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Israel Strikes Iranian Weapons Shipment Near Damascus

Oct 1, 2023, 14:37 GMT+1
moke rises from a fire in a container storage area after an Israeli air strike on the Syrian port of Latakia on December 7, 2021.
moke rises from a fire in a container storage area after an Israeli air strike on the Syrian port of Latakia on December 7, 2021.

The Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) carried out airstrikes near Damascus Saturday night, specifically targeting an Iranian weapons shipment en route to Lebanon.

The airstrikes were initially reported by news outlets associated with the Syrian opposition and were not officially confirmed by state media.

The airstrikes took place in al-Dimas, located west of Damascus, and their primary targets were locations belonging to the Syrian army and pro-Iranian militia groups. Immediate reports regarding casualties were unavailable, and the extent of damage resulting from the alleged airstrikes remained uncertain.

Social media footage captured explosions, but it is unclear if they were the result of airstrikes successfully hitting their intended targets or part of Syrian air defense activities.

Traditionally, the IDF refrains from commenting on specific strikes conducted in Syria. However, they have openly acknowledged conducting numerous sorties against Iran-backed groups over the past decade, with a primary focus on intercepting arms shipments destined for entities such as Hezbollah in Lebanon. Israel has also openly accused the Syrian military of supporting Hezbollah in the region.

Last month, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported that Israel had targeted arms depots and positions of Hezbollah in Lebanon, as well as other militia groups linked to the Islamic Republic in the rural areas of Damascus province.

Additionally, in February, Iran International obtained exclusive information indicating the establishment of an anti-aircraft defense system in Syrian territory by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. The development suggested that the Islamic Republic was allocating significant funds from Iran's public budget to safeguard the airspace over Syria, where they support the country's regime.

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Iran’s Sistan-Baluchestan Province Is Country's Poorest

Oct 1, 2023, 12:51 GMT+1

Latest figures show Iran's Sistan and Baluchestan Province has the country's lowest annual income.

The province, with a population of around four million, including around 700,000 Afghan nationals, has undergone some of the worst poverty during the current economic disaster facing the regime, including bread and fuel shortages, limited access to drinking water, severe droughts and mass unemployment.

The data was revealed by the Statistical Center of Iran (SCI) which reported that from March 2022-March 2023, the province was Iran's poorest.

According to the SCI report, the average income of rural households in the province, where the majority of the population is Sunni, was just over $900 annually, which is 55.3% lower than the average income of rural households across Iran.

Meanwhile, the annual average income of urban households in the province was nearly $2,200, marking more than a 35.4% deficit compared to the national average income for the past year.

Despite repeated pledges to improve the situation, successive administrations have made limited efforts to invest in the region, create job opportunities, build suitable housing, or establish decent schools.

Narcotics smuggling from Afghanistan also poses a significant problem in the area, leading to hundreds of small-time traffickers facing execution each year under Iran's stringent criminal laws.

During the last year’s protests that followed the death of Mahsa Amini in custody, Sistan and Baluchestan witnessed the highest number of casualties among all 31 provinces.

The Islamic Republic has been grappling with high inflation since 2019, but the inflation experienced in the past Iranian year was markedly more severe than in previous years. According to the SCI report, inflation in the food and beverages sector reached 87% in certain months.

Calls Grow To Revoke Iran-Linked Pentagon Official's Clearance

Oct 1, 2023, 11:31 GMT+1

Following the disclosure of an Iranian influence campaign, more US senators are demanding the revocation of the security clearance of a Pentagon official.

It seems the individual in question is Ariane Tabatabaei, who holds the position of Chief of Staff for the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations and Low Intensity Conflict, a high-ranking role with access to top-secret information.

In a recent statement, Senator Marsha Blackburn emphasized that “no individual affiliated with the Iranian regime should have access to sensitive information or influence over US foreign policy.”

She, along with several other Republican Senators, sent a letter to the Pentagon regarding the individual who possesses US security clearance and holds a senior position within the Department of Defense.

The development follows a report by Iran International and Semafor, which simultaneously exposed that several individuals closely linked to President Joe Biden's former Iran special envoy, Robert Malley, were part of an influence network established by Iran's foreign ministry.

Notably, at least three individuals listed by the Foreign Ministry were, or later became, key aides to Robert Malley, who was placed on leave this June following the suspension of his security clearance.

Meanwhile, Senator John Kennedy of Louisiana confirmed that a letter, signed by numerous Republican Senators, has been sent to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin calling for the clearance to be revoked.

“Anyone with ties to the Iranian regime should not have a security clearance at the Department of Defense—that’s common sense,” he stressed.

The scandal has led to huge criticism being heaped on the Biden administration which has remained tight lipped on the matter while investigations into Malley continue, including under the FBI.

Iran, Venezuela, Syria Build New Refinery In Homs

Oct 1, 2023, 10:30 GMT+1

Iran, Venezuela, and Syria are to construct a new refinery in Syria's Homs province to buffer Iran’s “resistance front”.

The Homs refinery is planned to have a daily refining capacity of 140,000 barrels of oil.

The 'resistance front' refers to the various Iranian proxy groups in the Middle East and beyond such as Hezbollah, Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, and the Popular Mobilization Forces.

The proxy militia groups have been designated as terrorist organizations by the United States, Israel, and several Western nations.

