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Congress To Probe US Tour Of Iranian Actor With IRGC Links

May 10, 2022, 09:28 GMT+1
A screen grab of Parviz Parastui, the Iranian actor whose US visit sparked a controversy
A screen grab of Parviz Parastui, the Iranian actor whose US visit sparked a controversy

The US Congress has started probing why the Biden administration granted visa to an Iranian actor who is reportedly close to the country’s Revolutionary Guard (IRGC).

According to a letter obtained by the Washington Free Beacon, Indiana’s Republican member of the House Armed Services Committee, Jim Banks, has asked the administration for explanation about the visa to Parviz Parastui (Parastouei), saying he has an "overt connection" to the IRGC and the former commander of its Qods (Quds) force Ghasem Soleimani.

“Parastui has been directly involved in IRGC funded propaganda projects, promoting a hardliner ideology that seeks to shape Iran’s culture to the agenda of the Iranian regime”, the letter read.

During a film screening event in Los Angeles late last month that was organized by the far-left anti-Israel group Code Pink, Parastouei was caught on camera during a row with an Iranian dissident.

Before the event, Sam Rajabi, a former judoka champion who now lives in the US, insisted that Parastui explain his relationship with Soleimani, while filming him on his mobile phone. Parastoueire refused to respond, and the encounter ended in Parastui knocking the mobile out of Rajabi's hand. The video taken by Rajabi went viral on social media with hundreds commenting in support of or against Parastui.

Code Pink introduces itself as a women-led grassroots organization "working to end US wars and militarism" and supporter of peace and human rights initiatives. Code Pink condemns US sanctions on Iran.

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Ukraine Invasion Created Wheat Supply Problems For Iran– US Lawmaker

May 10, 2022, 08:09 GMT+1

An American lawmaker says the Russian invasion of Ukraine has created a tough time for Iranians and many others regarding the supply of wheat.

Alabama Republican senator Tommy Tuberville told Iran International on Monday, “Iran and a lot of (other) people are going to have problems because of this (Russian war)”, noting that “Iranians are not going to be the only ones that will have problems with wheat and corn and things like that. It’s going to be a tough time for a lot of people”.

Reacting to how the Islamic Republic is handling the wheat shortages that has sent bread and pasta prices soaring and prompted popular protests, Tuberville said, "You can do a lot of things to people, but you'd better feed them. You need to feed your people and take care of them, or obviously that could be a huge problem”.

“The wheat shortage is a problem for all of us. We’re starting to see shelves empty and it’s going to be a tough time with this (Ukraine war) going on, because 30 to 35 percent of the world’s grain comes from that area - Russia and Ukraine”, he said, warning that “So that’s serious, going to get very serious”.

Security forces in Iran are on high alert to prevent unrest over rising bread prices, as unrest has been reported in Khuzestan Province in the past few days.

IRGC, Hezbollah Take Over Abandoned Russian Bases In Syria - Report

May 10, 2022, 00:40 GMT+1

While Russia has begun pulling out its troops from Syria to bolster forces in Ukraine, Iran forces and Lebanese group Hezbollah have reportedly taken over its bases.

The Moscow Times, an independent Dutch-based paper, said on Friday that several military units have been relocated from bases across Syria to three unnamed airports at the coast of the Mediterranean Sea, from where they will be transferred to Ukraine.

No Russian official or state media has yet confirmed the transfer.

The current number of the Russian forces in Syria is not known but according to the data by the Russian Defense Ministry, about 63 thousand military personnel were stationed in the country in 2015-2018.

Russia has been a staunch military backer of Syria and started to support Syrian President Bashar Assad with airstrikes in 2015 as government forces were struggling in the Syrian civil war.

Assad visited Tehran on Sunday and received praise by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and promises of stronger cooperation.

Although the real purpose of the unannounced visit was not clear, it could strengthen perceptions of Iran's meddling in the region, if its military role expands in Syria in the wake of Russia's entanglement in Ukraine, and now the withdrawal of its forces.

