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Iran Turns ‘Red’ As Omicron Spreads

Maryam Sinaiee
Maryam Sinaiee

Iran International

Feb 4, 2022, 13:02 GMT+0Updated: 17:26 GMT+1
A COVID patient in a Tehran hospital.
A COVID patient in a Tehran hospital.

Iran's health ministry has declared a hospital emergency as the Omicron variant of Covid-19 grips the country. Nearly 80 Iranian cities are deemed "red zones.”

After a few weeks of relative calm, only 11 cities still show ‘blue’ on the Covid map, with Tehran among the ‘red’ cities and 180 cities categorized as "orange.”

Health authorities, who have said the country is in a sixth wave of the pandemic, expect infections to rise to “up to” 400,000 daily cases with three-digit daily death figures. The health ministry said Thursday that numbers in hospital had increased by 64 percent in a week to over 18,000.

On Saturday parliament's open sessions and committee meetings were cancelled as 47 of 290 lawmakers as well as 30 staff members had tested positive for Covid.

A member of the Scientific Committee of the national Covid taskforce, Hamidreza Abtahi, told the Iranian Labour News Agency (ILNA) Friday that Omicron was spreading faster than expected.

Abtahi expressed concern over plans to re-open schools and to hold gatherings during the ten-day Fajr period that ends on the anniversary of the 1979 Revolution on February 11. He cited the Fajr film and theater festivals, as well as Etekaf (from the Arabic for ‘adhering to’) ceremonies, scheduled this year for February 15-18, during which large numbers pray in mosques throughout day and night. The government has yet to announce restrictions on any of these activities.

Infections rose to over 37,000 Thursday, with 2,000 of those hospitalized. The death toll from Covid was reported at 61 for the 24-hour period ending Thursday noon.

Abtahi said cases requiring hospitalization had not increased at the same pace as under earlier Covid waves. An official of Zanjan Medical Sciences University, Mashoud Taghilou, told Tasnim news agency Friday that while infections in Zanjan province had jumped 20-fold in ten days, the numbers hospitalized had tripled and the numbers requiring intensive care doubled.

Iran has reported 6.48 million cases and over 132,600 deaths, since it became the second country in the world to declare an epidemic in February 2020. Critics accuse the government of underreporting Covid cases and deaths, although Iran has reported the highest number of deaths than all the other countries in the region and the second highest number of infections.

With around 66 percent of people vaccinated, Iran has reported 6.5 million cases compared to 12 million in Turkey with 85 percent vaccinated, 433,000 in Egypt, which has vaccinated 27 percent and has a larger population. The United Arab Emirates has vaccinated 96 percent and Iraq just 16 percent.

According to official figures so far over 60 million Iranians have received one dose, 54 million have had two doses, and 18 million have also had a booster.

Abtahi said authorities were concerned over the number of children with the virus, with most children not vaccinated and intensive care facilities in children's hospitals were limited. The committee, he said, had urged the authorities to vaccinate children between five and twelve urgently.

The World Bank in January approved a $90 million loan to help Iran manage the pandemic. "This funding will not go to the Iranian budget and all loan proceeds, as well as procurement and disbursements, are being managed by the World Health Organization,” a World Bank Spokesman told the AFP news agency.

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Colombia Says Iran, Russia Helping Venezuela To Move Troops To Border

Feb 4, 2022, 11:32 GMT+0

Colombia has accused Venezuela of moving troops to their common border with technical assistance from Iran and Russia, Reuters reported.

Citing intelligence sources during an anti-drugs conference in Colombia's Caribbean city of Cartagena on Thursday, Defense Minister Diego Molano said that the troop movements took place near Colombia's Arauca province, which is the scene of violent drug war between guerrillas of the National Liberation Army (ELN) and FARC dissidents.

Molano called the deployment "foreign interference", saying, "We know that men and units of the FANB (the Spanish acronym for National Bolivarian Armed Forces of Venezuela) have been mobilized towards the border with technical assistance from Russia...and Iran”.

Colombia's human rights ombudsman has reported that clashes between the armed groups for control of the drugs trade in Arauca has left 66 dead and 1,200 displaced in January alone.

The Colombian government says Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro is sheltering both FARC dissidents and the ELN, an accusation that has been repeatedly denied.

Venezuelan Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino Lopez called the allegation by his counterpart "inappropriate statement".

He described Colombia as the country which “Bogota's oligarchy has converted into an appendix of the (United States) South Command in our America, into a location of US military bases”.

Iran and Venezuela have strengthened their cooperation in recent years and continue exchanging oil products despite US sanctions on both countries, without any visible action by Washington, which tries to engage with both.

Iran's Currency Strengthening Amid Hopes For A Nuclear Deal

Feb 4, 2022, 10:40 GMT+0

Iran’s battered currency has risen around 10 percent since its lows in early December when the market was gripped by pessimism over a possible nuclear deal.

The rial rose to 275,000 against the US dollar in Tehran’s unofficial currency exchange market on Friday, after falling to 310,000 in the closing weeks of 2021.

Nuclear talks that started last April in Vienna have yet to result in an agreement, but some progress has been reported. Negotiators have returned to their capitals in what diplomats have said is the decisive stage of making tough decisions.

Iran’s currency began to fall in late 2017 as it became apparent that former US president Donald Trump wanted to withdraw from the 2015 nuclear agreement with Iran and impose sanctions. It continued to lose value as Washington began imposing sanctions in mid-2018 and so far, the rial has fallen eightfold against major currencies.

