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Two Tehran cafes shuttered over alleged alcohol, nudity and dancing

Sep 18, 2025, 18:08 GMT+1Updated: 20:50 GMT+1
People sit inside Suite Lounge café-restaurant in northern Tehran
People sit inside Suite Lounge café-restaurant in northern Tehran

Authorities in Tehran have shut down two cafe-restaurants over alleged violations including “serving alcohol, nudity, and mixed-gender dancing,” Revolutionary Guards-affiliated Fars news agency reported on Thursday.

Fars said the Suite Lounge café-restaurant in northern Tehran was shut down on those grounds and released a video of a police raid that did not show nudity, though women without the compulsory hijab were visible.

The Banichu café-restaurant in western Tehran, which had previously received a closure warning, was also shut down earlier this week after authorities said "six liters of homemade and foreign alcohol were discovered," and mixed-gender parties were held.

The main suspect linked to Banichu remains at large, and a judicial case is under review at the Tehran prosecutor’s office, the report added.

Possession and consumption of alcohol are illegal in Iran, carrying punishments ranging from fines and lashings to prison sentences. Despite the ban, underground networks and discreet venues continue to supply alcohol, often at high cost and under strict secrecy, according to both state and independent reports.

Separately, on Thursday, police in the western Iranian city of Doroud shut down 12 cafés and traditional teahouses for “failing to comply with trade regulations,” state broadcaster IRIB reported, adding that another nine businesses received written warnings.

In recent weeks, authorities have shuttered several cafes and restaurants across Iran, citing reasons ranging from live music and mixed-gender gatherings to customers failing to conform to Islamic dress codes.

Over the past two months, at least 20 cafes, garden restaurants, and wedding halls have been closed in Tehran, Dezful, Hamedan, Kashan and Maragh in Isfahan province over alleged hijab violations, according to a report by reformist daily Ham Mihan.

Last year, at least 536 businesses across Iran were shut down, mostly for non-commercial reasons such as enforcing mandatory hijab, operating during Ramadan, or holding events during religious mourning periods, according to US-based rights group Human Rights Activists in Iran (HRANA).

The group said the closures highlight growing intervention by judicial and security bodies in business activity, with significant impacts on individual and social freedoms.

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Snapback sanctions will be imposed on Iran by month’s end, Macron says

Sep 18, 2025, 17:00 GMT+1

Snapback sanctions on Iran will be triggered at the end of this month, French President Emmanuel Macron said in an interview with Israel’s Channel 12 on Thursday.

Asked if the return of UN sanctions on Iran was a "done deal," Macron answered: “Yes, I think so. Because the latest news we have from the Iranians are not serious."

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, he added, “tried to make a reasonable offer” to reach a deal with European powers, but did not receive backing from other members of the Iranian ruling system.

Iran made a new proposal to the E3 nations Britain, Germany and France on Wednesday to avoid the return of UN sanctions, Wall Street Journal journalist Laurence Norman reported on X earlier on Thursday.

The E3 views the proposal as insufficient because it seeks major concessions without any concrete Iranian action, Norman added, citing an unnamed source.

Seperately, Axios journalist Barak Ravid wrote on X that a draft resolution to extend the suspension of UN sanctions on Iran will be circulated at the Security Council on Thursday, with a vote scheduled for Friday.

Barak said the resolution is not expected to pass, which would trigger the “snapback” mechanism, leading to the reimposition of sanctions on Iran at 8 p.m. ET on September 27.

The three European powers triggered the snapback process on August 28 under Resolution 2231, demanding Iran return to talks, grant wider access to inspectors, and account for its missing uranium stockpiles.

On Wednesday, European foreign ministers urged Iran to resume nuclear talks, allow inspections of sensitive sites and curb its stockpile of highly enriched uranium.

Last week, Iran's foreign minister Abbas Araghchi said that if the E3 move to activate the snapback mechanism to reimpose UN sanctions, "they will be excluded from nuclear negotiations with the Islamic Republic."

Europe unmoved by Iranian proposal to avoid sanctions - WSJ reporter

Sep 18, 2025, 15:56 GMT+1

European states at the center of a sanctions drama with Tehran due for a finale next month deemed an Iranian proposal to gain a reprieve insufficient and overly demanding, a Wall Street Journal reporter said on Thursday.

The E3 - France, Germany and the United Kingdom - last month triggered a mechanism in a 2015 international nuclear deal with Iran to "snapback" international sanctions within 30 days if Tehran does not convince them of its compliance.

“Iran made a new offer to E3 yesterday to avoid snapback, I understand. One which frankly is barely a bit credible. I am not alone in thinking that,” Norman posted on X, going on to cite a source familiar with the matter.

"The E3 regard Iran's latest proposal as insufficient in substance as it demands far-reaching actions like extension of the SnapBack or even complete termination (of 2231) in exchange for Iranian declarations of intent, but without any concrete actions on the Iranian side," he quoted the source as saying.

Norman was referring to the United Nations Security Council resolution number promulgating the nuclear deal which, in the Western view, authorizes the snapback move.

