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Canada to release review on security failures allowing terror suspects in

Sep 25, 2024, 20:17 GMT+1

Canada is set to release its internal critical review on how two men with reported ties to ISIS were allowed to enter the country despite serious security concerns.

The report, scheduled for release in two weeks, follows the arrests of 62-year-old Ahmed Fouad Mostafa Eldidi and his 26-year-old son, Mostafa Eldidi, in Richmond Hill, Ontario. They face terrorism charges, including conspiracy to commit murder on behalf of ISIS.

The case has sparked significant controversy and concern, particularly among the official opposition party, who have questioned how a man with alleged ties to ISIS managed to enter Canada and evade detection during two separate national security screenings.

The elder Eldidi, who is now facing charges of aggravated assault linked to a 2015 incident outside Canada, allegedly participated in a promotional video for ISIS, where he was seen committing a violent act that experts have said likely constitutes a war crime.

The fact that he was granted Canadian citizenship and allowed to enter the country has raised serious questions about the effectiveness of Canada's immigration and security vetting processes.

Immigration Minister Marc Miller addressed these concerns, stating that the federal government is actively investigating whether Eldidi’s citizenship should be revoked.

"I'm as disgusted as any Canadian. But I have a responsibility to get to the bottom of it, and I will," Miller said during a morning news conference.

According to reports the RCMP's investigation and subsequent arrests of the Eldidis were triggered by a tip-off from French intelligence authorities – further increasing criticism of Canada’s intelligence services.

The RCMP has stated that the father and son were in the "advanced stages of planning a serious, violent attack in Toronto," with a machete and axe found in their possession at the time of their arrest.

The case has intensified scrutiny over Canada’s ability to prevent individuals with ties to terrorist organizations from entering the country. Just this month, another incident further compounded these concerns when 20-year-old Muhammad Shahzeb Khan was arrested near the US border in Quebec, allegedly planning a terrorist attack targeting Jews in New York City.

These events have sparked a growing debate over the issuance of visas and the overall security measures in place to screen individuals suspected of involvement in terrorist activities.

Opposition House Leader Andrew Scheer has called the situation a “colossal failure,” demanding that a parliamentary committee investigate how Eldidi gained entry into Canada. The federal New Democrats have echoed this call, with MP Alistair MacGregor requesting that the ministers responsible for immigration and public safety appear before the committee.

Canada’s handling of Iranian regime officials

As it pertains to Iran, the Canadian government has identified Tehran as a regime that engages in terrorism and systematic or gross human rights violations. In response, Ottawa has taken steps to block senior regime officials from entering the country. Initially, in November 2022, Canada made officials who served in the Iranian regime from November 15, 2019, onward inadmissible.

This measure was later expanded to include officials dating back to June 23, 2003, the day Iranian-Canadian photojournalist Zahra Kazemi was detained, tortured, and killed by state forces.

Last year, the Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA) reported denying entry to numerous senior officials from the Iranian government. Since the implementation of these measures, the CBSA has been investigating approximately 100 individuals with status in Canada for potential connections to Tehran.

While dozens of individuals have been denied entry to Canada, there have been concerns raised by the Iranian diaspora that the deportations of individuals already in Canada, with ties to the regime, are not moving quickly enough.

In an interview with Iran International, Pierre Poilievre, the leader of Canada’s Conservative Party, stressed that Canada should not become a haven for the terrorist activities of the IRGC or the Islamic Republic’s proxy forces. He further stated that those who act as saboteurs for the Islamic Republic have no place in Canada.

While it remains unclear whether the forthcoming review will also address concerns related to Iranian regime officials on Canadian soil, the expanded scrutiny reflects Canada’s broader efforts to prevent potential threats from entering the country.

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US should threaten to blow Iran 'to smithereens' for threats - Trump

Sep 25, 2024, 18:38 GMT+1

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump said on Wednesday that the United States should threaten to bomb countries which seek the assassination of US leaders in the wake of an alleged Iranian plot on his life.

"If I were president, I'd inform the threatening country, in this case Iran, that if you do anything to harm this person, we're going to blow your largest cities and the country itself to smithereens, and there'd be no more threats," Trump told supporters at a rally in in North Carolina.

"But right now we don't have that leadership or necessary leaders," the former president added.