As the cash-strapped government printed more money the currency became weaker and annual inflation reached to more than 40 percent.

Although there is no definitive outcome in the nuclear talks, the rial began rising in January. One reason could be Iran’s higher oil exports despite US sanctions. By all indications, Tehran has been shipping more crude in the past months, although it is not clear how much foreign currency returns to its coffers.

US Commander Says CENTCOM Deterring Iran's 'Malign Activities'

Feb 4, 2022, 10:03 GMT+0

The Pentagon has called Iran the central threat to the stability of the region, saying the top priority of CENTCOM is to deter the Tehran's malign activities.

CENTCOM Commander Gen. Kenneth F. McKenzie told the Middle East Instituteon Thursday that “Iran relies on proxies to do its dirty work funneling them arms and other resources with the expressed purpose of sowing discord and endangering human life”.

McKenzie said following the US strike that killed the IRGC’s Qods (Quds) commander Qasem Soleimani, “Iran largely confined itself to activities beneath what it perceives as the threshold of our forbearance, yet in so doing it has inflicted unnecessary suffering on its own citizens and those of its neighbors, all at the cost of innocent life and the risk of a devastating broader conflict.”

However, the Iran-aligned militia are more reckless now because the new Qods commander “does not exercise the same degree of control over them that Soleimani enjoyed”, increasing rogue and violent actions.

Following parliamentary elections in Iraq last October when Iran-backed politicians did not perform well, their militia supporters used violence to influence the formation of a new government, McKenzie argued.

He added that the conflict in Yemen has lasted so long only because of Iran’s support for the Houthis, noting that “the Houthis are less interested than Iran in waging a limited war.” Rather they recklessly use whatever the Iranians put at their disposal in pursuit of victory regardless of the risk to human life.

Iran Executions Rise With 46 Cases In January

Feb 3, 2022, 20:50 GMT+0

Iran executed “at least” 46 people in January, a steep increase on the same month in the past three years.

The Norway-based Iran Human Rights (IHRNGO) reported Thursday that 17 people were executed in Iranian prisons on drug-related charges and 21 for murder.The grounds were unclear in the remaining eight cases.

The number jumped from 27 the same month in 2021, 33 in 2020, and 36 in 2019. Fifteen of the 46 were Baluchi, a minority people living in Iran’s south east bordering Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The rights group said that only six executions were reported by Iranian media and officials, but that it had verified the other 40.

IHRNGO Director Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam said “the international community” should “not turn a blind eye” to the wave of executions as talks continued in Vienna to revive the 2015 Iran nuclear agreement, the JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action).

“We reiterate that the international community must prioritize human rights, especially the death penalty, in any negotiations with the Islamic Republic,” Amiry-Moghaddam said. “Sustainable peace and stability are impossible without upholding human rights.”

Iran this week executed two gay men convicted on charges of sodomy who had spent six years on death row. A total of 299 people were executed in 2021, including four juvenile offenders, a 26-percent increase on 2020.

Iran Plans to Work With China On Technology To Further Restrict Internet

Feb 3, 2022, 20:07 GMT+0
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Maryam Sinaiee

Iran may cooperate with China over information technology, the spokesman for the parliamentary committee reviewing Internet censorship legislation has said.

Lotfollah Siyahkali told Khabar Online that while agreements with China covering various aspects of the economy required parliamentary ratification, there would “probably” be agreement in “information and communication technology” (ICT).

An ad hoc parliamentary committee, called the Joint Siyanat Committee, is reviewing a draft bill on cyberspace regulation proposed to parliament in June, to further restrict access to various apps and websites.

Some of the bill’s supporters argue Iran should emulate China's in creating a national intranet. "The Chinese have unique and innovative experience in this field, which we can put to use," lawmaker Ali Yazdikhah said January 18.

"Passage of time proved that speculation over imitating the Chinese in Internet restriction are more true than other theories [such as using European models, which have generally aimed to extend non-digital rules into cyberspace]," the reformist Etemad newspaper wrote January 25.

China uses its ‘Great Firewall,’ a fortified digital border, to manage access to information entering and exiting the country through the Internet.

If passed, the legislation currently under review in Iran would require foreign and domestic social-media networks and messaging applications to register with a regulatory and supervisory body that would include representatives of intelligence organizations. The ministry of communications and information technology would be charged with blocking any social networks or messaging applications that failed to gain approval.

Lawmakers behind the bill, including the committee spokesman Siyahkali, want foreign social networks and messaging applications to designate a responsible Iranian company as their legal representative and to agree to abide by rules set by the regulator.

The Great Firewall

Iran has been heavily restricting access to the Internet for the past 20 years. Many foreign and Iranian websites, including media websites, are already blocked in Iran although controls are readily sidestepped by VPNs (virtual private networks) and anti-filtering software. While Instagram is the only major social-media platform not blocked in Iran, millions of Iranians use Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and WhatsApp.

Despite China’s national intranet, the Chinese use various means, including VPNs, to circumvent restrictions.Tech Rader, the technology news and reviews website, recently recommended for visitors and residents the top five VPNs for piercing China’s ‘Great Firewall.’

Tehran in March signed a 25-year cooperation agreement with Beijing. It was launched during Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian's recent visit to China. With around 18 percent of the world’s population, China is home to 20 percent of Internet users globally.