Baku has no intention to launch attack against Armenia

“We are in contact with the authorities of both the Republic of Azerbaijan and Armenia, and the Armenian authorities have expressed concern about the possibility of (raising) a new military conflict from Azerbaijan,” Kan’ani siad in his weekly presser on Monday, adding that Baku authorities notified Iran that they have no intention to carry out a military attack and that the recent movements are a conventional military action on the eve of the winter season, as the movement in the mountainous areas becomes more and more difficult.

Tehran is critical over the security of the common borders with its northern neighbors and it assures that the country’s borders are safe, and it continues to follow the developments in the Caucasus with seriousness, he underlined.

“Karabakh is a part of the Republic of Azerbaijan, the rights and security of the people of this region must be secured in a specific framework and this is our official position. Iran has always emphasized the need to respect the territorial integrity of countries and has always opposed any change in the international borders,” the senior diplomat stressed, adding that the mutual recognition of the territorial integrity of both sides by Armenia and the Republic of Azerbaijan will be an important step to achieve lasting peace and security.

On prisoner swap deal with US

“We are optimistic that the exchange of prisoners will take place in the near future,” Kan’ani cited elsewhere in his remarks, commenting on the recent agreement reached between Tehran and Washington.

Touching upon the issue of releasing Iran’s frozen funds, Kan’ani said that Tehran hopes that this transfer will take place in the coming days so that the country can have full access to its assets.

Iran can buy all non-sanctioned goods with its released assets, he added.

On security agreement with Iraq

Elsewhere in his remarks, Kan’ani touched upon the process of the implementation of the recent security agreement between Tehran and Baghdad, according to which the Iraqi side is committed to disarm the armed separatist and terrorist groups in the Kurdistan region by September 19.

This deadline will not be extended under any circumstances and this matter has been officially announced by Iraqi officials to the Iraqi side, he said.

He went on to say that fortunately, the Iraqi government has taken favorable measures in this regard so far and it emphasized that it adheres to the agreement. The Prime Minister of Iraq has also made favorable statements recently, and Iran hopes to see the full implementation of this agreement on the determined date, he continued.

He added that the visit of the President of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) Bafel Jalal Talabani is not related to the security agreement and is in the framework of bilateral talks.

In July, the Chief of Staff of the Iranian Armed Forces warned Iraq over the presence and the activity of anti-Iran terrorist groups in that country.

Major General Mohammad Bagheri said that Iran waits until Iraq’s deadline is over and hopes that the Iraqi government fulfills its responsibility, but if the deadline is finished and the anti-Iran terrorists remain armed or continue to carry out operations, the country will resume acting against the terrorists.

IRGC Ground Force Commander Brigadier General Mohammad Pakpour earlier said that Iraq has undertaken a commitment to disarm and expel anti-Iran terrorists operating in the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region.

Since September 24, 2022, the IRGC has launched several rounds of airstrikes against the positions of the terrorists who are holed up in Iraqi Kurdistan.

The IRGC has urged the central government in Iraq and authorities in Kurdistan to meet their commitments toward Iran and take necessary measures to secure the border.

On November 21, 2022, positions of anti-Iran separatist and terrorist groups in northern Iraq came under combined attacks using missiles and kamikaze drones. The strikes targeted the positions of the notorious ‘Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan’ (PDKI) and the Komala Party in northern Iraqi Kurdistan, Iran’s Arabic-language al-Alam television news network reported at the time.

On lifting arms embargos on Iran

Touching upon the issue of lifting arms embargos on Iran, Kan’ani said that Iran expects that the related countries will adhere to their commitments within the framework of the JCPOA.

For any non-constructive action, Iran reserves the right to take action in accordance with each action and it will not ask permission from anyone to secure rights, he added.

In early September, Iran’s Minister of Defense Brigadier General Mohammad-Reza Gharaei Ashtiani said that all cruel arms embargoes on the country will end next October.

On Iran-IAEA ties

Regarding the meeting of the Board of Governors of the IAEA, he stated that the cooperation between Iran and the IAEA continues within the framework of the March 4th joint statement between the AEOI and the IAEA.

The next meetings and discussions will be held in the same framework, he added.  

Expressing hope that the current meeting of the agency will be held in a completely professional format, he stressed that Iran expects the director general of the agency to carry out his professional mission away from political pressures and perform this mission correctly and accurately.

Kan’ani clarified that the agency is a specialized, technical and professional organization which should not be politically abused for political purposes in order to put pressure on other countries.

