Iran election turnout hits historic low

Iran election turnout hits historic low
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A woman casts her ballot during the parliamentary and Assembly of Experts elections at a polling station in Tehran on March 1, 2024. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)
Iran election turnout hits historic low
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People queue to vote during the parliamentary and Assembly of Experts elections at a polling station in Tehran on March 1, 2024. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)
Iran election turnout hits historic low
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Voters fill out their ballots during the parliamentary and Assembly of Experts elections at a polling station in Tehran on March 1, 2024.(AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)
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Updated 03 March 2024
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Iran election turnout hits historic low

Iran election turnout hits historic low
  • Total voter turnout but may be at lowest since the 1979 Islamic Revolution
  • Under Iranian law, the parliament has a variety of roles, including overseeing the executive branch

TEHRAN: Turnout for Iran’s parliamentary election, seen as a test of the clerical establishment’s legitimacy, appears to have hit a historic low of around 40 percent, according to unofficial reports in Iranian media on Saturday.
Heavyweight moderates and conservatives stayed away from Friday’s election and reformists called it unfree and unfair as it was mainly a contest between hard-liners and low-key conservatives loyal to Islamic revolutionary ideals.
Mohammad Khatami, Iran’s first reformist president, was among the critics who did not vote on Friday.
Imprisoned Nobel Peace Prize laureate Narges Mohammadi, a women’s rights advocate, in a statement shared by her family with Reuters, called the election a “sham.”
The Hamshahri and Kayhan newspapers both reported that turnout was estimated at about 40 percent, in line with official surveys ahead of the poll estimating about 41 percent of eligible Iranians would vote.
The Hamshahri called the turnout “a 25-million slap” to calls for an election boycott, in a front-page headline next to a depiction of a ballot paper smacking US President Joe Biden in the face.
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei accused Iran’s “enemies” — a term he normally uses for the United States and Israel — of trying to create despair among Iranian voters.
“The Silent Majority” was the front page headline in Ham Mihan, a pro-reform newspaper, which also put the turnout at about 40 percent.
The interior ministry may announce the official turnout later on Saturday. If the turnout figure is officially confirmed, it would be the lowest turnout since Iran’s Islamic revolution in 1979.
Iran’s turnout fell to 42.5 percent in 2020 parliamentary elections from about 62 percent in 2016.
The election follows anti-government protests in 2022-23 that spiralled into some of Iran’s worst political turmoil since the revolution and coincided with growing frustration over the country’s economic woes.
Over 15,000 candidates ran for the 290-seat parliament on Friday.
The parliamentary election was twinned with a vote for the 88-seat Assembly of Experts, an influential body that has the task of choosing 84-year-old Khamenei’s successor.
Hard-line President Ebrahim Raisi was re-elected to the Assembly of Experts with 82.5 percent of the vote, the interior ministry announced on Saturday.
Hassan Rouhani, a pragmatist who was elected president in landslide wins in 2013 and 2017 promising to reduce Iran’s diplomatic isolation, was banned from running, drawing criticism from moderates.


Clowns try to put smiles back on faces of Gaza children

Clowns try to put smiles back on faces of Gaza children
Updated 26 sec ago
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Clowns try to put smiles back on faces of Gaza children

Clowns try to put smiles back on faces of Gaza children
  • Clowns and acrobats performed for them in the courtyard of a school where their displaced families have been sheltering from the bombing

NUSEIRAT: The children of Gaza have little to eat, have had to flee their homes and have survived nearly six months of terrifying Israeli bombardment.

But for a few precious minutes children in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the center of the Gaza Strip laughed and yelped with joy.

Clowns and acrobats performed for them in the courtyard of a school where their displaced families have been sheltering from the bombing.

The unrelenting war has taken a terrible toll on Gaza’s children.

Most of the 32,490 people killed in the besieged territory since the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel have been women and children, according to the Health Ministry toll.

