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Iran tightens COVID curbs as cases, deaths surge

By - Aug 14,2021 - Last updated at Aug 14,2021

An Iranian health worker inoculates a man against the coronavirus, at a vaccination centre set up inside the Iran Mall in the capital Tehran, on Saturday (AFP photo)

TEHRAN — Iran on Saturday announced new curbs to combat the spread of COVID-19 as deaths and infections surge and as the country tries to speed up its vaccination campaign.

The Islamic republic is struggling to the contain what officials have called a “fifth wave” of the virus driven by the highly infectious Delta variant.

Hit by the Middle East’s deadliest outbreak, Iran has officially recorded more than 97,000 deaths and over 4.38 million infections, with numbers breaking daily records several times this month.

Health authorities acknowledge that the official figures underestimate the country’s real toll.

Iran’s national coronavirus taskforce announced Saturday that government offices, banks and non-essential businesses must close their doors countrywide from Monday until the end of next Saturday.

A ban on car travel between provinces will be in force from noon on Sunday (07:30 GMT) until August 27, taskforce spokesman Alireza Raisi told IRNA state news agency.

The new measures coincide with two Shiite religious commemorations set for next week, though authorities said the restrictions would not impact ceremonies held in the open air.

Iran has avoided imposing a full lockdown on its 83-million-strong population, instead resorting to piecemeal measures such as temporary travel bans and business closures.

Authorities have recently tried to speed up the country’s inoculation campaign amid criticism that it began too late and as Iran’s exhausted health system struggles to cope with rising case numbers.

A few thousand Iranians lined up on Saturday at a vaccination centre at Tehran’s sprawling Iran Mall, AFP journalists said.

“The vaccination pace is accelerating every day, thank God,” said Bahare Karimi, a health ministry representative at the vaccination centre, adding that health workers were “very tired now”.

She told AFP that the centre was currently distributing Sinopharm vaccines, but that the type of jab being administered might differ from day to day.

More than 14.7 million people have received a first vaccine dose, but only 3.8 million have received the required second jab, the health ministry said on Saturday.

As well as China’s Sinopharm, Iran is also administering Russia’s Sputnik V, India’s Bharat Biotech and the AstraZeneca/Oxford vaccines, according to the health ministry.

Authorities have approved the emergency use of two locally made vaccines, but the only mass-produced one, COVIran Barekat, is in short supply.

Pharmacy worker Hamed Rahmati complained as he waited in line for his jab.

“They didn’t [import vaccines] when they were supposed to and now it’s too late,” he said.

President Ebrahim Raisi said that Iran needed an addition 60 million vaccine doses to “control the unfavourable coronavirus situation”, according to the government’s website.

Raisi told a COVID-19 taskforce meeting on Saturday that 30 million doses would be imported and made available “in a short time”, without elaborating.

Choked by US sanctions that have made it difficult to transfer money abroad, Iran has said that it has struggled to import vaccines.

In January, supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei banned the use of jabs made by the United States and Britain, calling them “completely untrustworthy”.

 

West Baghdad without water after ‘attack’ on power grid

By - Aug 14,2021 - Last updated at Aug 14,2021

BAGHDAD — Baghdad’s west has been cut off from the city’s water network after the Daesh group attacked an electricity pylon powering a pumping station, authorities and residents said on Saturday.

Unclaimed attacks on Iraq’s electricity network have been increasing since the start of summer, at a time when the country is facing severe power shortages.

Authorities normally accuse “terrorists” of being behind the attacks, without identifying a particular group.

But the Iraqi army said in a statement on Saturday that Daesh terrorists were behind an “attack” on Friday on a pylon in Tarmiya, north of the capital.

The pylon supplies the Tarmiya pumping station which serves Karkh, the city’s west and home to several million people.

Baghdad announced victory over the Daesh group in 2017, though troops continue to fight sleeper cells.

Residents of Karkh told AFP on Saturday that water had been cut off since the day before.

“We don’t have much water in our tank and we’re afraid this cut will be prolonged,” a Karkh resident told AFP, declining to be identified.

