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Iranian lawmaker defends 93% uranium enrichment as peaceful

Sep 25, 2025, 12:31 GMT+1Updated: 14:42 GMT+1

Iran can enrich uranium to 93 percent for 'peaceful' purposes, a senior lawmaker said on Thursday, rejecting US arguments against its nuclear program.

“The United States says Iran has oil and therefore does not need nuclear industry, but then America, which is a major oil producer, should not have nuclear power either,” Mahmoud Nabavian said.

“We can have 93 percent enrichment for peaceful purposes.”

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Iran diplomacy wobbles as factions compete to avoid looking soft on US
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Iran diplomacy wobbles as factions compete to avoid looking soft on US

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ANALYSIS

The politics of pink: how Iran uses cuteness to rebrand violence

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Scam messages seek crypto for ships’ safe passage through Hormuz, firm warns

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EXCLUSIVE

Family told missing teen was alive, then received his body 60 days later

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TEHRAN INSIDER

The future has been switched off here

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  • Diplomacy tolls at Hormuz as conflict returns to its doorstep
    OPINION

    Diplomacy tolls at Hormuz as conflict returns to its doorstep

  • Opposition to US talks grows in Tehran as ceasefire deadline nears
    INSIGHT

    Opposition to US talks grows in Tehran as ceasefire deadline nears

  • Tehran moderates see ‘no deal–no war’ limbo as worst outcome
    INSIGHT

    Tehran moderates see ‘no deal–no war’ limbo as worst outcome

  • The future has been switched off here
    TEHRAN INSIDER

    The future has been switched off here

  • Lights out, then gunfire: Witnesses recount Mashhad protest crackdown
    VOICES FROM IRAN

    Lights out, then gunfire: Witnesses recount Mashhad protest crackdown

  • Is Iran entering its Gorbachev moment?
    INSIGHT

    Is Iran entering its Gorbachev moment?

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Talks make no sense if Iran honors commitments and others do not, Pezeshkian says

Sep 25, 2025, 12:26 GMT+1

Negotiations cannot be one-sided, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said in a meeting with anti-war activists in New York on Thursday, adding that Iran has abided by its nuclear commitments while others have not.

“What kind of negotiation is it where we must honor our commitments while they do not uphold any of theirs?” he said.

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India and China to secure essentials against snapback, Pezeshkian's adviser says

Sep 25, 2025, 12:20 GMT+1

International pressure surrounds the snapback mechanism and sanctions on financial institutions in recent months have exceeded it several times over, Masoumeh Aqapour, an adviser to Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian, said on Thursday.

“There is international pressure regarding the snapback mechanism. Sanctions imposed on financial institutions over the past six months have been several times greater than those under the snapback mechanism,” she said.

“Psychologically it can have a large impact on the country’s economy. We must pursue both long-term and short-term programs to minimise the effects of the snapback mechanism,” she added.

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“We should use the capacity of India and China to supply essential goods.”

EU urges Iran to take nuclear steps and engage with IAEA

Sep 25, 2025, 12:14 GMT+1

EU Council President António Costa said he met Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian in New York to raise concerns over Iran’s nuclear program, detainees, and military support for Russia.

“We agreed that continued dialogue remains essential to address and resolve these issues,” Costa said in a post on X. “I urged President Pezeshkian to take — even at this late stage — concrete steps towards full cooperation with the IAEA.”

China’s Indonesian oil imports raise suspicions of Iranian trade - Bloomberg

Sep 25, 2025, 10:17 GMT+1

China has sharply increased crude imports declared from Indonesia in recent months, an unusual surge that points to possible new workarounds for Iranian oil exports, Bloomberg reported on Wednesday.

Customs data show 2.7 million tons of Indonesian crude -- around 630,000 barrels per day -- arrived in August, far exceeding Indonesia’s average output of 580,000 bpd in 2024, most of which was consumed domestically. The flows followed a sharp jump in July.

China, the biggest buyer of Iranian oil, officially reported no imports from Tehran since mid-2022. In the meantime, it buys more oil from Malaysia than the country produces. In the past two months, shipments from Malaysia -- often used for ship-to-ship transfers and rebranded cargoes -- have dropped more than 30%.

Analysts say operators are now shifting tactics.

“This is just part of a continuing evolution of the operators’ tactics, hiding what they’re doing,” said Charlie Brown, a senior adviser at United Against Nuclear Iran. “They’re still doing ship-to-ship transfers in the same area off Malaysia; the basic trade pattern remains the same.”

Vessel-tracking data show tankers including the Aquaris, Yuhan, Pola and Pix signaled calls at Indonesia’s Kabil port near Singapore -- a hub not connected to crude exports but close to established transfer zones off Malaysia. These tankers later discharged cargoes in Chinese ports such as Qingdao, Rizhao and Dalian.

  • Sanctions snapback to boost China’s access to cut-price Iranian oil - Reuters

    Sanctions snapback to boost China’s access to cut-price Iranian oil - Reuters

  • Sanctions and graft decimated Iran oil revenues, ex-Treasury official says

    Sanctions and graft decimated Iran oil revenues, ex-Treasury official says

Bloomberg cited the Aquaris as receiving Iranian crude from the sanctioned Sorion tanker before unloading in Qingdao in June. The Yuhan and Pola followed similar patterns, according to data from Vortexa and Kpler.

Queries to Indonesia’s energy ministry, Pertamina, Kabil port, and China’s foreign ministry went unanswered, Bloomberg reported.

China’s reliance on Iranian oil has provided Tehran with a crucial economic lifeline as US sanctions continue to target the trade.

The looming return of UN sanctions on Iran is unlikely to curb its oil exports but could boost China’s refiners, who already take nearly 80% of Tehran’s 1.6 million barrels per day at steep discounts, Reuters reported on Wednesday.

Dollar in Iran climbs to 1,084,000 rials as snapback deadline approaches

Sep 25, 2025, 10:14 GMT+1

Dollar rate in Iran kept rising on Thursday, hitting a new record of 1,084,000 rials, figures showed.

The surge comes as the deadline for the snapback mechanism draws closer, fueling pressure on the local currency.

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