Happening now...

Oct 18, 2010
6,271
848
this calls for a shot of stoli (y)

Russia Calls Israel 'the Problem' in the Middle East, Defends Iran and Its Allies

"The problem in the region is not Iranian activities," Russian ambassador to Israel Anatoly Viktorov told the Jerusalem Post in comments later shared by Moscow's embassy in Tel Aviv. "It's a lack of understanding between countries and noncompliance with U.N. resolutions in the Israel-Arab and Israel-Palestinian conflict."

Israelis have steadily annexed and settled across territories deemed Palestinian by the United Nations. Violence between the two sides has stymied peace efforts for decades, though frictions between Israel and Iran, along with fellow pro-Palestinian partners such as Lebanese Shiite Muslim movement Hezbollah, have taken precedence.

But Viktorov dismissed Israeli concerns of Hezbollah plots such as infiltrations and rocket attacks, pointing instead to regular Israeli operations against the group and other suspected Iranian assets in countries like neighboring Syria.

"Israel is attacking Hezbollah, Hezbollah is not attacking Israel," Viktorov said, arguing there is "no proof Hezbollah created the tunnels" Israel has uncovered along its contested northern border with Lebanon.

Russia Calls Israel 'the Problem' in the Middle East, Defends Iran and Its Allies (msn.com)
 
Oct 18, 2010
6,271
848
i would like to ask the u.s., and the eu3 clowns the same question.
iran is trailblazing in the new world order, the aforementioned
are trying to cling to the old crippled one ;)
 

Pooya

Administrator
Staff member
Sep 23, 2004
35,398
1,454
Vancouver, Canada
www.IranSportsPress.com
Another execution, another shameful day
Iranian journalist Ruhollah Zam, whose reporting helped spur large anti-government protests, was executed by Iran on Saturday morning, according to reports by state media.

Zam, 47, was found guilty of “corruption on earth” and sentenced to death in June 2020. The sentence was upheld by Iran’s Supreme Court on Tuesday this week, shortly before his execution.

The vague charge of “corruption on earth” is often used “in cases involving espionage or attempts to overthrow Iran’s government,”
 

Behrooz_C

Elite Member
Dec 10, 2005
16,650
1,566
A small island west of Africa
What this poor guy did is not a crime in any other civilised country on earth, nevermind death sentence.

He created a website in which he exposed the corruption at the heart of the regime. Ironically, his information came directly from inside the regime.


The set him up and kidnapped him. They then interrogated him and took pictures which they then claimed came from his time in Israel. In reality he never went there.
 

IEI

Administrator
Staff member
Nov 10, 2002
14,500
3,336
I have not followed this case as closely, looks like he was living in Paris and then decided to visit Iraq? anyone knows why? why would someone who is actively against IR decides to visit "IRAQ"? makes no sense to me.
Somehow they lied to him and abducted him and then killed him.
 
Oct 18, 2010
6,271
848
anti-iranian terrorists in eu can not escape justice.
iran is taking a page out of isreal and u.s. book and
is hunting them down and brining them to justice.

Iran intelligence plot alleged in Habib Chaab's abduction in Istanbul - The Washington Post

Turkey says Iranian intelligence was behind elaborate plot to kidnap opponent in Istanbul


ISTANBUL — When exiled Iranian opposition figure Habib Chaab traveled from his home in Sweden to Turkey in October, he did not tell his friends, one of them said.
“None of us would have accepted him going,” said the friend, Fouad al-Kabi. Turkey had become known as a “backyard” for Iranian intelligence agents, he said, and Chaab, a leader of a militant separatist group, was wanted by Tehran.

Soon after he arrived in Istanbul, Chaab disappeared.

Chaab led the Swedish branch of the Arab Struggle Movement for the Liberation of Ahvaz, or ASMLA, a decades-old separatist group advocating for the independence of Iran’s ethnic Arab minority, most of whom live in the oil-rich southwest of the country but have long complained of discrimination and neglect. The group’s political leaders operate from exile in Europe, while a military arm stages attacks inside Iran.
A Turkish investigation found that Chaab traveled from Sweden to Istanbul on Oct. 9, to meet a woman they referred to as Saberin S. She arrived in the city the day before Chaab did, after traveling from Iran on a forged Iranian passport.


The day Chaab arrived, several members of the kidnap team purchased plastic ties at a hardware store in Istanbul. Chaab landed that evening and went to meet Saberin at a gas station in the Istanbul district of Beylikduzu, where she was waiting in a van.
Once inside, Chaab was drugged and his hands and feet bound. He was driven to the eastern Turkish province of Van, handed over to a human trafficker and smuggled across the border the next day, the summary said. Saberin also returned to Iran.