Many Baghdad residents have installed their own water tanks, as persistent power cuts make Iraq’s daily water distribution erratic.

Municipal authorities urged residents to ration tank water usage until the pylon has been repaired and the situation “returns to normal”.

Since the start of the summer, authorities have reported the damage or destruction of some 60 electricity pylons across the country, mostly in desert regions.

Prime Minister Mustafa Al Kadhemi met security and intelligence officials on Friday and ordered the establishment of a crisis unit to protect the electricity network.

Oil-rich Iraq produces just 16,000 megawatts of power — far below the 24,000 megawatts needed, and even further from the expected future needs of a country whose population is set to double by 2050, according to the UN.

The country buys gas and electricity from neighbouring Iran to supply about a third of its power sector, which has been worn down by years of conflict and poor maintenance, and is unable to meet the needs of the country’s 40 million population.

Last month, areas in the country’s south were plunged into darkness for several days after a series of similar attacks.

Around the same time, Iran briefly suspended its gas and electricity exports because of Iraq’s failure to pay a $6 billion energy debt.

The failure of Iraq’s power system is particularly acute in the baking hot summer months, when temperatures shoot past 45ºC.

 

South Sudan VP Machar's ex-deputy joins rival as infighting grows

By - Aug 12,2021 - Last updated at Aug 12,2021

JUBA — South Sudanese Vice President Riek Machar's movement suffered a fresh blow on Thursday as his deputy quit to join a rival military faction, following deadly clashes between the two sides.

At least 32 people were reported dead when violence broke out on Saturday, just days after Machar's foes in the Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army-In Opposition (SPLM/A-IO) said they had ousted him as party leader and head of its armed forces.



The infighting has raised fears for South Sudan's fragile peace process.

"To ensure that South Sudan moves away from the legacy of conflict, the fostering of divisions and splits of parties must... stop," the so-called Troika of Britain, Norway and the United States said on Thursday.



The statement came after East African bloc IGAD warned this week that the splintering of the SPLM/A-IO "is beyond an intra-party crisis and bears significant immediate and long-term implications" for the world's youngest nation.

On Thursday, Henry Odwar, the movement's deputy chairman and South Sudan's former mining minister, announced that following his resignation from the government a day earlier, he was switching loyalties to General Simon Gatwech Dual, who has led the push to oust Machar.



In a signed document seen by AFP, Odwar accused Machar of sidelining other members in a bid to "single-handedly" direct the party's affairs and said the new faction hoped "to steer the movement and chart [a]more democratic and people's centered path".

The two men, who did not share a close personal relationship despite years working together, were reportedly at loggerheads for some time.

Odwar's exit will likely weaken Machar's influence in the Equatoria region, his former deputy's base.

Analysts say the bickering leaves Machar in an increasingly precarious position as he attempts to work alongside his former foe President Salva Kiir to implement a peace process which is already behind schedule.

'A weak partner' 

The 2018 agreement ended South Sudan's five-year civil war between forces loyal to Machar and Kiir that cost almost 400,000 lives, as the two men hammered out a power-sharing deal.

But the latest fighting within Machar's movement diminishes his negotiating power and in doing so, threatens the peace process, said James Okuk, a South Sudanese policy analyst.

"By splitting itself... [the SPLM/A-IO] becomes a weak partner and a weak partner is not good in the implementation of the peace agreement," Okuk told AFP.

"This will give President Kiir an upper hand now to be in control of politics in the country."

Nicholas Haysom, the head of the UN mission in South Sudan, on Thursday joined calls by IGAD, the Troika and Kiir's office to halt the violence.

He urged the "factions, and indeed all signatory parties to work together to overcome their differences peacefully."

The warring parties have announced a temporary ceasefire for now, with each blaming the other for launching the early-morning attacks Saturday on rival forces in Upper Nile State which borders Sudan.

Deepening discontent 

South Sudan has struggled with war, famine and chronic political and economic crisis since celebrating its hard-fought independence from Sudan in July 2011.

As discontent has deepened, some citizens have called for a peaceful public uprising to topple the current regime.

At least two prominent activists were arrested last week after they signed a declaration by a coalition of civil society groups calling for the resignation of Kiir and Machar.