Iraq Reiterates Plan For Legal Action Against Iran Over Water

May 9, 2022, 17:59 GMT+1

Baghdad will file an international lawsuit against Iran over water disputes, a senior advisor to the Iraqi Ministry of Water Resources said Sunday.

Aoun Diab told the state-funded al-Iraqiya television that the ministry had forwarded a dossier to the government after Iran had failed to respond after requests to discuss its diverting six rivers flowing into Iraq. Diab criticized what he called a lack of cooperation and drew an unfavorable comparison with Turkey given a delegation from Ankara was due to arrive for a field study.

Iraqi officials have for months talked of filing a case with the International Court of Justice, while Iranian officials have suggested Iraq’s chronic water challenge – the United Nations in 2017 ranked it the world’s fifth most vulnerable country to water shortage and food availability – results more from Turkish dams.

In April, Minister of Water Resources Mahdi Rashid al-Hamdani accused Tehran of ignoring Iraqi water rights “even if its dams are filled with water."

Both the Tigris and Euphrates, Iraq’s most important sources of water, originate in Turkey, although tributaries come from Syria and Iran.

Across the Middle East, water shortages have fed tensions between countries and within countries. Iranian officials have warned of a further fall this year in precipitation.

Iran Slams Sweden Trial Of Former Prison Official, Denies Link To Condemned Academic

May 9, 2022, 16:38 GMT+1

Iran has again criticized the trial in Sweden of former judicial official Hamid Nouri over his alleged role in a wave of prison executions in 1988.

Speaking at a weekly press conference in Tehran Monday, Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said Sweden had “no jurisdiction” in the case and that the defendant’s “basic rights” had not been respected.

Khatibzadeh denied any connection between Nouri and the case of Swedish-Iranian doctor and academic Ahmadreza Djalali (Jalali), whose death sentence after an espionage conviction was recently reaffirmed six years after his arrest.

A verdict in the Nouri’s trial, which recently concluded, is due in July. He was arrested in 2019 on arrival at Stockholm airport, with his trial beginning August 202l over his alleged role in executions in Gohardasht prison, near Tehran in Iran in July- August 1988.

Khatibzadeh said the Nouri trial was a trap set by the Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization (MEK), an Iranian opposition group. “It is suspicious why the Swedish government is allowing this,” he noted.

MEK members have acted as witnesses, with the court adjourning some sessions to Albania, where the MEK was relocated from Iraq by the United States in 2016. The bulk of victims in 1988 were MEK members or supporters. Both Tehran and Washington have denied that reported talks over a potential prisoner exchange are linked to efforts to revive the 2015 Iran nuclear deal.

Tehran Confirms Visit Of Qatar's Emir Amid Deadlock In Nuclear Talks

May 9, 2022, 10:33 GMT+1

Qatar's Emir will visit Iran soon, Iran's foreign ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh confirmed on Monday during his weekly news conference.

"The visit of the Emir of Qatar to Tehran is on the agenda and includes bilateral, regional and international issues. After this trip, Iran's President will travel to a Persian Gulf country," Khatibzadeh said.

Citing a source, Reuters reported on Sunday that Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani will visit Iran before traveling to Germany, Britain and other European states to discuss efforts to revive Iran's 2015 nuclear deal and energy security in Europe.

The source added the Emir's trip aimed at bringing parties to the Iran nuclear pact to a "new middle ground." This follows an impasse in indirect Iran-US talks over Tehran's insistence that Washington remove the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) from the US Foreign Terrorist Organization list.

Other regional countires, including Saudi Arabia, Israel and the United Arab Emirates are opposed to reviving the JCPOA by lifting major economic sanctions and possibly removing IRGC from the US Terror list.

Qatar's Emir last visited Iran in January 2020 to reduce tensions between Tehran and Washington following the killing of top Revolutionary Guard Commander Ghasem (Qasem) Soleimani by the United States whilst on a visit to Iraq.

Iranian state media also reported the Emir's trip was meant to follow up on several bilateral memoranda of understanding signed during Iran's President Ebrahim Raisi's visit to Doha in February.