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Iran's Sunni Leader Rejects Regime’s Idea Of Israel's Destruction

Iran International Newsroom
Oct 14, 2023, 11:32 GMT+1Updated: 11:46 GMT+0
Mowlavi Abdolhamid, the top religious leader of Iran's largely Sunni Baluch population
Mowlavi Abdolhamid, the top religious leader of Iran's largely Sunni Baluch population

Iran's top Sunni leader Mowlavi Abdolhamid has contradicted the clerical regime on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, saying that neither side should be destroyed.

Abdolhamid distanced himself from the regime’s goal of Israel's annihilation during his Friday prayer sermon, decried the attacks on civilians “that has shocked the world,” without directly mentioning the Tehran-backed Islamist group Hamas.

Hamas unleashed a bloody invasion into Israel on October 7, inflicting the biggest loss of life in one day since the Holocaust. Israel has been pounding Gaza in retaliation for the Hamas rampage in Israel this week that has killed over 1,300 people, the deadliest attack on civilians in the Israeli history. More than 1,800 Palestinians have been killed.

In an apparent condemnation of Hamas attack, he said, "If Muslims disregard international laws, assault women, and kills children, we do not blindly support it. "He noted that extremism by anyone is not tolerable. He emphasized that Israel should also refrain from violating international laws.

The outspoken cleric said, "Anyone with a shred of humanity is deeply affected when seeing these heart-wrenching scenes of human slaughter."

He added, "The reality is that neither Muslims can destroy Israel, nor Israel can eliminate Palestinians. It's not achievable. When something is not achievable, why use force?"

A man carries bags as he walks past a mural symbolising freedom and peace between Israel and Palestinians, in Rondebosch, Cape Town, South Africa, October 11, 2023.
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A man carries bags as he walks past a mural symbolising freedom and peace between Israel and Palestinians, in Rondebosch, Cape Town, South Africa, October 11, 2023.

Abdolhamid emphasized the importance of maintaining a "fair stance" and suggested that governments and nations worldwide should strive to resolve differences rather than aligning themselves in this conflict. He said Israelis and Palestinians are two "nations" living alongside each other and also endorsed the idea of establishing two states.

The two-state solution to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict envisions an independent State of Palestine alongside the State of Israel, west of the Jordan River. The boundary between the two states is still subject to dispute and negotiation, with Palestinian and Arab leadership demanding full Israeli withdrawal from territories it occupied in 1967, which is rejected by Israel. 

Abdolhamid’s practical views for a solution to the decades long conflict are in stark contrast to that of the Islamic Republic, which only sees the destruction of Israel as the solution.

In 2015, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei said Israel must be destroyed in 25 years and the government even set up a countdown clock in Tehran and a few other cities. Many Iranians mock the anti-Israel rhetoric and the ticking clock, but the regime is adamant in pursuing the goal. Regime authorities use every opportunity to stress the necessity of "Israel's destruction," a slogan that has justified Iran’s huge financial and military support to militant groups such as Hamas and Hezbollah, while Iranian increasingly safe poverty and a bleak economic future.

While the Islamic Republic is cheering about the war in Israel, Iranians’ reactions to the regime’s propaganda indicate a complex societal schism. In Iran, once Khamenei dictates the regime's policy themes concerning global developments, other officials, clerics, and his representatives across the country begin to disseminate them.

Earlier in the year, Abdolhamid called for peace between Muslims and Jewish people, stating that "No one should think of the destruction of others, and everyone should think about peace." His remarks came against the backdrop of Iran’s repeated warnings against normalization of relations between Israel and Arab countries.

While Saudi Arabia and Israel had never been closer to a deal to establish official relations, US officials and a lot of pundits are of the opinion that the Hamas attack was meant to disrupt the normalization process.

After Abdolhamid’s sermons on Friday, people in several cities of the predominantly Sunni province of Sistan-Baluchestan took to streets and held anti-regime rallies.

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Worker Dies At Parsian Gas Refinery In Southern Iran

Oct 14, 2023, 11:07 GMT+1

A worker has died in a fatal fall at the Parsian Gas Refinery in southern Iran during maintenance work on the flare.

Parsian Gas Refinery, a significant facility located near Mehr in Fars province, plays a crucial role in Iran's gas production, generating 760 million cubic feet of natural gas and 1,500 tons of gas condensates daily.

Similar incidents, including fires, falls, and gas leaks, have been on the rise in Iranian refineries and petrochemical units in recent years.

Just a month ago, Hashemi-Nezhad Gas Refinery Company in Khorasan Razavi province reported two fatalities and five hospitalizations due to a gas leak in one of its units.

Also, an incident during essential maintenance operations at the Pars South Gas Complex's second plant on September 10 led to one fatality and two injuries.

Iran has experienced a series of unexplained explosions and fires in military, nuclear, and industrial facilities, including pipelines and refineries, since mid-2020. Notably, on January 28, a massive fire erupted at an Iranian military industry factory, suspected to be the result of a drone strike in Esfahan. While authorities have not provided full explanations for these incidents, they have often attributed high-profile sabotage attacks to Israel, although Israel has not officially claimed responsibility for these events.