On Thursday, the Troika urged the government to respond to "legitimate grievances".

"It is important for those voices to be heard and for freedom of expression to be protected".

Since he signed the power-sharing deal with Kiir, the 68-year-old Machar has faced growing opposition within his own ranks, with top cadres complaining they had lost out to the ruling party.

Machar has said the recent squabbles are aimed at derailing the formation of a unified armed forces command, a key component of the peace deal.

Flash floods kill 11 as Turkey reels from multiple disasters

By - Aug 12,2021 - Last updated at Aug 12,2021

This handout photo released by Turkey's IHH humanitarian aid group on Thursday shows a car floating in water in Kastamonu, after flash floods swept across several Black Sea regions (AFP photo)


ISTANBUL  — Turkish rescuers distributed food and relocated thousands of people into student dormitories on Thursday as the death toll from flash floods that swept across several Black Sea regions rose to 11.

The torrential rains descended on Turkey's northern stretches just as rescuers reported bringing hundreds of wildfires that have killed eight people since late July under near total control in the south.

Turkey has been grappling with drought and reeling from a rapid succession of natural disasters that world scientists believe are becoming more frequent and intense because of climate change.

Storms that swept in from the Balkans late Tuesday turned streets into running rivers and set off mudslides that buckled roads and tore down bridges in three mountainous regions hugging Turkey's rugged Black Sea coast.

Emergency services said waters briefly rose in some parts as high as four metres before subsiding and spreading across a region stretching more than 240 kilometres wide.

Agriculture and Forestry Minister Bekir Pakdemirli warned on Wednesday that the area was facing "a disaster that we had not seen in 50 or 100 years".

Rescuers were forced to evacuate a hospital holding 45 patients -- four of them in intensive care -- in the region around the coastal city of Sinop on Wednesday.

Images on television and social media showed stranded villagers being plucked off rooftops by helicopter and bridges collapsing under the force of the rushing water below.

Turkey's disaster response authority said 10 people had lost their lives in the northern Kastamonu province and one in the neighbouring region of Sinop.

Rescuers were also searching for a person who disappeared in the northern city of Bartin.

More rain 

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's office said he held a phone call with the heads of the affected regions on Thursday and promised to provide all state assistance available.

The emergencies authority said more than 1,000 rescuers were working in the region while Turkish Red Crescent teams were distributing food packages and hot meals.

Officials said more than 5,000 places had been allocated in student dormitories to shelter those displaced by the floods.

Dozens of villages suffered electricity and mobile phone service disruptions as masts and power lines went down.

The Anadolu state news agency said rescuers were focusing on a four-floor apartment building that partially crumbled and another one next to it that completely collapsed.

Images showed parts of both river-front buildings toppling into the rushing flood of brown water below.

Weather services predicted rains to continue to lash the affected area for the remainder of week.

The disaster struck less than a month after six people died in floods caused by heavy rains in the northeast Rize province.

Turkey's mountainous Black Sea regions frequently experience heavy rains that produce flash floods and mudslides in the summer months.

Officials said that all but three of the nearly 300 fires that had been ravaging Turkey's Mediterranean and Aegean coasts since July 28 have been brought under control.

Algeria combats wildfires, observes day of mourning

By - Aug 12,2021 - Last updated at Aug 12,2021

Villagers arrange aid packages in the fire-devastated Kabylie region, east of the Algerian capital Algiers, on Thursday (AFP photo)

TIZI OUZOU, Algeria— Blazes raged across northern Algeria on Thursday as the country observed a national day of mourning for dozens of people killed in the latest wildfires to sweep the Mediterranean.


The North African country has been in the grip of devastating fires since Monday that have claimed at least 69 lives -- 41 civilians and 28 soldiers.

Soldiers and civilian volunteers have joined firefighters on multiple fronts in the effort to extinguish the blazes that have been fanned by windy and tinder-dry conditions.

In Tizi Ouzou district, the area with the highest casualty toll, an AFP journalist reported entire sectors of forest going up in smoke.