Trump earlier said that the Islamic Republic was seeking to kill him and that his security detail had been increased as his campaign said it was briefed on the threats by US security officials.

“Big threats on my life by Iran. The entire U.S. Military is watching and waiting. Moves were already made by Iran that didn’t work out, but they will try again," the former President said on X.

"I am surrounded by more men, guns, and weapons than I have ever seen before," he added. "An attack on a former President is a Death Wish for the attacker!"

A spokesperson from the US Office of the Director of National Intelligence acknowledged the briefing on Tuesday but declined to address any specifics.

Authorities in Iran did not immediately comment on the situation.

Trump's campaign said the Iranian threats were part of an effort to undermine the United States, Iran's main antagonist since its Islamic Revolution in 1979.

"President Trump was briefed earlier today by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence regarding real and specific threats from Iran to assassinate him in an effort to destabilize and sow chaos in the United States," it said in a statement.

The campaign said intelligence officials conveyed that Iranian threats have "heightened in the past few months", without elaborating.

Iran has issued repeated threats of retribution against those who were involved in the 2020 targeted killing of Qasem Soleimani, Iran's top military and intelligence operative in the Middle East.

Earlier this month, a Pakistani man with alleged ties to Iran pleaded not guilty to charges stemming from an alleged plot to assassinate an unnamed American politician in retaliation for Soleimani's killing.

The defendant named Trump as a potential target but had not conceived the scheme as a plan to assassinate the former president, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Federal authorities are separately investigating an apparent assassination attempt on Trump at his Florida golf course in mid-September and a July 13 shooting of the Republican presidential candidate at a rally in Pennsylvania. There has been no indication of Iranian involvement in either of the alleged attempts.

US government agencies said last week Iranian hackers sent emails containing stolen material from the Republican former president's campaign to people involved in Democratic President Joe Biden's then re-election campaign, as part of an alleged broader effort by Tehran to influence the US election.

Biden stepped aside as a candidate in late July and was replaced by Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris, who faces Trump in a tight race for the Nov. 5 US elections.

In August, the United States accused Iran of launching cyber operations against the campaigns of both US presidential candidates. Iran denied the allegations.

Hezbollah stands despite commanders killings - Iran's Supreme Leader

Sep 25, 2024, 15:43 GMT+1

In his first response to the recent Israeli strikes that killed Hezbollah commanders, Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei stated that the attacks will not undermine the group's strength.

“Hezbollah’s organizational and human strength far surpasses these notions. Their power, capabilities, and resilience are vastly superior to being significantly undermined by these martyrdoms,” Khamenei said on Wednesday.

“Undoubtedly, the loss of an individual, particularly a commander with a distinguished record of jihad in the path of God, is a significant blow. There is no question about that. Yet, despite these losses, they have prevailed thus far,” he added.

The Iranian leader's speech comes amid escalating regional tensions, as Tehran's key proxy group faces an intensifying Israeli offensive. Since Monday, Israeli military operations in Lebanon have resulted in 569 fatalities and over 1,800 injuries, including the assassination of multiple top commanders over the weekend.

In another part of his remarks, Khamenei likened the operations of Lebanese and Palestinian forces against Israel to Iran’s own struggle during the eight-year war with Iraq. He reaffirmed the “religious and undeniable duty” to return Palestine and the Al-Aqsa Mosque to their rightful owners.

Khamenei further asserted, "The Palestinian and Lebanese resistance will ultimately prevail," accusing Israel of targeting civilians out of frustration with its inability to defeat its adversaries.

Since Hezbollah’s founding in 1982, Iran has remained its steadfast ally. Khamenei attributed the recent escalation in Lebanon to US involvement following Israeli strikes that destroyed communication equipment provided to Hezbollah.

Despite Washington’s claims of ignorance regarding Israel’s plans, Khamenei insisted, "The US is both aware and complicit," adding that President Biden’s administration "requires a victory for the Zionist regime" ahead of the upcoming November presidential election.

Former US hostage criticizes Iranian presence in New York

Sep 25, 2024, 13:52 GMT+1

A former US diplomat held hostage in Iran has called the presence of the Iranian president's delegation for the UN General Assembly in New York a lavish escape while Iran grapples with severe domestic crises.

