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Netanyahu tells Trump they see eye to eye on Iran after it tried to kill them

Feb 5, 2025, 01:22 GMT+0Updated: 16:52 GMT+0
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump hold a press conference on Feb. 4, 2025
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump hold a press conference on Feb. 4, 2025

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told US President Donald Trump at a White House Press conference on Tuesday that the two leaders agree on the danger posed by Iran after the Islamic Republic tried to kill them both.

The Israeli premier praised Trump for pulling out of a deal on Iran's nuclear program, helping midwife a Gaza ceasefire deal freeing some Israeli hostages and restoring on Tuesday the so-called maximum pressure policy of sanctions on Iran from his first term.

"We see eye to eye on Iran. That's the same Iran that tried to kill us both. They tried to kill you, Mr. President, they tried, through their proxies, to kill me."

Iran-backed Hezbollah fighters launched a drone attack from Lebanon on Netanyahu's vacant seaside residence at the height of its conflict with Israel last year. US law enforcement accused Iran of seeking Trump's assassination as retaliation for his order to kill top Iranian commander Qassem Soleimani in 2020.

"The roar of the Lion of Judah is heard loudly throughout the Middle East," Netanyahu said. "Israel has never been stronger and the Iran terror axis has never been weaker."

An attack by Iran-backed Hamas militants on Israel from Gaza on Oct. 7, 2023 triggered a multi-front confrontation embroiling the Jewish state, Iran and the armed groups the Islamic Republic supports in the Middle East.

Over the course of the 15-month war which is now paused by the ceasefire, Israel throttled Hamas in Gaza, decapitated Hezbollah's leadership and helped bring about the downfall of the Assad dynasty in Syria, Iran's oldest Arab ally.

A direct attack on Iran on Oct. 26, 2024 knocked out much of its air defenses and left the Houthi group in Yemen its last largely undeterred affiliate in the region.

"We've devastated Hamas, we decimated Hezbollah, we destroyed Assad's remaining armaments and we crippled Iran's air defenses," Netanyahu added. "We've defeated some of America's worst enemies."

The Israeli premier cited the Americans among the over 1,200 Israelis killed by Hamas in its Oct. 7 attack and among the scores taken captive in Gaza.

"We're both committed to rolling back Iran's aggression in the region and ensuring that Iran never develops a nuclear weapon," Netanyahu continued.

"Mr. President, ladies and gentlemen, Israel will end the war by winning the war. Israel's victory will be America's victory. We will not only win the war working together, we will win the peace."

Trump has repeatedly vowed to not allow Iran to possess a nuclear weapon and said he much prefers a diplomatic solution.

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Trump admin temporarily extends funding for Iran internet freedom projects

Feb 4, 2025, 21:47 GMT+0

The Trump administration has granted permission to several State Department-funded projects focused on internet freedom in Iran to operate for another 30 days, as the president signed a memorandum restoring his so-called maximum pressure policy on Tehran.

The continuation of long-term support for these projects is expected to be reviewed during the 30-day period.

Trump signed an executive order on January 20, his first day in office, suspending foreign development assistance for 90 days to allow for a review of its efficiency and alignment with his America First policy stance.

The decision left Iranian human rights activists concerned about its impact on Iran-related programs, with some saying the order could help Tehran further restrict its people’s access to information.

Following the executive order, the State Department halted most ongoing foreign aid programs and paused the initiation of new assistance, according to an internal memo distributed to officials and US embassies abroad.

Official government figures show Washington is the world's biggest donor of international aid, spending $39 billion in the 2024 fiscal year, out of which $65 million was allocated to funding State Department-administered Near East Regional Democracy (NERD).

The body is the main foreign assistance channel through which the United States has supported civil society and human rights in Iran since 2009, according to the Congressional Research Service.

A part of the US funds covers the expenses of Virtual Private Network (VPN) services which ordinary Iranians used to circumvent the Islamic Republic’s censorship. Many of these services will have to stop their operation following the aid cut.

“It is a very dangerous move, because the issue of internet freedom is very vital, both to the people of Iran and the allies of Iranian people in the West,” a cyber security expert based in Silicon Valley told Iran International on condition of anonymity.

Trump’s order, an internet activist told Iran International, deprives 20 million Iranians, or a fifth of the population, of US-supported VPNs they use to bypass Tehran’s internet curbs.

At their peak during the “Woman Life Freedom” protests in 2022, VPN usage in Iran hit two-third of the population. “In today’s Iran, the internet has no meaning without VPNs,” writes internet activist Soroush Ahmadi in an article for Peace Line journal, which is published by the Virginia-based NGO “Human Rights Activists in Iran”.

The VPNs commercially available in the Iranian market are believed to be controlled by the Islamic Republic and even sold by entities affiliated with the Revolutionary Guards who profit from the needs of Iranians to gain unfettered access to the internet.

Iran-backed groups must bounce back after Israeli blows, FM says

Feb 4, 2025, 19:11 GMT+0

Iran’s foreign minister called on the militant groups it backs in the Middle East to rebuild, in a sign Tehran may be determined to restore regional military influence eroded by Israel in a 15-month conflict.

“The resistance has gone through a difficult and significant period; it must rebuild itself, rebuild its forces, and apply the lessons learned from this war," Abbas Araghchi told a news conference at a Gaza-related event in Tehran on Tuesday.

“We are confident that the resistance will return to the field stronger than before.”

His remarks come as Gaza faces widespread devastation following Israel’s military response to the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks.