Villagers forced to evacuate in order to escape the flames began trickling back to their homes, overwhelmed by the scale of the damage.

"I have nothing left. My workshop, my car, my flat. Even the tiles were destroyed," one of them told AFP.

But he said he had "managed to save his family", while adding that "neighbours died or lost their relatives". 

'Surge of solidarity'  

Flags were flying at half-mast after President Abdelmadjid Tebboune declared three days of national mourning starting from Thursday.

Algerian authorities say they suspect widespread arson after so many fires erupted in such a short space of time.

The country's state prosecutor on Thursday ordered an investigation after a mob allegedly lynched a man they accused of sparking the wildfires.

Video footage posted online Wednesday showed a crowd beating to death 38-year-old Jamal Ben Ismail and setting him ablaze in the Tizi Ouzou district.

On the fourth day of the wildfires, efforts to overcome the blazes are continuing in many regions where civilians and soldiers often with limited means joined the fight.

Images of trapped villagers, terrified livestock and forested hillsides reduced to blackened stumps have been shared on social media.

Algeria is also chartering two firefighting planes from the European Union.

France also announced the arrival in Algeria of two Canadair firefighting planes it has sent.

"They will help the rescue efforts to deal with the terrible fires," French President Emmanuel Macron tweeted.

Neighbouring Morocco, with whom Algeria has long had strained ties over the Western Sahara, also offered to help by providing two planes.

Faced with the scale of the disaster, pleas for assistance are multiplying in Algeria and beyond.

"Individuals and associations are mobilising... by organising collections of clothes, foodstuffs, medicines and hygiene products," said Algeria's TSA news website, calling it a "surge of solidarity".

Djaffar, a resident of the village of Agoulmim in Kabylie, expressed his gratitude on Berber TV.

"God bless them... We had no electricity and people brought in generators from all around," the exhausted villager said after his ordeal.

"The flames were so high, they destroyed everything. Suddenly it was like a volcano," he said. 

Heatwave -

High winds fuelled the rapid spread of the flames in tinder-dry conditions created by a heatwave across North Africa and the wider Mediterranean.

The authorities have raised the possibility of criminal behaviour.

Four suspected "arsonists" were arrested so far, but their identities or suspected motives have not yet been disclosed.

Armed forces chief Said Chengriha visited soldiers in Tizi Ouzou and Bejaia, another badly affected area. Prime Minister Aimene Benabderrahmane also visited Tizi Ouzou.

Each summer, Algeria endures seasonal wildfires, but rarely anything approaching this year's disaster.

Meteorologists expect the Maghreb heatwave to continue until the end of the week, with temperatures in Algeria reaching 50 degrees Celsius .

Across the border in Tunisia, where almost 30 fires have been recorded since Monday, the mercury hit an all-time record of 50.3 Celsius in the central region of Kairouan (centre).

Almost 30 fires have been recorded in Tunisia since Monday.

On the northern shores of the Mediterranean, deadly wildfires have been raging in Turkey and Greece for the past two weeks.

In Italy, where firefighters were battling more than 500 blazes overnight, Sicily recorded a temperature of 48.8 degrees Celsius  on Wednesday that is believed to be a new European record.

Algeria mourns 65 dead as Mediterranean wildfires spread

Authorities suspect arsons took place after eruption of many fires

By - Aug 12,2021 - Last updated at Aug 12,2021

Smoke rises from a wildfire in the forested hills of the Kabylie region, east of the capital Algiers, on Tuesday (AFP photo)

OUZOU, Algeria — Firefighters, troops and civilian volunteers battled blazes in forests across northern Algeria on Wednesday as the country reeled at a death toll of at least 65 people in the latest Mediterranean wildfires.

Algeria's President Abdelmadjid Tebboune declared three days of national mourning starting from Thursday, and authorities say they suspect widespread arson after so many fires erupted in such a short space of time.

Twenty-eight of those killed were soldiers deployed to help overstretched emergency services tackle the rash of more than 50 fires that broke out on Tuesday, state television reported.

Several arrests have been announced, but the identity or suspected motives of those detained have not been disclosed.