“This is a great vacation for them, believe me. They love this—they can get out of Iran, relax, have a great meal, and see things they couldn't see in Iran. So, this is an excuse to get out,” Barry Rosen, senior advisor at United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI), told Iran International.

Staying at the Millennium Hilton, the visit is costing over $1,000 per night for each member of Masoud Pezeshkian's 40-person delegation, including his family, Rosen remarked that "the larger the delegation, the better time they have."

He further suggested that the group seems detached from the ongoing crises in Iran, where "the economy's in shambles, there's a water crisis, an electricity crisis, every possible crisis, and most of all, a human rights crisis."

Criticizing the issuance of visas for Pezeshkian and his delegation, Rosen recalled a previous instance when he had successfully opposed the appointment of a UN ambassador, saying, "Years ago, I complained against the attempt to bring in a UN ambassador by the name of Aboutalebi, and he was stopped."

However, Rosen acknowledged that diplomatic protocol is difficult to challenge, stating that while the delegation is technically present "legally," he personally does not view them as such.

In 2014, the White House refused to issue a US visa to Iran's nominee for UN ambassador, Hamid Aboutalebi, due to his involvement in the 1979 seizure of the US embassy in Tehran, during which Barry Rosen and dozens of others were taken hostage.

The decision effectively barred Aboutalebi from assuming his position at the United Nations in New York, the official linked to the student group that orchestrated the embassy takeover.

On November 4, 1979, a group of radical students loyal to Ayatollah Khomeini stormed the US Embassy in Tehran, seizing American hostages for 444 days. Taking place in the chaotic aftermath of Iran's Islamic Revolution and the collapse of the Pahlavi monarchy, the crisis deeply strained US-Iranian relations, leaving a lasting impact for years to come.

Recalling the day of the hostage crisis, Rosen said, "We were taken hostage around 10 o'clock in the morning. It was raining, and before I knew it, several hundred people had scaled the walls and burst into my office. They told me, 'You're a member of the nest of spies.'"

To this day, the Islamic Republic refers to the former US embassy in Iran, now defunct, as the "nest of spies." He went on to describe the ordeal: "They put me in handcuffs, threw me into the kitchen of the ambassador's residence, and from that point, I was interrogated, beaten, and tied up.

"As I lay on the floor, I heard Imam Khomeini say that taking Americans as hostages was the right thing to do. At that moment, I realized I was in serious trouble for a long time."

Explaining that his initial trip to Iran was as part of the Peace Corps, a US government program that trains and deploys volunteers for international development assistance, Rosen recounted how he later became a press attaché, working alongside American Ambassador William H. Sullivan. His role was to inform both Iranian journalists and the international press about the events unfolding during the Iranian Revolution.

Reflecting on the anniversary of Mahsa Amini's death in police custody, which sparked months of protests across Iran in 2022, Rosen emphasized the resilience of Iranian women, calling them "the valiant heroes of Iran." He remarked on the severe punishment that women have endured over the past two years.

"There are so many people still going through the jails, being punished, with death penalties being carried out and hangings happening all over the place," Rosen added. "This regime has a lot to answer for."

Iranian hardliners attack Pezeshkian over remarks on Israel

Sep 25, 2024, 11:53 GMT+1
•
Maryam Sinaiee

While in New York, Masoud Pezeshkian faced backlash from hardliners at home following a Bloomberg report that claimed he suggested Iran was prepared to ease tensions with Israel.

The report entitled “Iran's President Says He’s Prepared to Ease Tensions With Israel” was released after Pezeshkian met with a US media delegation in New York on Monday.

"We are prepared to give up all our weapons, provided Israel also disarms, and an international organization steps in to ensure security in the region. We don't even need them—we know how to secure our own safety,” Pezeshkian is heard saying in an audio file from the meeting obtained by Iran International.

Some hardliners have even called for Pezeshkian’s impeachment, signaling potentially serious domestic political strife. It remains unclear where Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei stands. While Pezeshkian's foreign policy statements were likely approved by Khamenei, it remains to be seen whether he will step in to rein in the hardliners.

Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, and the head of the government’s Public Relations Council, Elias Hazrati, strongly rejected Bloomberg’s claim, but an audio recording of the meeting obtained by Iran International confirmed the the Iranian president made those remarks.
Pezeshkian said on X Tuesday that he had criticized the “UN inaction against the crimes of the occupying regime” in a meeting with the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.