Israeli bombardments and ground operations have left much of the enclave in ruins, with tens of thousands of Palestinians displaced.

A long-sought ceasefire-for-hostages deal was brokered on January 15 after intense negotiations in Doha, mediated by the United States, Egypt and Qatar.

Hamas seized control of the territory in 2007. The armed cadres and military infrastructure of group, designated a terrorist organization by the United States and Britain, have been pummeled by a devastating Israeli incursion into the enclave.

Araghchi said that so-called resistance groups must adapt now that the conflict in Gaza is paused. The array of Islamist armed factions in the occupied Palestinian territories, Lebanon, Iraq and Yemen have long been funded and armed by Tehran.

Israel decapitated the leadership of Hezbollah in Lebanon and helped bring about the downfall of the Assad dynasty in Syria, Iran's oldest Arab ally.

Still, Araghchi said Israel had been defeated in the conflict and described the ceasefire as tenuous.

"Some think that this regime, due to this feeling (of defeat), may take action and violate the ceasefire, which is not unlikely given the nature of the criminal Zionist regime."

“The resistance movement is a school of thought and ideology that cannot be eliminated with weapons,” Araghchi added. “Its main weapon is not conventional arms; it is the blood of the martyrs.”

Iran's continued persecution of Christians raises alarm, says UN rapporteur

Feb 4, 2025, 12:00 GMT+0

UN Special Rapporteur on human rights in Iran, Mai Sato, has raised alarm over the persecution of Christians in the country, calling it a matter of serious concern that requires immediate attention.

Mai Sato addressed Article18’s joint side event at the UN in Geneva in late January, calling it a “timely opportunity” to assess the reality faced by Christian communities in Iran. Article18, a nonprofit organization, advocates for persecuted Christians in Iran and promotes religious freedom.

Sato spotlighted the plight of Christians in Iran the day before the country's Universal Periodic Review (UPR), a key UNHRC mechanism aimed at improving human rights, with Iran being one of 14 countries under review by the UPR Working Group.

Sato noted that previous UN rapporteurs had raised concerns about the systemic persecution of Christians in Iran in 2011, 2013, 2018, and 2020, yet little progress has been made.

“The violations reported in these communications mirror the very issues that presenters at this event will be discussing today,” she said, citing multiple breaches of Iran’s obligations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), which Iran ratified in 1975.

These include restrictions on religious freedom, freedom of expression, peaceful assembly, privacy, and non-discrimination.

Titled "Christians in the Islamic Republic of Iran: Legal Protections vs. Lived Realities," the Article18 event also included testimonies from individuals affected by religious persecution.

Sato urged civil society and what she called other stakeholders, to continue sharing evidence of Christian persecution and other religious minorities, saying the reports help keep the issue on the international agenda.

UN Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief Nazila Ghanea also contributed to the event.

In her remarks, Ghanea noted Article18's latest report's findings of the Iranian government's discriminatory treatment of Christian converts, citing severe sentencing in 2024, with 96 Christians facing 263 years in prison, 37 years of internal exile, and substantial fines, emphasizing the human cost behind these figures.

Although Christians are acknowledged as a religious minority in Iran, authorities impose severe penalties, particularly on those who convert from Islam to Christianity.

Iran arrests two female fans at football match

Feb 4, 2025, 11:32 GMT+0

Iran’s judiciary announced that two female spectators have been arrested during a football match at Tehran's Azadi Stadium as the government's push to ban women from games continues.

The judiciary said the women were detained during a domestic match between Persepolis and Tractor FC for allegedly engaging in “immoral behavior " but did not specify details or the exact charges they face.

Women have been banned from attending football matches in major stadiums like Azadi since the 1979 revolution, with authorities citing concerns over the stadium environment.

While FIFA and human rights organizations have pressured Iran to lift the ban, access remains highly restricted, the government using the country's strict Islamic laws to enforce segregation in what the UN and rights groups have termed "gender apartheid".

In 2019, FIFA intervened after the death of Sahar Khodayari, known as the "Blue Girl," who set herself on fire after being arrested for trying to enter a stadium disguised as a man.

In 2022, a limited number of women were briefly allowed into domestic league matches in Mashhad, though many were blocked from entering despite having tickets.

In spite of the bans at home, Qatar's World Cup in 2022 saw huge numbers of women turn out to support Iran.

Iran files case against two actors for shaking hands at film festival

Feb 4, 2025, 10:45 GMT+0

Iran’s judiciary has filed a legal case against filmmaker Marzieh Boroumand and actor Reza Babak for shaking hands on stage at the state-run Fajr Film Festival, breaking the country's strict Islamic laws.

A report by the judiciary-affiliated Mizan news agency said legal proceedings on the case took place in "recent days" but did not provide further details.

Boroumand, a filmmaker and puppeteer, is best known for her contributions to children's television, while Babak is a veteran actor in Iranian theater, television, and cinema industry.

Under Iran’s Islamic laws, physical contact between unrelated men and women is generally prohibited in public, including handshakes.

While enforcement of the law varies, authorities have prosecuted public figures in the past for similar incidents.

In 2015, Iranian cartoonist Atena Farghadani was charged with "indecent conduct" and "illegitimate sexual relations" after allegedly shaking hands with her male lawyer.

At the time, Amnesty International condemned the charges against Faraghdani saying, “It is clearly both absurd and a violation of the right to privacy to consider a man and a woman shaking hands as a criminal offence.”