On Mossad’s chief threatening Iran

Answering a question raised by a journalist on the recent threat of Mossad’s chief to assassinate Iranian officials, Kan’ani said that such a clear declaration of intention to assassinate the officials of other countries shows the terrorist nature of the Israeli regime.

Iran has proven that it will not shy away from securing its safety and responding to any foolish aggression, he cited, adding that the Zionist regime has been beaten by Iran many times in the past.

“Iran will not hesitate to respond to any foolish action,” he stressed.

On attack on Iran’s embassy in Paris

Regarding the recent attack on the Iranian embassy in Paris, Kan’ani stated, “We strongly condemn this action,” emphasizing that attacking a diplomatic place is an attack on the rights of citizens who go to the embassy to receive consular services. 

Iran expressed its protest in an official note to the French authorities, he said, adding that Iran gave the necessary warning to the French government and some European governments to strengthen the necessary protective measures in the framework of the 1961 Vienna Convention and fulfill their responsibilities over securing diplomatic places and the safety of Iranian diplomats.

He clarified that the French government is responsible for the security of Iran’s embassy and diplomatic facilities within the framework of the 1961 Vienna Convention.

According to Kan’ani, the French ambassador in Tehran has also strongly condemned the attack and said that the French government is pursuing to identify and prosecute the attackers.

Regarding the appointment of Iran’s new ambassador to France, he noted that the administrative process is underway and Iran hopes to complete this process in the future.

On holding new negotiations

Referring to the negotiations on lifting the illegal sanctions against Iran and reviving the JCPOA deal, the senior Iranian diplomat noted that the path of negotiation is not closed and new holding negotiations are not ruled out.

“Iran has always declared that it adheres to the diplomatic path as the path to ensure the rights and interests of the Iranian people, and uses diplomatic capacities to realise its rights and lift oppressive sanctions, and we have always welcomed initiatives,” he emphasized.

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‘US, allied terrorists continue to plunder Syria’s wealth, strategic resources’

Syria says the United States and its allied Takfiri terrorist groups continue to violate the country’s sovereignty and plunder its wealth and strategic natural resources.

Syrian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates made the remark in two identical letters on Sunday, which were addressed to Secretary General of the United Nations António Guterres and the rotating President of the Security Council Ferit Hoxha.

Damascus demanded that the US administration be held accountable for looting the country’s riches and be obliged to compensate for the unlawful act.

Syria also called for an end to aggressive practices and violations of international principles and the UN Charter by US occupation troops, who are illegally present in the northeastern part of the country and the strategic southeastern region of al-Tanf.

The letters further noted that Washington and its allied terrorists plunder Syria’s strategic assets in order to increase the strain of unilateral sanctions on Syrian people, prolong their suffering, and deprive them of their national assets.

The Syrian foreign ministry put the damage inflicted on the Syrian oil and mineral sectors as a result of “acts of aggression and sabotage” by US forces and their allied terrorists at $115.2 billion. 

The ministry stated that 150,000 barrels of Syrian crude oil are being smuggled out of the country on a daily basis, adding that 59.9 million cubic meters of natural gas as well as 413 thousand tons of refined gas, worth $21.4 billion, have also been stolen.

Moreover, vandalism and theft of specialized equipment have resulted in damages amounting to $3.2 billion.

The US-led military coalition, purportedly formed to fight the Daesh Takfiri terrorist group, has also inflicted losses standing at $2.9 billion on Syria’s oil and gas facilities, the letters highlighted.

The value of indirect losses to Syria’s economy amounts to $87.7 billion, which includes lost benefits from crude oil, natural gas and refined gas as a result of a sharp drop in their production, the letters read.

The Syrian foreign ministry also called for an end to the illegal presence of US occupation forces and return of Syria’s energy reserves and natural resources to the Damascus government, so that it can improve the humanitarian and living conditions of Syrians.

The letters came on the same day that the US military used dozens of tankers to smuggle crude oil from Syria’s northeastern province of Hasakah to neighboring Iraq.

Syria’s official news agency, SANA, citing local sources in al-Ya’rubiyah town, reported that a convoy of 40 tankers left Syria through the illegal Mahmoudiya border crossing on Sunday, heading towards Iraq.

The sources added that another convoy of US occupation forces, consisting of 55 tankers, rumbled through the same border crossing hours later and entered Iraq.

The US military has stationed forces and equipment in northeastern Syria, with the Pentagon claiming the deployment is aimed at preventing the oil fields in the area from falling into the hands of Daesh terrorists.

Damascus, however, maintains that the unauthorized US deployment is aimed at plundering the country’s rich mineral resources.