But for once they could forget all that horror as performers in rabbit costumes led them in a conga, pushing one injured boy in a wheelchair.

Then it was the turn of clown Omar Al-Saidi to tickle their funny bones with zany antics at the expense of another jester.

Wassim Lobed, whose support group organized the show and who acted as compere, said: “Traumas are beginning to appear in children so we are trying to provide psychological relief. “We hope to God that this war will end for the sake of our children in Gaza.”

So deep is the mental suffering of Gaza’s young that some hope to die quickly to escape the “nightmare,” a spokesman for the UN child welfare agency said on Tuesday.

“The unspeakable is regularly said in Gaza” now, said UNICEF spokesman James Elder, who is in the territory.

After meeting young people on Monday, he said several teenagers said they were “so desperate for this nightmare to end that they hoped to be killed.”

But Saidi, whose clown name is Uncle Zaatar, said he hoped the show had lifted some of that “burden” from the children’s shoulders.

As the children clapped and cheered at the end, he said he hoped the “smile will remain on their faces forever.”


At least eight killed in Israeli strikes on south Lebanon, security sources say

At least eight killed in Israeli strikes on south Lebanon, security sources say
Updated 17 min 8 sec ago
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At least eight killed in Israeli strikes on south Lebanon, security sources say

At least eight killed in Israeli strikes on south Lebanon, security sources say
  • Five were killed in a strike on the border village of Tair Harfa
  • A strike that hit a restaurant in the border town of Naqura killed at least another three people

BEIRUT: At least eight people including Hezbollah fighters have been killed in Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon, security sources told Reuters on Wednesday.
Five were killed in a strike on the border village of Tair Harfa and a strike shortly afterward that hit a restaurant in the border town of Naqura killed at least another three people, the security sources and official Lebanese media said.
Iran-backed Hezbollah said it had launched dozens of rockets over the border at Kiryat Shmona in northern Israel early on Wednesday in response to deadly Israeli air strikes on the village of Hebbariyeh in southern Lebanon a day earlier.
Those air strikes near two towns in northeast Lebanon killed three Hezbollah militants, the heavily armed Shiite Muslim group said.
Israel and Hezbollah have been trading fire across the border since the Israel-Hamas war erupted in Gaza in October, in the biggest escalation between the long-time enemies since a month-long war in 2006.


Israel backtracks on canceled Rafah talks: US official

Israel backtracks on canceled Rafah talks: US official
Updated 27 March 2024
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Israel backtracks on canceled Rafah talks: US official

Israel backtracks on canceled Rafah talks: US official
  • After the White House said it was “perplexed” by the move, Israel backtracked
  • “The prime minister’s office has said they’d like to reschedule the meeting dedicated to Rafah,” the senior administration official told AFP

WASHINGTON: Israel wants to reschedule talks in Washington to discuss a possible offensive in the Gaza city of Rafah, days after it canceled the trip in protest at a UN ceasefire resolution, a US official said Wednesday.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu angrily scrapped the visit on Monday after Israel’s closest ally, the United States, abstained on the UN Security Council vote, allowing it to pass and deepening talk of a rift with President Joe Biden.
But after the White House said it was “perplexed” by the move, Israel backtracked.
“The prime minister’s office has said they’d like to reschedule the meeting dedicated to Rafah. We are now working with them to set a convenient date,” the senior administration official told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The U-turn came after Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant had “constructive discussions” over the last two days with senior US officials in Washington, the official added.
“Rafah was one of the many topics discussed” in the talks with Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, CIA chief Bill Burns and National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan.
Last week, Netanyahu agreed to a personal request by Biden to send a team to Washington to hear US concerns and discuss ways to target Hamas without a major ground operation in Rafah, which is crowded with refugees.
But after the UN Security Council vote demanding an immediate ceasefire in the Gaza war, Israel said that it was canceling and that the US abstention “hurts” its war effort and its bid to free hostages.
The White House said on Monday it was “kind of perplexed” and “very disappointed” by the cancelation.
The United States also insisted its abstention did not represent a shift in policy on Israel.
But Biden has voiced increasing frustration with Netanyahu as the civilian death toll in the Gaza Strip mounts and the humanitarian situation for Palestinians becomes increasingly dire.
The US president was caught on a hot mic recently saying he needed to have a “come to Jesus meeting” with the Israeli premier over the situation.
Israel launched a relentless offensive on Gaza after an unprecedented attack by the Palestinian militant group Hamas resulted in the deaths of about 1,160 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of Israeli figures.
Around 130 people are still believed to be held hostage in Gaza following the attack.
Israel’s military campaign has killed more than 32,000 people, mostly women and children, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory.


