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Houthi General Tells IRGC-Linked Website Of Coming Attacks On UAE

Maryam Sinaiee
Maryam Sinaiee

Iran International

Jan 30, 2022, 21:41 GMT+0Updated: 17:25 GMT+1
Houthi Lieutenant-General Abed Al-Thour
Houthi Lieutenant-General Abed Al-Thour

A Houthi in an interview with the IRGC-linked Tasnim Sunday has threatened the United Arab Emirates with "more effective and powerful strikes" in the future.

"Future strikes on the UAE will be more effective and more powerful than before and the UAE may lose its capability to run the country," Lieutenant-General Abed Al-Thour the Deputy Chief of the Ideological Department of the Houthi armed forces told Tasnim in an exclusive interview published Sunday. He added that the Houthi military is determined to "go deep inside the UAE to achieve its military goals".

Al-Thour said the Houthis' recent attacks on Abu Dhabi, dubbed Yemeni Storm 2, was a message to Mohamed bin Zayed, the Crown Prince of the Emirate of Abu Dhabi, that his country will pay a high price for his "efforts to appease Israel".

The Iran-backed Houthi military official said the Houthi army has reached "the military expansion and industrialization stage" and "self-sufficiency in military industries".

Al-Thour also threatened Saudi Arabia and said the Houthis are prepared for bigger operations "deep inside Saudi Arabia".

Iran has been arming and training the Houthi rebels for years, with United Nations experts verifying that drones and missiles used against Saudi Arabia having Iranian origin.

Weapons seized by the US Navy originating in Iran and destined for Houthis.
100%
Weapons seized by the US Navy originating in Iran and destined for Houthis.

In 2019 Al-Thour made similar threats against the UAE. "I am telling you that the UAE – Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Al-Ain, Fujairah, and all those emirates – will lose everything they have," he said, adding that with its aerial strikes and missile force, Yemen will "send the UAE back to a time before its foundation" and that despite not having a border with the UAE, their air force and missile force could reach the country to strike its trade and economic capabilities.

On Sunday Fars, another IRGC-linked news agency in a report quoted the Houthi Al-Khabar Al-Yemeni news website as saying Houthis are planning to implement widespread operations against 50 economic and military targets across the Emirates.

Al-Khabar said on Sunday that sources in the Houthi military intelligence have said that “approximately 300 drones, 50 ballistic missiles and 46 cruise missiles" will be used in the operation dubbed "Al-Aram Flood" to “paralyze the UAE economy".

The Yemeni website quoted the Houthi Minister of Defense Mohamed al-Atifi as saying a few days after the attack on Abu Dhabi that "painful and terrifying strikes" were to be expected in the "strategic, military and economic depth of the coalition countries.”

The Saudi-led Coalition that backs Yemen's internationally recognized government said January 13 that the Iran-backed Houthi rebels had targeted a key oil facility in Abu Dhabi and the UAE capital's international airport with explosive-laden drones launched from Sana'a airport.

In 2019 the UAE, a member of the Saudi-led coalition that has been fighting Iran-backed Houthi forces for over seven years, scaled down its military presence in Yemen amid heightened regional tensions with Iran but the Houthis.

A few days after the attack on Abu Dhabi, the Houthi information minister Zeifollah al-Shami was interviewed by Tasnim news agency who said the attack was meant to tell the UAE that there would be retaliation if they continued to attack Houthi forces.

Fars said in a report entitled "The Reason for the Yemeni Attack on Abu Dhabi Today" called it the "biggest strike on the UAE in the country's 50-year history."

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EU Denounces Harsh Sentence For Iran Rights Activist Mohammadi

Jan 30, 2022, 19:04 GMT+0

The European Union has decried a recent sentence for leading human rights campaigner Narges Mohammadi to eight years in prison and over 70 lashes.

In a statement on Sunday, the EU also expressed concern over her poor health, stressing that enforcing the sentence “is against the universal principles of human rights and the rule of law”.