Images of trapped villagers, terrified livestock and forested hillsides reduced to blackened stumps were shared on social media, many of them accompanied by pleas for help.

AFP journalists saw villagers desperately trying to put out the spreading fires with makeshift brooms in an effort to save their homes.

High winds fuelled the rapid spread of the fires in the tinder-dry conditions created by a heatwave across North Africa and the wider Mediterranean, fire official Youcef Ould Mohamed told the state-run APS news agency.

Scores of separate wildfires remained active Wednesday, spread across 17 provinces, emergency services spokesman Nassim Barnaoui told reporters.

Most of the fires and 16 of the deaths were recorded in Tizi Ouzou district, in the mainly Berber region of Kabylie, east of the capital Algiers.

“I left all my stock in my village and fled to Tizi Ouzou with my wife and three children,” said Abdelhamid Boudraren, a shopkeeper from the village of Beni Yeni.

“Luckily I own a flat in the centre of Tizi Ouzou, where I’m holed up with my family and some neighbours.”

The situation was also “alarming” in Bejaia, Tarch Hakim, the head of civil protection in the city, the second biggest in Kabylie, told APS.

“Things were under control, but with the outbreak of nine large fires on Wednesday morning, our forces are scattered,” Hakim said.

Fires in Tunisia 

There have been mounting calls for aid convoys to be sent to the worst-hit districts with food and medicine from the capital.

On Wednesday, an AFP correspondent saw several lorries headed to Tizi Ouzou with aid donated by the public.

France’s Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said the former colonial power “stands ready” to offer support in tackling the situation, and expressed the “solidarity of France with the Algerian people”, in a post on Twitter.

The British embassy in Algiers offered their “condolences to those who have died, or been injured or affected”.

State media have reported four arrests for suspected arson.

Meteorologists expect the heat wave across North Africa to continue until the end of the week, with temperatures in Algeria reaching 46ºC.

In Algeria’s neighbour Tunisia, the temperature in the capital Tunis hit an all-time record of 49ºC on Tuesday.

The Tunisian emergency services reported 15 fires across the north and northwest, but no casualties.

On the northern shores of the Mediterranean, Turkey reported eight deaths and Greece three from wildfires that have raged for the past two weeks.

Each summer, Algeria endures seasonal wildfires, but rarely anything approaching this year’s toll.

In 2020, nearly 440 square kilometres of forest were destroyed by fire, and several people were arrested on suspicion of arson.

On Monday, the UN released a major report showing how the threat from global warming is even more acute than previously thought.

It highlighted how scientists are quantifying the extent to which human-induced warming increases the intensity and/or likelihood of a specific extreme weather event, such as a heatwave or a wildfire.

Climate change amplifies droughts, creating ideal conditions for wildfires to spread out of control and inflict unprecedented material and environmental damage.

Sudan says to hand Bashir over for international war crimes trial

By - Aug 12,2021 - Last updated at Aug 12,2021

In this file photo taken on August 19, 2019 Sudan's deposed military ruler Omar Al Bashir stands in a defendant's cage during the opening of his corruption trial in Khartoum. (AFP photo)

KHARTOUM — Sudan will hand longtime autocrat Omar Al Bashir to the International Criminal Court (ICC) along with other officials wanted over the Darfur conflict, Foreign Minister Mariam Al Mahdi said Wednesday.

Bashir, 77, has been wanted by the ICC for more than a decade over charges of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity in the Sudanese region.

The "Cabinet decided to hand over wanted officials to the ICC", Mahdi was quoted as saying by state media, without giving a time frame.

The United Nations says 300,000 people were killed and 2.5 million displaced in the Darfur conflict, which erupted in the vast western region in 2003.

The Cabinet's decision to hand him over came during a visit to Sudan by ICC Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan, who met with Mahdi on Tuesday.

Mahdi noted the handover of wanted officials will be discussed between the Cabinet and the ruling sovereign council comprised of military and civilian figures for final approval, according to state news agency SUNA.

The transitional authorities have previously said they would hand Bashir over, but one stumbling block was that Sudan was not party to the court's founding Rome Statute.