Jalil Salarieh, the CEO of the National Iranian Oil Refining and Distribution Company (NIORDC), announced last week that the governments of Tehran, Caracas, and Damascus are preparing to enter the financial and construction phase of this project.

He also disclosed that Iranian engineers repaired the existing Homs refinery after a visit by President Ebrahim Raisi during his trip to Syria in May. Following the restoration of the current Homs refinery, Iran intends to send 100,000 barrels of oil daily to Syria for processing at the facility.

The specific amount of capital allocated by Iran for the refinery's construction has not been disclosed, and it remains uncertain whether this investment will generate financial returns for Iran.

In addition to offering technical and logistical support to Syria's oil industry to circumvent US sanctions, Iran maintains a significant military alliance with the Bashar al-Assad government in Syria, alongside Russia.

Two More Bookstores Closed In Tehran For Failing To Enforce Hijab

Oct 1, 2023, 08:45 GMT+1

Amid crackdown on businesses and cultural establishments due to women not adhering to the mandatory hijab, two more bookstores in Tehran faced closure on Saturday.

Ketab-e Dey and Ketab-e Khaneh announced on their Instagram page that they would be closed "until further notice." When questioned by users about the reason for the closure, the management confirmed, "We were sealed [shut down by the regime]”.

While the store managers refrained from providing detailed explanations, reports suggest the shutdown of the bookstores is part of an ongoing effort to enforce hijab rules in Tehran and other Iranian cities.

Meanwhile, the Qom Prosecutor's Office reported the closure of a cinema in the religious city, alleging "indecent advertising related to the screening of a foreign film." They claimed that the film's horror genre and introduction of supernatural elements were somehow linked to "Satanism."

While the protest movement in Iran over the past year, sparked by the tragic death of Mahsa Amini while in custody, didn't lead to the overthrow of the regime, it did manage to significantly challenge one of its core principles, mandatory hijab.

As women increasingly defy the mandatory headscarf and venture out, the regime intensifies its efforts to suppress social activities, punishing the population as it faces challenges in enforcing hijab rules amid growing public resistance.

In recent months, numerous shops, restaurants, cafes and malls where Iranian women continue to disregard the regime's mandatory hijab have been shut down across Iran, with many women arrested in the process.

This month, new laws were passed to introduce even harsher punishments for failure to comply with hijab laws.

Iranian Regime Shutting Down Cafes To Protect ‘Islamic Culture’

Oct 1, 2023, 05:31 GMT+1
•
Maryam Sinaiee

Iranian authorities have been shutting down cafes around Tehran University campus in the past eighteen months to “protect the wholesome Islamic-Iranian culture.”

Closing cafes and coffee shops, which are very popular with students and other young people, is apparently part of the larger plans of the ruling hardliners to shut down all such establishments as symbols of “corruptive western culture”.

In the past two years many cafes and coffee shops have been forced to shut down across the country, often on various charges including “failure to enforce the hijab” or for live music.

In a letter to the higher education minister apparently leaked on social media by hackers who targeted the ministry earlier this week, the university’s chancellor, Seyed Mohammad Moghimi, has boasted that all but one of the cafes around the university campus have been closed “with the help of all of the university’s departments” in the past eighteen months.

Authorities have not confirmed or denied the authenticity of the letter which suggests that the university owns the land on which the buildings of the cafes stand and offers cooperation in shutting down even those built on land not owned by the university.

Many social media users are baffled that the chancellor of the country’s biggest and oldest university should be so concerned about the existence of cafes around the university campus.

“I think shutting down cafes is useless. Shut down the university to find relief from your concerns,” a comment on X said while someone else opined that the authorities are concerned about these cafes because they are a place for students to gather freely. “I forgot the parks around the university. You should turn them into parking lots, too,” another tweet said.

Meanwhile, on Saturday Defa Press, the news agency of Iran's Armed Forces, alleged that some cafes had been “centers for networking against national security”.

The article in Defa Press, used complex syllogism to prove its allegation and claimed that half of the 150 cafes in the central areas of the capital Tehran, where the said university campus is also located, had been partially funded by “European embassies, particularly the one involved in last year’s riots” before shutting down.

Iranian authorities and hardline media always refer to last year’s nationwide protests during which over 500 protesters were killed as “riots” and “sedition” and blame western powers of stirring them up to weaken the Islamic Republic and destroy it.

“Over 50 percent of these [cafes] were not economically viable but they continued to operate because all of them received funding from the same source,” Defa Press wrote.

Defa Press claimed that the cafes were helped by these western powers because they were places for young gamers to convene and network, and argued that new technologies, including those employed by these gamers, could be used against the Islamic Republic’s national security without elaborating on the connection.

Referring to Tehran University Chancellor’s letter, writer and journalist Abdoljavad Mousavi in a commentary for the reformist Ham-Mihan newspaper on Tuesday strongly criticized the efforts for Islamizing the “appearance” of the Iranian society including elimination of everything that looks influenced by the western culture.

Comparing the mindset of the Iranian hardliners to the Taliban, Mousavi warned that shutting down cafes -- like banning video players in the 1980s, satellite TV in the 90s and internet filtering after 2002-- would only encourage “underground cafes” and draw more people to these underground establishments. “Stop acting with [fake] modestly, do what your brothers [in Afghanistan] did. Ban women from leaving their homes. Shut down the universities too and put an end to all this,” he wrote.