“The EU calls on Iran to comply with its obligations under international law and urgently release Ms. Mohammadi, taking also into account her deteriorating health condition,” a spokesperson said.

On Friday, Human Rights Watch also slammedher arrest, saying that the Islamic Republic is committed to crush any grassroots effort to protect human rights and urged world powers to press Tehran to stop the crackdown.

The rights group said that the recent heavy sentence meted out against Mohammadi shows that Iran’s revolutionary courts are criminalizing human rights activism.

On January 15, Branch 26 of Tehran’s revolutionary court gave her the harsh sentence in a five-minute summary trial that was held behind closed doors while she was denied access to a lawyer.

In a letter from the notorious Gharchak (Qarchak) Prison, obtained by Iran International, Mohammadi said the court stated her nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize as evidence of her criminality.

Mohammadi was arrested in mid-November at the death anniversary of a citizen, Ebrahim Ketabdar, who was shot dead by security forces during the November 2019 protests.

New COVID Wave Hits Iran's Parliament With 30 Sick And 10 Hospitalized

Jan 30, 2022, 15:54 GMT+0

As another Covid-19 wave hit Iran in January, reports say that over 30 members of parliament have contracted the coronavirus and up to ten are hospitalized.

MP Abolfazl Aboutorabi said on Sunday that about 30 lawmakers have been diagnosed with Covid-19 in the past few days.

He said the parliament’s presidium has asked all the lawmakers to get tested for Covid-19 to help curb the spread of the virus.

Alireza Salimi, a member of the presidium, said 10 lawmakers have been hospitalized with complications, while another MP has said that paqrliament members attended the Saturday session although they were tested positive for the virus.

Iran's Health Minister Bahram Einollahi announced the start of the sixth wave of the coronavirus pandemic in the country on Thursday as hospitals report increasing number of referrals related to the highly infectious Omicron variant.

“Unfortunately, we should declare that we have practically stepped into the sixth wave with the rise in hospitalization and outpatient cases,” Einollahi said, urging people to get booster shots.

Epidemiologists say the number of patients will increase fivefold each week, with the number of daily fatalities also rising.

Alireza Zali, the head of Tehran's Covid-19 taskforce, has said the Omicron variant is 64 percent more contagious than the Delta mutation, noting that tests are often unable to detect Omicron because of its similarity to common cold.

Iran To Allow Buy-Out Of Military Service, For The Rich

Jan 30, 2022, 15:23 GMT+0

Iran has announced it will reinstitute a buy-out scheme for the country’s compulsory military service, but only affluent people can afford the fees mentioned.

According to parliament’s budget review committee spokesman on Saturday, the scheme has received preliminary approval and if it is adopted, Iranian men can buy out their military service as of the next Iranian year starting March 21.

The new plan only includes the absentees who are over 35 years old or at least eight years have passed from their conscription due date, the prices differing based on the levels of education, with those with higher education having to pay higher fees.

The new rates start at 2.5 billion rials (nearly $10,000 at today’s rates) and goes up to 6 billion rials, which are about 11 to 24 times more than the last time the government allowed such exemptions. Average salaries in Iran are about $200 a month.

The option to buy out of the draft was removed from regulations about three years ago because even then only wealthy families could afford it for their sons through paying absence fines.

According to Iran’s constitution, all men over 18 years old must serve in the military for about two years otherwise they cannot apply for a passport to leave the country.

Earlier in the month, a member of the budget committee said that all expats who haven’t served their compulsory conscription can pay €15,000 ($17,000) to buy their freedom.

Iranian Lawmaker Warns Of Massive Uprisings In Coming Months

Jan 30, 2022, 13:44 GMT+0

A conservative Iranian lawmaker has warned of massive uprisings in the country if the economic situation keeps deteriorating in the coming months.

Criticizing President Ebrahim Raisi’s decision to slash food subsidies, Ahmad Naderi said on Sunday that the government is on the wrong path on some issues.