But last week, Sudan's cabinet voted to ratify the Rome Statute, a crucial move seen as one step towards Bashir potentially facing trial.

'Horrific crimes' 

Bashir, who ruled Sudan with an iron fist for three decades before being deposed amid popular protests in 2019, is behind bars in Khartoum's high security Kober prison.

The Hague-based ICC issued an arrest warrant for Bashir in 2009 for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Darfur.

It issued another warrant for him the next year for genocide, but he defied the court by repeatedly travelling abroad.

Sudan's attorney general Mubarak Mahmoud said on Tuesday in a meeting with Khan that his office was ready to cooperate "with the ICC in all cases, especially the victims of the Darfur war, in order to bring justice to them".

Bashir was ousted by the military and detained in April 2019 after four months of mass nationwide protests against his rule after his government tripled the price of bread.

The former strongman was convicted in December 2019 for corruption, and has been on trial in Khartoum since July 2020 for the Islamist-backed 1989 coup which brought him to power. He faces the death penalty if found guilty.

Amnesty International has previously called for Bashir to be held accountable for “horrific crimes”, referring to the genocide in Darfur.

Sudan has been led since August 2019 by a transitional civilian-military administration, that has vowed to bring justice to victims of crimes committed under Bashir.

Khartoum signed a peace deal last October with key Darfuri rebel groups, with some of their leaders taking top jobs in government, although violence continues to dog the region.

The Darfur war broke out in 2003 when non-Arab rebels took up arms complaining of systematic discrimination by Bashir’s Arab-dominated government.

Khartoum responded by unleashing the notorious Janjaweed militia, recruited from among the region’s nomadic peoples.

Human rights groups have long accused Bashir and his former aides of using a scorched earth policy, raping, killing, looting and burning villages.

In July, a peacekeeping force completed its withdrawal from the war-ravaged region.

But after years of conflict, the arid and impoverished region is awash with automatic weapons and clashes still erupt, often over land and access to water.

Earlier this month, seven fighters from rebel groups that signed the peace deal with the transitional government were killed in clashes.

Last year, alleged senior Janjaweed militia leader Ali Muhammad Ali Abd Al Rahman, also known by the nom de guerre Ali Kushayb, surrendered to the court.

ICC judges said in July he would be the first suspect to be tried over the Darfur conflict, facing 31 counts including murder, rape and torture.

Libyans launch new round of UN-led political talks

By - Aug 12,2021 - Last updated at Aug 12,2021

TRIPOLI — Delegates from war-torn Libya launched a new round of UN-led talks via video conference on Wednesday aiming to reach a compromise ahead of planned elections.

The meeting comes six weeks after the failure of negotiations held in Switzerland between the 75 participants from all sides gathered for the Libyan Political Dialogue Forum.

The United Nations Support Mission in Libya was forced to acknowledge the failure of that session after four days, due to a lack of consensus among the delegates.

On Wednesday, the forum will again try to agree on a constitutional framework to govern the crucial parliamentary and presidential elections in December.

Oil-rich Libya was plunged into chaos after dictator Muammar Qadhafi was toppled and killed in a 2011 NATO-backed uprising.

Two rival administrations later emerged, backed by a complex patchwork of militias, mercenaries and foreign powers.

While Turkey supported a UN-recognised administration in Tripoli, eastern-based strongman Khalifa Haftar enjoyed backing from the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Russia.

Under a UN-backed ceasefire agreed last October, an interim administration was established in March to prepare for presidential and parliamentary polls on December 24.

The agreement was widely hailed as “historic” at the time, but since then divisions have resurfaced, raising doubts about the likelihood that the elections can go ahead as planned.

Iran’s Raisi presents conservative, male-only Cabinet

By - Aug 11,2021 - Last updated at Aug 11,2021

TEHRAN — Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi on Wednesday presented his Cabinet to parliament, state media said, nominating a conservative as his top diplomat amid talks with world powers to salvage a nuclear deal.

A list published by the government on Twitter showed a conservative-dominated, male-only cabinet of ministers that is set to be officially announced by parliament on Saturday.

Iran’s parliament, which is currently dominated by conservatives, is charged with validating the line-up of ministerial candidates.