Corridor linking Turkey, Saudi Arabia, UAE to be launched

He made this announcement during his speech at the 18th summit of the Group of Twenty (G20) leaders, currently taking place in the Indian capital, New Delhi, Shafaq News reported.

President Erdogan stated, “We are collaborating with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Iraq to create a major commercial corridor, consisting of railways and ports, connecting our countries. This corridor will originate from those countries and extend through Basra and other regions of Iraq, ultimately reaching Turkey.”

He further added, “We aim to take significant and swift steps in this project in the near future.”

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Iran determined to boost ties with Saudi Arabia: Ambassador

Iran’s new ambassador Alireza Enayati (3rd R) arrived in Riyadh last Tuesday to start his diplomatic mission.

Iran’s ambassador to Riyadh says the Islamic Republic is determined to boost its bilateral ties with Saudi Arabia, noting that a promising future is looming as the kingdom has a similar resolve.

Speaking in an interview with Asharq al-Awsat newspaper, Alireza Enayati said “I want to put emphasis on what President Ebrahim Raeisi assigned to me when I met him, which is to employ all efforts” to strengthen the friendly and brotherly relations between Tehran and Riyadh.

He noted that Iran views Saudi Arabia as a “strategic partner of great importance within the framework of its good neighborliness policy.”

Enayati further said “a promising future” is looming as the two countries are keen to expand bilateral ties.

“What has been achieved during the past six months heralds goodness and a promising future, and we have serious resolve to develop Iranian-Saudi relations,” he said, adding, “We have seen the same feeling in our [Saudi] brothers.”

That places “a huge responsibility on me to first develop and strengthen bilateral relations and then use them in benefit of the region based on common interests, reciprocal respect, and collective responsibility.”

The Iranian envoy noted that the two neighboring countries are “influential in the region and the Islamic world.”

Back in March, Iran and Saudi Arabia agreed under a Chinese-brokered deal to revive diplomatic relations severed in 2016.

Iran officially reopened its embassy in Riyadh in June, followed by its consulate in Jeddah and its representative office with the Organization of Islamic Cooperation.

The Saudi embassy in Tehran and its consulate in Mashhad have also resumed operations.

Enayati arrived in Riyadh last Tuesday to start his highly-anticipated diplomatic mission. Abdullah bin Saud al-Anzi, Saudi Arabia’s new ambassador, also arrived in Tehran on the same day.

Several explosions reported in southern Lebanon

Some sources announced that the reason for the terrible sound heard in the south of Lebanon was the breaking of the sound barrier by the Zionist regime’s fighter jets.

According to the reports, the Israeli regime’s fighter jets are flying in northern occupied Palestine. 

No further details have been released.

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Yemen says capable of targeting all war coalition member states

This file photo, released by the media bureau of Yemen’s Operations Command Center, shows a Yemeni missile.

Head of Yemen’s Supreme Political Council says the country’s missile force is capable of targeting all member states of the Saudi-led coalition that are waging a war on Yemen.

Speaking during a meeting in the western city of Hudaydah on Sunday, Mahdi al-Mashat said that the Yemeni ground forces have achieved deterrence power against enemies like that possessed by the naval forces.

“Last year we [said] …that the Navy possessed weapons, with which we could strike any point in the sea from anywhere in Yemen, and this was a message of deterrence to the forces of war,” Saba news agency quoted Mashat as saying.

“And now I am sending them the following message on the ground level. It seems that you need to try our missile force, which can strike any target in any city in the aggression countries from anywhere in Yemen, and not from a specific region.”

He also hailed Yemen’s military achievements as a source of pride and honor for the nation.

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.

At least 10 killed in renewed clashes at Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon

At least 10 people have been reportedly killed and dozens of others injured in renewed clashes between rival groups in a Palestinian refugee camp in southern Lebanon over the past days.

After a month-long shaky ceasefire, the violence broke out on Thursday between affiliated members of Fatah movement and armed groups in Ain al-Hilweh refugee camp in the Lebanese southern city of Sidon.

Fierce clashes continued for a fifth day on Monday between the rival Palestinian groups at the camp with machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades.

Palestinian sources in the camp were cited by local media as saying that the violence has so far claimed the lives of at least 10 people from both sides. Six of them were from Fatah and another two were armed militants.

The two remaining victims were civilians, a Lebanese security source and two Palestinian sources said. One was also killed on Saturday when a stray bullet from the clashes reached a town near the camp, a Lebanese security source said.

Five Lebanese army soldiers were also reported wounded, one of them critically, when shelling hit three of their positions on the outskirts of the camp on Sunday, raising to 86 the number of injuries in the renewed clashes between the rival groups at the camp.