He said that Raisi’s proposed reforms in the next year’s budget can endanger the entire Islamic Republic regime.

Raisi has been pushing to end cheap dollars allocated by the government to importers of essential food and medicine, as it faces a huge budget deficit.

Naderi also slammed the policies of former president Hassan Rouhani, saying that Raisi’s government cannot bring about miracles and undo “the catastrophes” that happened during eight years of Rouhani’s “neoliberal administration” in several months, but the new government should be in the right track.

“I warn that if these approaches continue, we will reach a point where we will see great social upheavals”, he said.

Earlier in the day, the parliament's budget review committee rejected Raisi's plans to eliminate the cheap dollar subsidy.

Workers and employees from various economic sectors, including teachers, nurses, firefighters, and even staff members of the judiciary department, hold regular protest rallies or strikes to demand better working conditions and salaries.

Food prices have risen by more than 60 percent in recent months, on top of high inflation in the previous three years, while the government is unable to sufficiently boost wages as United States sanctions impede full capacity oil exports and international trade.

Iran's Khamenei Quotes US State Department Saying Sanctions Failed

Jan 30, 2022, 13:08 GMT+0
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Mardo Soghom

‘Maximum pressure’ sanctions by the United States have clearly failed, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei declared Sunday, quoting the US State Department.

Calling sanctions an “economic assault” Khamenei said that it caused some hardship for the people “but production did not buckle and the spokesman of America’s foreign ministry a few days ago frankly and explicitly announced that the maximum pressure policy has turned into a humiliating defeat for America.”

Khamenei was quoting State Department spokesman Ned Price who in his press briefing on January 25 said, “The maximum pressure campaign was an abject failure,” adding that former president Donald Trump’s policy did not change Iran’s behavior.

Iran’s economy went into a tailspin in 2018, when Trump withdrew from the 2015 nuclear agreement and imposed tough sanctions. Inflation skyrocketed and government budget deficits soared. The sanctions also impacted Iran’s proxy forces in the region, but they continued their destabilizing operations, although they could have been more effective without the sanctions.

In a speech to managers of Iran’s industrial and economic sectors Khamenei reiterated his ideology of self-reliance and called for “economic jihad” in defiance of sanctions, although he admitted that Iran’s economy performed very poorly in the last decade. At the same time, he claimed victory against US sanctions, that he said were meant to foment dissatisfaction among the people.

But as usual, the Supreme Leader blamed presidential administrations instead of the political and economic systems he presides over and his own policy of perpetually confronting the West and regional countries which have good ties with the United States.

Iran’s centralized economy plagued by corruption and mismanagement, as well as under the pressure of oil export sanctions has had zero growth in the past decade. Even before nuclear sanctions kicked in from 2011, its growth on average was anemic at under 3 percent since the early 1980s.

But Khamenei who has been in power since 1989, increasingly relied on loyal hardliners, and resorted to political persecutions and engineered elections instead of allowing a more accountable political system to take root. At the same time, insiders and the military took over the state-run economy using oil export revenues to perpetuate an unproductive system, as they enriched themselves.

In his speech Khamenei expressed disappointment at low GDP growth, lack of investments, a fast-growing liquidity problem leading to inflation and other serious problems the country faces. He emphasized however, that these difficulties are not just due to sanctions but also an outcome of “wrong decisions or lack of effort.”

He then mentioned a series of problems facing Iran’s domestic production sector, such as low quality of products, highlighting the auto industry which has been blamed for high fatalities in road accidents recently. Nevertheless, he reiterated that self-reliance should be the motto.

Khamenei and other insiders in the Islamic Republic system fail to understand or acknowledge that a modern economy can only grow with less government interference, more interaction with other economies, investments and competition. But the Supreme Leader’s domestic quest to reward supporters and continue a confrontational foreign policy, as well as a nuclear program with military ambitions foreclose paths toward economic success.