has been a field for rivalry among world powers in modern times, he added that due to West Asia’s geographical location and its vast resources, the colonial powers have always had a greedy eye on that region.

The IRGC commander stated, “Today, the Islamic Revolution is confronting the enemies in the east of the Mediterranean Sea and the north of the Red Sea,” adding, “The geography of the Islamic Revolution has extended and we have many complementary powers such as Hezbollah in Lebanon, which can determine the balance of power in terms of politics and security in it (that region).”

“Before the victory of the Islamic Revolution, there were no visible signs of resistance in Palestine, but today the Palestinian groups have put all the occupied territories under fire and the Zionists have no comfortable sleep now.”

Pointing out that more than 30 armed operations are carried out against the Zionists in the West Bank every day, Salami added, “Those who used to fight with stones in the past, today have missiles and drones and enjoy having a military power.”

Emphasizing that the Zionist regime is now isolated in the world and is grappling with civil war, political division, social protests and security battles, the IRGC commander added, “A powerful coalition has been formed in the world against the Zionist regime, and the state of Resistance has become very different now [as compared to the past].”

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Iran to face no threats via Iraqi Kurdistan region

Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian and his Iraqi counterpart Fuad Hussein held a meeting in New York late on Monday.

In this meeting, the two sides discussed issues of mutual interest as well as issues related to the Kurdistan region.

The top Iraqi diplomat said that no threats will be posed via Iraq’s soil and Kurdistan region against Iran following the security agreement between the two sides.

Pointing to the prisoner swap agreement between Iran and the US as well as releasing Iran’s frozen funds in South Korea, he described such activities as a positive step and significant in the diplomacy of lifting sanctions.

Back in March, Iran and Iraq concluded a security agreement under which the Iraqi government promised to disarm terrorist and separatist groups based in the Kurdistan region by September 19, vacate their military barracks, and transfer them to the camps established by the Baghdad government.

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South Korea hopes ties with Iran to be developed

“The Iranian funds that had been frozen in South Korea due to financial sanctions on Iran have been recently transferred to a third country successfully under close coordination among the involved countries,” South Korea’s foreign ministry said in a statement.

The money in Qatar would be spent on food, medicine and other humanitarian items as it was in South Korea, the ministry said, according to Reuters. 

“Our government expects our bilateral relations to further develop on the occasion of the transfer of the frozen funds,” the ministry said and thanked the governments of Qatar and Switzerland for their “constructive role” in resolving the issue.

Iran and the United States agreed to free five prisoners each as part of a deal that also included the release of billions of Iranian assets, which were illegally frozen in South Korea under the pretext of US sanctions.

The funds, owed to Iran for exports of oil and gas, had been frozen in South Korean bank accounts since 2018 after the administration of then President Donald Trump pulled the US from a landmark nuclear deal with Iran, further aggravating tensions with Tehran.

MNA/PR

Saudi Arabia ditches allies, holds direct peace talks with Yemen: Report

Saudi officials have reportedly held direct talks with a delegation from Yemen’s Ansarullah resistance movement over a permanent ceasefire to end the war, leaving its allied parties in the cold.

Citing informed sources, the Lebanese al-Akhbar daily reported on Monday that the Omani-mediated negotiations have been taking place between Saudi Arabia and the Sana’a government in Riyadh.

It said the Saudi-appointed Presidential Leadership Council (PLC) in Yemen and the UAE-backed Southern Transitional Council (STC) “appear to have no role in the negotiations,” predicting that the pair’s role “will not go beyond signing and attending the [upcoming] ceremony.”

Saudi Arabia, the report added, is ignoring the STC’s secessionist aspirations and has rejected its demands to be included in the Riyadh talks.

The discussions are almost at a “final” stage with “great progress,” particularly in relation to humanitarian issues, it noted.  

Also recently, a delegation from Oman arrived in Sana’a.

“Optimism exists regarding the mediation and the Omani efforts to achieve peace in Yemen,” Ali al-Qhoom, a member of Ansarullah’s political bureau, said on social media.

The peace talks will be focused a range of issues, including the full reopening of Yemeni ports and Sana’a airport, as well as the payment of public sector wages from oil revenues and rebuilding efforts, in addition to a timeline for the withdrawal of foreign forces from Yemen, he emphasized.

Meanwhile, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman met a delegation from the Sana’a government in Muscat. 

The main topics discussed were “the state’s general budget, movement between provinces, and lifting the blockade on ports,” al-Akhbar reported.

“Bin Salman provided guarantees to Sana’a regarding all points of disagreement, including the American position opposing peace.” 

Speaking on Sunday, Tawfiq al-Humairi, an advisor to Yemen’s Information Ministry, said Riyadh had agreed to lift the siege on Yemen and return its looted funds.

“The pressures directed towards Saudi Arabia from Sana’a today outweigh the American pressures on Riyadh,” he said, referring to Ansarallah’s threats to target Saudi Arabia and the UAE in retaliation for the protracted war on Yemen.

Saudi Arabia initiated a brutal war of aggression against Yemen in March 2015, enlisting the assistance of some of its regional allies, as well as massive shipments of advanced weaponry from the US and Western Europe.

The Western governments further extended their political and logistical support to Riyadh in their failed bid to restore power in Yemen to the country’s former Saudi-installed 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 further led to the killing of tens of thousands of Yemenis and turned the entire nation into the scene of the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

A UN-brokered ceasefire, which was reached last year, is still largely in place despite its official expiry. It has significantly reduced clashes over the past months.