In a statement, the Lebanese Army’s General Directorate said the injured soldiers were transferred to a nearby hospital for treatment and warned against the consequences of targeting army positions.

Ain el-Hilweh, established in 1948, is the largest of 12 Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon, hosting around 80,000 of up to 250,000 Palestinians countrywide, according to the United Nation’s Palestine refugee agency (UNRWA).

The first round of violence erupted in late July when an unknown gunman attempted to kill a member of an armed group named Mahmoud Khalil, but fatally shot his companion instead. In the confrontations that ensued, Abu Ashraf al-Armouchi, a senior commander with the Fatah movement, who was in charge of security inside Ain al-Hilweh, was killed along with several of his aides.

On August 6, a ceasefire subsided the fighting but heavy confrontations sporadically resumed afterwards and left more than a dozen people dead.

UNRWA said over 2,000 people have been forced to flee since the beginning of the clashes in the camp in late July.

Hamas denies backing armed groups in Ain al-Hilweh

In a statement on Monday, the press office of the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas dismissed reports claiming that the movement, alongside Lebanon’s Hezbollah and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad movement, was backing the gunmen fighting in the refugee camp of Ain al-Hilweh.

“We reject these void and fake claims that contradict our policies and beliefs, and we consider them a newfangled attempt to distort the image of Hamas movement and the Palestinian resistance,” the statement said.

“Since day one of the incidents, we have worked with all the Palestinian and Lebanese factions and forces, in addition to the Lebanese security apparatuses and the Palestinian ambassador to Lebanon, to cease fire and preserve the camp, its residents, and the Lebanese neighborhood,” the movement added.

The Palestinian resistance movement underlined, “These claims are totally untrue, and they only serve the Israeli occupation and the enemies of the Resistance.”

Local media reports said a senior Fatah official is set to land in Lebanon on Monday and that the acting chief of Lebanon’s General Security intelligence agency will hold an emergency meeting on the latest round of clashes in the Palestinian camp.

Erbil complies with Iran-Iraq security deal: Barzani

Nechervan Idris Barzani made the remarks in a meeting with the Ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Iran to Baghdad Mohammad Kazem Ale-Sadegh on Monday. 

Emphasizing the importance of relations with the Islamic Republic of Iran, Barzani said that Iran is an important neighbor for the Kurdistan region.

“The Kurdistan region adheres to the security agreement between Iran and Iraq, and Iran must be sure that we will not allow the security of this country to be threatened from within this region”, he added. 

Ale-Sadegh, for his part, appreciated the officials of the Kurdistan region of Iraq for providing facilities to the pilgrims of Arbaeen earlier this month.

He also emphasized the implementation of security agreements and the strengthening and expansion of relations between the Islamic Republic of Iran and Iraq, as well as constructive dialogue and interaction between the Kurdistan region of Iraq and the federal government of the country.

Erbil complies with Iran-Iraq security deal: Barzani

Ale-Sadegh also met and held talks with Prime Minister of Kurdistan Region Masrour Barzani and is scheduled to meet with Masoud Barzani, the leader of the Democratic Party of Iraqi Kurdistan.

Earlier on Sunday, President of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), Bafel Jalal Talabani, arrived in the Iranian capital of Tehran, leading a high-level delegation from his party.

Recently, Qasim al-Araji, the national security adviser of Iraq, said in a speech that Baghdad is making a lot of efforts to implement the provisions of the security agreement with Iran.

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Israeli protesters scuffle with police outside justice minister’s home

Israeli police disperse protesters as they block the entrance to the residence of Justice Minister Yariv Levin in Modiin, September 11, 2023. (Photo by AFP)

Israeli demonstrators flooded the streets outside the residence of the hawkish justice minister on Monday, scuffling with the police.

Regime troops moved to control the crowds outside Yariv Levin’s home in Modiin.

The major grievance of the anti-regime demonstrators has been the highly controversial judicial overhaul scheme presented by the cabinet of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The roughly 200 demonstrators blew horns, chanted through megaphones against the regime and brandished signs.

Six people were arrested on charges of disrupting public order and blocking roads.

After a few hours, Levin left his besieged home in a sleek black car surrounded by security guards who tried to clear a path for him through the swarm of protesters.

Israel is facing its worst domestic political crisis in years.

The protests have seen the 36th straight week.

Proponents of the plan 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.

The prime minister is on trial on several counts of corruption charges. He is said to be attempting to use the scheme to quash possible judgments against him.

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

The supreme court, for the first time in its history, will convene its entire 15-judge bench on Tuesday, September 12, to hear an appeal against that bill.