Violence Against Afghan Refugees Causing Serious Concerns In Iran

Oct 14, 2023, 09:48 GMT+1
•
Maryam Sinaiee

Indiscriminate violence against Afghan migrants earlier this month has led to serious concerns of escalation of maltreatment of Afghans in Iran in the coming days.

At least three major instances of violence against Afghans have been reported on social media where the hashtag “Expulsion of Afghans a National Demand” was used to promote Anti-Afghan immigrants’ views.

A large crowd of Iranians on October 6 staged a protest rally outside the local council’s office in Eghbaliyeh, a town of 55,000 in Qazvin Province, wielding sticks and chanting that Afghans should be expelled from Iran. A video posted on social media also showed a small mob of mainly youngsters attacking the homes of the town’s Afghan residents and throwing stones at their windows.

A local police official, Brigadier General Ali Ebrahimi, said that police had arrested nineteen individuals for the violence. Social media users, however, reported the injury of several Afghans. They also claimed police did not take any action to protect the homes of the Afghans during the incident.

A video Iran International TV received on October 7 also showed two Afghan teenagers being treated at a Tehran hospital allegedly after being attacked and wounded by knife. The same video shows a third young Afghan man in the corridors of the same hospital saying he was also stabbed.

The narrator of the video blames the Islamic Republic for allowing mistreatment of Afghans and claims there have been many more similar instances of attacks on Afghans recently.

In another video posted on social media several Iranians are seen assaulting a young Afghan man in Sanandaj, the capital of the western province of Kurdistan where the number of Afghan immigrants has never been high compared to some other regions such as Tehran and eastern provinces. The attacker who is wielding a saber is heard in the video demanding that the Afghan man say he will never set foot in Sanandaj again.

In the past few weeks the government’s political rivals have repeatedly warned about its “open borders” policy and the possibility of hidden agenda with hardliners responding to such criticism by accusing critics of inciting “Afghan-phobia” amid fast-growing anti-Afghan sentiments on social media and violence against the immigrants.

The Islamic Republic adopted an unprecedentedly lenient approach to immigration of Afghans when hardliner President Ebrahim Raisi took office in Iran two years ago and anti-American Taliban formed a government in neighboring Afghanistan.

Some government critics claim authorities are actively encouraging the growth of the Afghan population with incentives such as subsidized energy and food to remedy the problem of population decline or even to bolster its military by recruiting young Shiite Hazara Afghans.

The Revolutionary Guards linked Fars news agency has accused a “shadowy political group” of seeking to cause tension between the Islamic Republic and the Taliban by raising an alarm about the growth of the number of Afghans in the country since the Taliban took over Afghanistan two years ago.

Heshmatollah Falahatpisheh, a former conservative lawmaker and chairman of the parliament’s foreign policy and national security committee is one of the politicians who has repeatedly warned about the security problems that may emerge from increased Afghan immigration in recent months.

Falahatpisheh claims that there is a “mafia” that financially benefits from Afghan immigration. “There is a confluence of trafficking of commodities, narcotics, humans and fuel in eastern borders whose interests are intertwined and have practically blocked the policy of blocking and management of the borders,” he told the reformist Ham-Mihan newspaper Sunday. “As a person who used to have official responsibility for field investigation in eastern borders, I must point out the reality. The country is facing a serious threat to its national security and interests.”

Iran's Sunni Leader Challenges 'Destruction' Of Israel

Oct 14, 2023, 08:51 GMT+1

The outspoken leader of Iran's Sunnis has contradicted the government, stating that the obliteration of Palestinians and Israel's annihilation are unattainable.

Mowlavi Abdolhamid, the Friday Prayer Imam in Zahedan, used his weekly sermon to condemn attacks on civilians without specifically mentioning the militant group Hamas. He stressed that blind allegiance to Islamic groups does not have his approval, affirming, "Extremism from any quarter, when it entails harm to people or children, is unacceptable to us."

Simultaneously, he expressed concern about the current humanitarian situation in Gaza as a consequence of Israel's response to the attacks. The Sunni leader endorsed the concept of a two-state solution for the Palestinian issue, emphasizing the need for a just resolution to the current crisis.

He added, "The reality is that neither Muslims nor Israel, can achieve the destruction of the other one. It's an unattainable goal. Why resort to force when the objective is unattainable?”

His remarks stand in contrast to the stance of the Islamic Republic, which has consistently advocated for the "destruction" of Israel, effectively rejecting the notion of a two-state solution.

In a 2011 conference in Tehran, Iran's ruler Ali Khamenei declared, "Any plan that seeks to divide Palestine is destined for failure."

Iranian authorities exploit every opportunity to underscore the imperative of Israel's "destruction," a slogan that has been accompanied by substantial financial support for militant groups like Hamas and Hezbollah.

However, in the wake of widespread global criticism of Hamas's attack on Israeli territory, Ali Khamenei distanced Iran from the surprising assault in his initial official response.