Ultraconservative Raisi last week succeeded Hassan Rouhani, a moderate whose landmark achievement during his two-term presidency was the 2015 agreement that gave Iran relief from sanctions in return for curbs on its nuclear programme.

Former US president Donald Trump torpedoed the accord three years later by unilaterally withdrawing the United States from it and imposing crushing sanctions.

Tapped to lead the foreign ministry is 56-year-old Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, described by state television as a “prestigious diplomat of the resistance axis”.

Seen by local media as an establishment figure with close ties to regional allies including Lebanon’s Hizbollah, he often pens foreign policy articles for the website of Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Amir-Abdollahian was Iran’s pointman for talks with US officials at a 2007 joint committee in Baghdad concerning the security situation in Iraq.

“Negotiating with America has never been a taboo,” he tweeted in 2018, referring to the Baghdad talks, adding that the issue was “America’s bullying” behaviour.

Raisi also named ex-deputy oil minister and managing director of the national gas company Javad Owji as his oil minister.

Former oil minister Admiral Rostam Ghasemi, an economic affairs aide to the head of the Revolutionary Guard elite Al Quds force and a presidential candidate, was nominated to be transport minister.

Like Ghasemi, Raisi’s picks to head the interior and tourism ministries — Amir Vahidi and Ezzatollah Zarghami, respectively — are former Guard members who are under US sanctions.

Six rounds of nuclear talks between Iran and world powers were held in Vienna between April and June in an attempt to revive the accord.

The last round concluded on June 20, with no date set for another. Iranian officials had said talks would not resume before the new government took over.

A veteran of Gulf affairs, Amir-Abdollahian served under the foreign minister from 2011 as deputy for Arab and African affairs before being replaced in 2016, a move heavily criticised by Rouhani’s conservative opponents.

Amir-Abdollahian later turned down an offer to be Iran’s ambassador to Oman, according to ISNA news agency. He has since served as an special aide for international affairs to the last two parliament speakers.

 

Murder of city official fuels anger over Iraq impunity

By - Aug 11,2021 - Last updated at Aug 11,2021

A handout photo released by Iraq’s prime minister’s media office shows Prime Minister Kadhemi (left) during a tour in the holy Shiite city of Karbala, south of the capital Baghdad, on Wednesday (AFP photo)

KARBALA, Iraq — The gunning down in the street of a municipal official in the Iraqi shrine city of Karbala sparked anger on Wednesday over the government’s failure to halt a wave of assassinations.

Abir Salim, the director of municipal services in the city which houses the mausoleums of two of Shiite Islam’s most revered figures, was shot dead as he was carrying out his duties on Tuesday, Prime Minister Mustafa Al Kadhemi’s office said.

He was on foot supervising a survey of unauthorised construction in Karbala when his killer pulled out a gun and shot him at close range.

Security camera footage posted on social media showed an attacker, dressed in a traditional white robe, open fire in the street and Salim fall to the ground.

The suspected killer was arrested shortly afterwards.

“Murderers and criminals will not escape punishment,” the prime minister promised as he visited Karbala on Wednesday to offer his condolences to Salim’s family.

His office released photographs of him berating the suspected killer, who had been blindfolded by his police captors, during a visit to the crime scene.

The images did little to assuage public anger at the apparent impunity for politically linked crimes that has seen more than 70 activists targeted for assassination since October 2019.

“The weakness of the security forces goes hand in hand with the intimidation of society by the tribes, religion and the political parties,” one Twitter user complained.

Another demanded that Kadhemi show the same energy in tracking down the killers of pro-reform activists.

There have been no claims of responsibility for the wave of killings.

But supporters of anti-government protests that broke out in 2019 charge that the culprits are known to the security forces but allowed to go free because of political connections, particularly with Iraq’s powerful neighbour Iran.

After decades of war, insurgency and sectarian conflict, Iraq has no shortage of firearms in circulation.

According to the Small Arms Survey, the country counted 7.6 million registered firearms in 2017 for a population of 39 million people, 40 per cent of them under the age of 14. Many more are unregistered.

 

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