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US envoy to Ukraine calls Iran’s bond with adversaries a new global problem

Mar 6, 2025, 17:23 GMT+0Updated: 23:37 GMT+0
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Iranian counterpart Masoud Pezeshkian at BRICS summit, Kazan, Russia, October 2024
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Iranian counterpart Masoud Pezeshkian at BRICS summit, Kazan, Russia, October 2024

US President Donald Trump's envoy to Ukraine on Thursday said the informal security grouping of Iran, Russia, North Korea and China presented a challenge to global security which had not existed in his first term.

"This is a brand new arrangement ... we were not confronted with this four years ago," Keith Kellogg told the Brookings Institution thinktank in Washington DC. "This is not just a European problem. This is a global problem."

"Four years ago," he added, "the North Koreans were over here. The Iranians were over here. The Russians, you know, were over here, working, working (the Ukraine) issue, and then the Chinese were over here. Well, now they're all together," he said.

Russia suggested to the United States that the two powers should hold talks focused on Iran's nuclear program, a Kremlin spokesman said on Wednesday, in yet another sign of converging outlooks on global affairs by Washington and Moscow.

Bloomberg reported on Tuesday that Russia has agreed to assist Washington in communicating with Iran on various issues, including its support for regional groups hostile to the US.

Trump's overtures to Russia have upended international relations in recent weeks and the potential role for Moscow in addressing Tehran disputed nuclear program links the issues more closely.

Iran has provided Russia with hundreds of drones for its full-scale invasion of Ukraine as the two powers heavily sanctioned by the United States have drawn closer.

The potential realignment of Russia and the United States in opposition to Iran's nuclear program might deprive Iran of a key ally - a possibility President Masoud Pezeshkian appeared to acknowledge on Thursday.

"If Russia, the United States, or any other country wants to take action, when our hope is in God and our reliance is on our own beliefs, we will find a way," Pezeshkian said according to a readout of his speech published on the president’s website.

"Today, someone may rebuke us, someone may not cooperate with us, or we may run into conflicts with each other. If we rely on anyone other than God, we will face problems," he added.

Kellogg said Washington's Eurasian adversaries had been disunited previously, adding, "(Trump) kept them all segmented,"

"It's sort of like the game of Whac-A-Mole, that every time a mole would come up, you whack it down. Well, all the moles came up, and now we've got to figure out, okay, how do we do this?"

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Rights group urges recognition of 'gender apartheid' in Iran

Mar 6, 2025, 16:39 GMT+0

A US-based rights group has urged governments to recognize what it called gender apartheid in Iran as a crime against humanity, arguing that the Islamic Republic systematically oppresses women.

"The oppression of women in Iran is not just discrimination—it is a deliberately designed, institutionalized system of domination intended to enforce the subjugation of women to maintain the state’s grip on power," said Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI) director of communications, Bahar Ghandehari.

"This state-sanctioned systemic subjugation amounts to nothing less than gender apartheid, which fully meets the threshold of a crime against humanity," she added in the press release on Thursday.

Unlike racial apartheid, which is explicitly banned under international law, gender apartheid is not yet recognized as a distinct crime.

CHRI called on governments to support its inclusion in the proposed Crimes Against Humanity treaty, impose sanctions on officials enforcing discriminatory policies, and back UN investigations into rights abuses in Iran.

Earlier this year, Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi called on France's Senate to support the criminalization of gender apartheid and prioritize the fight for human and women's rights in Iran.

Tehran postponed implementing the controversial hijab law in December following a backlash from the public and the international community.

President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Wednesday he cannot implement the law due to popular opposition, after hardliners largely thwarted his agenda by pushing out top aides and rejecting his overtures to Washington.

The remarks, quoted by the head of his office in a post on X, were the strongest yet against a dormant law to tighten Islamic morality restrictions on women.

Popular opposition to hijab enforcement exploded in September 2022 when a young woman named Mahsa Jina Amini died in morality police custody, sparking nationwide protests dubbed the Woman Life Freedom movement.

The unrest was quashed with deadly force and opposition to the theocracy festered, but hardliners still drafted the new hijab law in May 2023.


Three more Iranian ministers face possible impeachment, lawmaker says

Mar 6, 2025, 13:55 GMT+0

Three Iranian ministers are facing potential impeachment proceedings, according to a member of Iran's parliament, who also dismissed the recent impeachment of the economy minister as politically motivated.

"A group is seeking to impeach reformist ministers in the cabinet, including Labor Minister Ahmad Meydari, Health Minister Mohammad-Reza Zafarghandi, and Culture Minister Reza Salehi Amiri," said Abdolreza Sepahvand on Thursday.

Sepahvand criticized the impeachment of the economy minister, saying that "the issue of the exchange rate and the dollar was a deception" and driven by personal motived related to appointments.

He also accused certain political groups of being unwilling to compromise with the government.

Last week, President Masoud Pezeshkian's Economy Minister Abdolnaser Hemmati was impeached by Parliament while Vice President for Strategic Affairs Javad Zarif was forced to resign.