Japan envoy to support peace, aid efforts amid Israel war on Gaza

Japan envoy to support peace, aid efforts amid Israel war on Gaza
Updated 27 March 2024
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Japan envoy to support peace, aid efforts amid Israel war on Gaza

Japan envoy to support peace, aid efforts amid Israel war on Gaza
  • The tour is part of Japan’s various efforts “to calm down the situation surrounding Israel and Palestine,” the Foreign Ministry said

TOKYO: Japan’s government has dispatched Tsukasa Uemura, the country’s special envoy for Middle East peace, to Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE from March 27 to April 3 to assist in peace and aid efforts.
The tour is part of Japan’s various efforts “to calm down the situation surrounding Israel and Palestine as soon as possible and to improve the humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip, while closely communicating with the countries and international organizations concerned,” the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
Uemura is Japan’s former ambassador in Saudi Arabia.


Egypt pledges support for Palestinian rights during talks with Fatah representatives

Egypt pledges support for Palestinian rights during talks with Fatah representatives
Updated 27 March 2024
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Egypt pledges support for Palestinian rights during talks with Fatah representatives

Egypt pledges support for Palestinian rights during talks with Fatah representatives
  • Parties discussed the humanitarian and security situation in the Gaza Strip and the Israeli-occupied West Bank
  • Mahmoud Al-Aloul led the Fatah delegation, which included Palestinian officials Rawhi Fattouh and Samir Al-Rifai

CAIRO: Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry on Wednesday pledged his country’s continued support for Palestinian rights during talks with a visiting delegation representing the Fatah political movement.

The parties discussed the humanitarian and security situation in the Israeli-occupied Gaza Strip and the West Bank.

Mahmoud Al-Aloul led the Fatah delegation, which included Palestinian officials Rawhi Fattouh and Samir Al-Rifai.

Ministry spokesman Ahmed Abu Zeid said Shoukry and the Palestinian officials considered ways to halt Israel’s war in the Strip and curb growing settler violence against Palestinians and their property in the West Bank.

The Egyptian minister highlighted the need to put an end to the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza and stop the Israeli practice of collective punishment which he said included indiscriminate targeting, siege, starvation, and destruction of infrastructure.

Shoukry urged the immediate implementation of a recent UN Security Council Resolution demanding an immediate ceasefire adding that world powers had a legal and humanitarian responsibility to ensure the full and sustainable provision of aid to the Strip.

On the UN aid agency UNRWA, he noted that it was important not to politicize its work and to resume its funding to allow it to provide vital services in all areas of Gaza.

The Palestinian delegation briefed Shoukry on the dire humanitarian and security conditions in the West Bank and Jerusalem and the unprecedented Israeli restrictions placed on Palestinians in Jerusalem and worshippers at Al-Aqsa Mosque.

Shoukry denounced the continued expansion of illegal Israeli settlements, the latest of which involved the ratification of the confiscation of 8,000 dunums (almost 2,000 acres) of land in the Jordan Valley region of the occupied West Bank.

He condemned attempts at forced displacement of Palestinians which he pointed out undermined the foundations of the future peace process and peaceful coexistence in the region.

Egypt, he added, would continue to push the international community to work toward a two-state solution to the crisis, recognize the Palestinian state, and approve its full membership of the UN.