Iran denies seeking a bomb, criticized the US withdrawal from the agreement during President Donald Trump's first term in 2018 and say the European powers lack authority to trigger snapback sanctions because they violated their own commitments to the deal.

Any agreement to extend or avert the restored sanctions must be reached before a October 18 deadline.

The E3 "remain dedicated to diplomacy and ready to engage with Iran at any time, including" at the UN General Assembly meeting in New York next week, Norman quoted the source as saying.

The 80th session of the UN General Assembly opened on September 9, with world leaders beginning to arrive in New York on September 22.

Norman, a veteran watcher of international nuclear diplomacy, paraphrased Iran’s position as “Give us everything we want, and we might give you some of what you want.”

The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), signed in 2015 by Iran and the P5+1, the United States, Britain , France, Germany, Russia and China plus the European Union, aimed to curb Iran’s nuclear program in return for sanctions relief.

Iran says facing 'hybrid war' despite end of 12-day conflict

Sep 18, 2025, 14:02 GMT+1

A senior commander in Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said on Thursday the country remained under attack in a “hybrid war” waged by the United States and Israel, even after the end of their 12-day military confrontation in June.

Yadollah Javani, the Guards’ deputy political chief, said the conflict was “years old” and had only taken on a military dimension earlier this summer. He told a gathering in Kerman that while fighting had ceased, the campaign continued across media, cyber and political domains.

Javani said Iran’s response would be a “hybrid jihad,” mobilizing military, cultural and public resources to counter what he described as the enemy’s focus on narrative battles and online influence.

Israel retains capabilities inside Tehran, Mossad chief says

Sep 18, 2025, 13:42 GMT+1

The head of Israel's Mossad intelligence agency, David Barnea, says there are still capabilities buried within Tehran, ready to be activated while Iran continues to hunt down suspects.

Speaking at the Prime Minister's Award Ceremony, Barnea said: “We have won, and we will continue to win. Though we proved that Iran is penetrable, we are not letting up.

“The Mossad has very strong operational capabilities, even more imaginative and powerful than before — especially inside Iran and even in the heart of Tehran.”

At the ceremony, Mossad received this year’s honor in recognition of its recent operations. Among them was the so-called “beeper operation” in Lebanon, in which pager devices used by Iran-aligned Hezbollah members exploded simultaneously.

Another operation cited involved the establishment of a covert drone base inside Iran, which Israel said was used to destroy missile launchers prepared to fire following Israel’s June 13 strikes.

“We will continue to build and strengthen our capabilities in Iran, to keep our eyes open from within Iran on what is happening behind closed doors, and we will not allow ideas that could endanger our security to grow,” he said.

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Since the June war, over 700 Iranians have been arrested on charges of spying for Israel with at least nine given the death sentence already.

Inside Israel, dozens of Israelis have been arrested on allegations of spying for Iran since the beginning of the Gaza war in 2023, some of whom involved in plots to kill top military and political leaders in the country.

Iran armed forces chief hails Russia’s stance during 12-day war

Sep 18, 2025, 12:36 GMT+1

Russia took firm positions during the 12-day war with Israel, Chief of Staff of Iran’s Armed Forces Abdolrahim Mousavi said in a meeting with Russian Energy Minister Sergei Tsivilev in Tehran on Wednesday.

“The enemy used negotiations as a cover for deception and betrayed diplomacy by starting the war,” Mousavi said.

He said Iran has never initiated war and sees diplomacy as the best way to resolve disputes, but argued that the armed forces had given a strong response to the United States and Israel.

Moscow supports stronger cooperation in both economic and defense fields, the Russian minister said in return.

Pezeshkian stresses partnership

Iran is prepared to expand cooperation with Moscow, President Masoud Pezeshkian said in a separate meeting with Tsivilev.

Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian (right) meeting Russian Energy Minsiter Sergei Tsivilev (left) in Tehran on September 18, 2025.
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Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian (right) meeting Russian Energy Minsiter Sergei Tsivilev (left) in Tehran on September 18, 2025.

“No barrier stands in the way of Iran-Russia cooperation, and the model of successful cooperation between independent countries like ours will prove that the era of unilateral powers has ended,” Pezeshkian said.

He called joint projects proof that sanctions have not obstructed Tehran. “Growth can be achieved without reliance on unilateral powers,” Pezeshkian added, saying that agreements in transport, energy, and power generation will move forward if ministers and expert teams accelerate implementation.

Iran’s parliament in May approved a 20-year strategic partnership with Russia. The agreement, initially signed by Russian President Vladimir Putin and Pezeshkian on January 17, was ratified by Russia’s State Duma in April.

While the pact does not include a mutual defense clause, it commits both nations to military-technical cooperation, joint exercises, and coordination against what they define as shared threats.

Officials from both governments remain in regular contact to ensure agreements are carried out, Tsivilev said. “No pressure or sanctions can disrupt this process.”

Iranian and Russian officials have repeatedly announced projects on trade, transport, and energy. Many have been delayed or left incomplete because of financial limits and logistical difficulties.