Iran says UK should be held accountable over hostile accusations

Mar 6, 2025, 12:36 GMT+0

Iran said on Thursday that Britain must be held accountable for making what it called baseless accusations against the country following the UK’s move to tighten restrictions on Tehran following allegations of foreign interference.

"Any government that makes baseless accusations against the Iranian nation or takes hostile actions against them must be held accountable," Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei said in a post on X on Thursday.

Baghaei was responding to the UK government's decision to place the Islamic Republic’s intelligence and security establishment on the highest tier of its foreign influence watchlist, citing concerns over Tehran’s political interference.

Under the new designation, Iran and any individuals acting on its behalf will be required to register their activities in the UK or face possible prison sentences of up to five years.

Referring to past British involvement in Iran’s internal affairs, Baghaei added, "You accuse Iran of what you yourselves are skilled at: interfering in the internal affairs of nations! But this is no longer the 19th century."

In his post, he mentioned the 1953 Iranian coup d'état during which Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh was removed from power. The event, historically understood as a US and British-instigated operation, involved the Iranian military and resulted in the consolidation of power by Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the last monarch of Iran.

The Islamic Republic says the objectives of this action were to safeguard British oil interests in Iran, following the Iranian government's refusal to accede to Western demands regarding oil concessions.

Baghaei accused Britain of trying to distract from its own record. "The UK insists on its irrational and hostile mindset toward Iranians, aiming to cover up its crimes as a supporter of the genocide of the Palestinian people and backer of anti-Iranian terrorism," he said.

Russia considering Iran’s interests in US talks, Iranian lawmaker says

Mar 6, 2025, 11:57 GMT+0

Russia is taking Iran's interests into account during its talks with the United States, a senior Iranian lawmaker said, highlighting the closeness of Tehran and Moscow in the wake of the war on Ukraine.

"Russia, in negotiations with the United States, also considers Iran's interests," said Abbas Moghtadaei, deputy head of parliament's national security and foreign policy committee. "The Russians have a strategic agreement with us and will take our interests into account."

He dismissed concerns that Iran's interests could be compromised as part of wider US-Russia talks, particularly over Ukraine.

"Iran's position and Ukraine's position on the international stage are completely different," he said.

"Therefore, comparing our country with Ukraine and presenting this analysis that the US and Russia can negotiate about Iran's interests as they bargain about Ukraine's interests, is fundamentally flawed."

Moscow and Tehran have become ever closer in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022, during which Iran has been sanctioned by global powers such as the US, UK and EU, for supplying Russia with drones used to target civilian populations in Ukraine.

The two nations, along with China, have carried out multiple military drills since the war began, in addition to signing long-term strategic agreements, which Moghtadaei said has cemented the alliance between the three countries.

"Those who analyze that the US and Russia will trade on Iran's interests the same way they negotiate over Ukraine, do not have a deep understanding of our country and its capabilities," he added.

The Kremlin confirmed on Wednesday that Russia suggested to the United States that the two powers should hold talks focused on Iran's nuclear program, with Russian media reporting this week that President Vladimir Putin has agreed to mediate nuclear talks between Washington and Tehran.

Iranian artists and activists condemn flogging of dissident singer

Mar 6, 2025, 10:35 GMT+0

Iranian artists, activists, and public figures condemned the execution of a 74-lash sentence against singer Mehdi Yarrahi, denouncing it as a sign of deepening repression.

Yarrahi was sentenced after performing the protest song Rousarito (Take Off Your Headscarf). He confirmed through his lawyer that the punishment had been carried out and expressed defiance in response, following news that his case had finally been closed.

Writing on X, he said: “He who is unwilling to pay a price for freedom is unworthy of it.” He later added: “You have taken glass to break our stone.”

Renowned actress Taraneh Alidoosti shared a photo of Yarrahi in an Instagram story, writing: “Shame on fanaticism, shame on torture, shame on violence, shame on inhumane laws, and shame on our helplessness.”

Labor activist Esmail Bakhshi called the flogging “a whip striking the entire body of art and all art lovers in this land [Iran]," as hundreds of artists and entertainment stars continue to be victims of the state crackdown on dissent.

The singer gained prominence for his support of the 2022 popular protests, ignited by the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in custody of hijab police.

His case has drawn renewed attention to the targeting of artists in Iran. Other musicians, including Toomaj Salehi and Saman Yasin, were imprisoned for supporting the protests, though both have since been released.

Many high level figures in the likes of sports and entertainment have been given punishments from jail time to travel bans, fines and work bans.

It was not only in Iran that solidarity message flooded the internet. In Canada, Iranian dissident Hamed Esmaeilion wrote: “In praise of those whose weary bodies bear the bloody marks of the whips of criminals and tyrants.”

US-based Singer Dariush Eghbali also reacted, posting Yarrahi’s image alongside a verse from his song: "Neither bullets nor daggers, neither gallows nor prison; Don’t frighten the stars away from the night."

Ahmad Zeidabadi, a Tehran-based commentator with ties to the Reformist camp, criticized the justification behind the sentence, writing: “Woe to that form of religiosity that remains trapped in history and does not modernize itself!”

In contravention of international laws on torture, Iran continues its policy of flogging, which along with death sentences, has increased in the wake of the 2022 uprising, according to rights groups.