Iran's Foreign Minister Says Hamas Attack 'Purely Palestinian Operation'

Oct 14, 2023, 08:28 GMT+1

Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian has once again claimed that Hamas’ attack on Israel was a purely “Palestinian operation”, although Iran supports the group.

Amir-Abdollahian who was meeting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in Damascus as part of a regional tour, was quoted as saying that Iranian and Syrian support for the Palestinians is not a secret, but repeated Tehran’s position that it was not directly involved in the attack.

Hamas launched a surprise invasion of southern Israel on October 7, using thousands of forces who killed well over 1,000 Israeli civilians, prompting a siege of Gaza and relentless Israeli bombing of targets in the Palestinian enclave.

The Iranian regime immediately congratulated Hamas, calling the attack a heroic act and organizing street celebration. However, as governments and international media asked if Tehran had a role, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei tried to distance the regime, saying the attack was a Palestinian operation.

Amir-Abdollahian also told Assad that “the resistance is capable of resisting against the Zionist regime for a long time.”

The Islamic Republic uses the term “Resistance Front” to refer to many of its proxy militant armed groups around the region, and the Syrian regime. Lebanese Hezbollah and Hamas are the largest of these groups receiving hundreds of million dollars a year from Iran, in addition to weapons and training.

The Israeli military has surrounded the Gaza Strip with the aim of an eventual ground operation that according to officials is aimed to eliminate Hamas as a fighting force. Hundreds of thousands of Gazans have been told by Israel to evacuate to safer areas to reduce civilian casualties.

Iran May Accept Global Financial Conventions, Say Politicians

Oct 14, 2023, 05:31 GMT+1
•
Iran International Newsroom

A prominent politician in Tehran has suggested that President Ebrahim Raisi may seek another review of four bills allowing Iran to join the FATF conventions. 

The FATF (The Financial Action Task Force) is a G-7 initiative to combat money laundering and financing terrorism. The four bills stuck in Iran's legislative system since 2017 due to opposition by hardliners include measures to join the convention against organized crime, to amend “the anti-money laundering law,” to accept the convention against financial support for terrorism” and a “bill to amend the law against financial support for terrorism.” 

The former head of the Iranian parliament's national Security and Foreign Relations Committee Heshmatollah Falahatpisheh also told Etemad Online that "if it is true that Raisi has now asked Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei to order the Expediency Council to start another review of the FATF bills, then we should be sorry for the country's national interests as Raisi was one of the opponents of the bills."

The bills were handed over to the Expediency Council, a group of former officials trusted by Khamenei, for review after it changed hands between the parliament (Majles) and the constitutional watchdog the Guardian Council without any progress. 

Lawmaker Heshmatollah Falahatpisheh (undated)
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Lawmaker Heshmatollah Falahatpisheh

In addition to the limitations imposed on Iran's international trade and banking due to US and other international sanctions, adherence to the FATF conventions is essential for international traders. It provides assurance that the funds used by Iran in transactions will not be funneled into money laundering, cross-border organized crime, or terrorism financing.

Hardliners, however, have been strictly opposing the bills saying openly that joining the conventions would bar Iran from sending money to groups such as Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Hezbollah, designated as terrorist groups by key countries.

Falahatpisheh charged that hardliners have been benefitting from illicit trade and financial transaction while Iran has been on the FATF blacklist. He added that Raisi strongly opposed the bills as an Expediency Council member and the head of Iran's Judiciary. He said that Raisi as President has now realized that joining the FATF and returning to the nuclear deal with the West are necessary to improve Iran's ailing economy. 

Meanwhile, Expediency Council member Mohammad Sadr also acknowledged in an interview on Wednesday that "many of the opponents of the JCPOA and FATF have realized the significance and necessity of the nuclear agreement and the anti-money laundering conventions. 

Sadr emphasized that without the FATF, Iran's existing economic challenges will remain unsolved, and the system is susceptible to encountering new issues.

Some politicians and many commentators and economists have been insisting that passing the bills are essential for conducting financial transactions with the world. Many had also pointed out that even if the sanctions are lifted, Iran will not be able to conduct international trade and banking without accepting the terms of the FATF. 

Iran's radicals and hardliners are being blamed for the impasse in the country's economy, politics and foreign policy while almost everyone knows that all the decisions originate with Khamenei and dictated to the system. However, former Reformist politician Jalil Rahimi Jahanabadi has called for a powerful reformist minority at the Majles to counterbalance hardliners. 

He said: "We need to harness and control the radicals. A powerful reformist minority can have a good impact on the Majles." It is interesting that the reformist figure is happy only if a minority comes from the reform camp rather than demanding to win the majority in parliament. 

Raisi had called for debating the FATF and JCPOA before leaving for New York to take part in the UN General Assembly in September, however, the issue popped up again after the brutal Hamas attack on Israel last week. Iran finds itself in the crosshairs of international criticism for being the main supporter of Hamas. Khamenei was forced to say publicly that the regime played no direct role in the attack.