“The silence of the world, especially the Western countries, about the death of 41,000 innocent people in Gaza is incomprehensible. The Islamic world will not allow them to turn Lebanon into another Gaza,” he added in his tweet.

“A more beautiful world! President Pezeshkian talked about a region free from weapons of mass destruction and a world free from nuclear weapons,” the Pezeshkian administration’s X account posted Tuesday.

The harshest criticism has come from ultra-hardliners within the Paydari Party and its allies, who continue to quote the Bloomberg headline despite "corrections" from Araghchi and others. They accuse Pezeshkian of betraying Hezbollah, Hamas, Yemen, and other Iranian allies in the region.

“The least that should be done after this scandal in the US is to impeach such an incompetent person and remove him from the presidency of Iran!” one of the critics outraged by the alleged suggestion of the possibility of escalation with Israel posted on X.

“It seems that the multilateral diplomacy of Javad Zarif and President Pezeshkian will be damaging to the Resistance Axis. The message of peace from Iran as the main supporter of the Resistance Axis when Lebanon is on fire has boldened the Israeli army,” another critic charged.

Mohammad-Javad Zarif, Pezeshkian’s Vice President for Strategic Affairs, also took to X to defend Pezeshkian for “the most well-founded defense of the resistance of the people of Palestine, Lebanon, and Yemen” in New York, “exposing the dual standards of the Western countries in matters such as weaponization, war, and human rights” and “showing that genocidal Israel is an aggressor with nuclear weapons”.

Opponents of the Islamic Republic, however, are criticizing Pezeshkian's government for its support of militant groups within the Axis of Resistance, rather than for any alleged attempts at de-escalation in the region.

“Is Mr. Pezeshkian the President of Lebanon, Yemen, and Palestine … that he is talking on their behalf? Is it an honor to put Iran’s money and wealth in the mouths of terrorists?” one of the replies to Zarif’s post in Pezeshkian’s defense charged.

“Why did Lebanon and Yemen get themselves involved in this as if Israel occupied their lands? It was you who armed them. Otherwise, why should Lebanon and Yemen get involved in a Palestinian war?” another comment to Zarif’s post read.

“You and the criminal regime under the criminal Khamenei’s command send money and weapons to terrorist groups such as Hezbollah instead of supporting your own people … You’d better pay heed to human rights violations in Iran instead of theatrical human rights performances in New York…,” another X post declared.

Since his arrival in New York, Pezeshkian has held meetings with the UN Secretary-General, the President of the European Council, the King of Jordan, and presidents of Switzerland, Turkey, and Finland, the Elders Group, and some US media representatives.

Pezeshkian also sat for an interview with CNN’s Fareed Zakaria in which he warned about the escalation of the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah and an all-out war in the region.

In his Tuesday address to the UN General Assembly, he stated that Iran is willing to return to the now-defunct JCPOA nuclear agreement, provided the West meets its obligations, which would effectively mean the lifting of sanctions.

Paris ties with Tehran depend on fate of nationals held in Iran - Macron

Sep 25, 2024, 09:44 GMT+1

French President Emmanuel Macron told his Iranian counterpart that an improvement in bilateral relations could only happen if there was an immediate release of three French nationals held in Iran.

"The President of the Republic stressed the need to obtain without delay the release of the three French nationals arbitrarily held hostage in Iranian prisons for two years in undignified conditions, an imperative prerequisite for any improvement in bilateral relations with France," the French presidency said in a statement.

Macron met Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York.

According to the Iranian readout of the meeting, Pezeshkian criticized France’s support for Israel in its war with Iran-backed militant group Hamas. He said, “The continuation of Israel’s crimes could lead to a situation that is out of control.”

Last year, the French government accused Iran of adopting a policy of "state hostage-taking" and "blackmail," intensifying calls for the release of French nationals detained in Iran.

Cecile Kohler, a teacher and head of the National Federation of Education, Culture and Vocational Training (FNEC FP-FO), and her partner Jacques Paris, also a member of the same trade union, were arrested on May 8, 2022. They are accused by Iranian authorities of inciting labor protests, charges both their families and the French government deny.

Apart from the couple, other French citizens detained in Iran include Olivier, known only by his first name, and Louis Arnaud, a banking consultant sentenced in 2022 to five years in jail on national security charges.