Farmer jailed in Hong Kong for burning flag

A man has been jailed in Hong Kong for burning the national flag, in the first sentence of its kind.

S Korea suspends savings banks citing weak finances

South Korea has suspended seven local savings banks citing the weak state of their finances.

Japan urges mass evacuation ahead of Typhoon Roke

More than a million people in central and western Japan have been urged to leave their homes as a powerful typhoon approaches.

Burma begins swap scheme for cars over 40 years old

Owners of some of Burma's most antiquated cars have been queuing in Rangoon to exchange their old vehicles for permits to import newer models.

Polio strain spreads to China from Pakistan

Polio has spread to China for the first time since 1999 after being imported from Pakistan, the World Health Organization (WHO) has confirmed.

Showing posts with label Ahmadinejad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ahmadinejad. Show all posts

Friday, March 15, 2013

President Ahmadinejad will attend the funeral of Chavez

Iran's President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, conveying expressions of grief over the people and the Government of Iran the death of Venezuela's President, Hugo Chavez.(REUTERS)

Tehran (Reuters)-Iran's President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, would visit Venezuela to attend the funeral ceremony of late President of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, on Friday.

According to the Fars news agency reports, President Ahmadinejad and his delegation from Iran will be leaving Tehran to Caracas on Thursday for a two-day visit to Venezuela.

Iran's Government also set Wednesday as the day of national mourning over the death of Chavez and planned to hold a memorial service to honor Chavez, who died in a hospital in Caracas on Tuesday (5/3) or local time Wednesday (6/3) Indonesia time.

President Ahmadinejad delivered a speech of grief from the people and Government of Iran over the death of Chavez in a message to Venezuela officials.

"For Justice, love and freedom alive, Hugo Chavez will stay alive. For conviction, the sanctity of human life, and he's going to stay alive. As long as the Nations life and struggle for independence, manifest the goodness and justice, he would still be alive, "Ahmadinejad's message.

(ANT)



News; Finance; Insurance; Health; Cancer



News; Finance; Insurance; Health; Cancer; Car Insurance; Health Insurance

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Ahmadinejad: Iran's economic pressure can be controlled

Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (REUTERS/Egyptian Presidency)

All domestic and international developments have been taken into consideration in the planning of the new fiscal year, Iran.
Tehran (Reuters)-Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says Iran's enemies through the pressure of economics can be controlled.

"All domestic and international developments have been taken into consideration in the planning of the new fiscal year, Iran. The enemy attempted to use the currency to hit the country's economy, "said Ahmadinejad in an interview with the TV station, Iran Saturday.

He said they (Iran's enemies) must know Iran's economy is one of the largest in the world and the nation of Iran is unparalleled in resisting foreign pressure to defend its rights.

President Ahmadinejad called for Iran to protect people's solidarity in the face of the enemy and pressure plans to disintegrate.

He added the Government has a plan to assist people in obtaining their daily living needs, as quoted from the official Iran News Agency, IRNA.

"The role of oil and State expenditure in the draft calendar of upcoming Iran Government's budget has been reduced, the Government has plans to meragamkan the source of his income," he said again.

Iran officials in several occasions gave back that sanctions against United States-led Western countries have affected the economy of the Persian Iran positively.

The previous weekend, Vice Chairman of the Parliament of Iran Mohammad Hassan Aboutorabi-Fard confirmed the positive result of the sanctions and pressure on Iran's oil sector and economy. Pressure and embargo paves the way for Iran to end its reliance on oil sales results.

(C003)



News; Finance; Insurance; Health; Cancer



News; Finance; Insurance; Health; Cancer; Car Insurance; Health Insurance

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Ahmadinejad tegaskan Iran tolak tekanan Barat

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
Presiden Iran Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (ANTARA)

Kalian tidak bisa mengacungkan senjata sambil mengancam rakyat Iran agar mereka mau bernegosiasi."
Dubai (ANTARA News) - Presiden Iran Mahmoud Ahmadinejad mengatakan Teheran tidak akan bernegosiasi mengenai persoalan program nuklir jika  ditekan negara-negara Barat.

Di sisi lain, Ahmadinejad akan bersedia duduk satu meja perundingan dengan musuh-musuhnya jika negara-negara tersebut berhenti "mengacungkan senjata."

Dalam pidato perayaan 34 tahun revolusi Islam Iran, Ahmadinejad menggunakan kata-kata yang lebih bernada damai dibanding Wali Fakih atau pemimpin tertinggi Ayatullah Ali Khomeini, yang pada 7 Februari lalu menolak desakan Amerika Serikat agar kedua negara bernegosiasi langsung.

Dalam penolakannya, Khomeini mengatakan bahwa "perundingan" dan "tekanan" adalah dua hal yang tidak bisa disatukan.

Ahmadinejad sendiri tidak mempunyai kewenangan untuk memutuskan dilakukannya negosiasi terkait program nuklir. Kewenangan tersebut sepenuhnya berada di tangan Khomeini.

Amerika Serikat dan sekutu-sekutunya mencurigai Iran sedang mengembangkan persenjataan atom dan menggunakan program energi nuklir sipil untuk menyamarkannya. Tehran menolak dengan tegas tuduhan tersebut.

"Kalian tidak bisa mengacungkan senjata sambil mengancam rakyat Iran agar mereka mau bernegosiasi," kata Ahmadinejad di depan ratusan ribu orang yang berkumpul alun-alun Azadi (yang bermakna kebebasan) dan dikutip Reuters.

"Perundingan tidak boleh digunakan sebagai alat untuk memaksakan pendapat seseorang, jika kalian berhenti mengacungkan senjata pada rakyat Iran, saya sendiri yang akan datang untuk bernegosiasi," kata dia.

Tehran ssedang mencari cara untuk melepaskan dri dari berbagai sanksi yang telah memukul ekspor minyak mentah sekaligus menurunkan nilai mata uang rial sampai setengah dari tahun lalu. Hal itu memicu inflasi yang tinggi dan mmengurangi daya beli masyarakat biasa di negara tersebut.

"Saat ini, para musuh kita sedang berusaha sekuat tenaga untuk menekan bangsa Iran untuk mengehentikan kemajuan yang telah dicapainya, namun mereka tidak akan berhasil," kata dia.

(G005)



News; Finance; Insurance; Health; Cancer



News; Finance; Insurance; Health; Cancer; Car Insurance; Health Insurance

Friday, September 23, 2011

Iran's Ahmadinejad attacks West, prompts walk-out

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad flayed the West on Thursday for a catalog of misdeeds, but his address to the United Nations passed over Tehran's nuclear program and the Palestinian statehood issue.
In his 30-minute speech, the Iranian leader also failed to mention the pro-democracy uprisings that have swept the Arab world this year, including Syria, Iran's closest Arab ally.
U.S. delegates walked out when Ahmadinejad said "arrogant powers" threatened anyone who questioned the Holocaust and the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States with sanctions and military action. Other Western delegates also left, in what has become an annual feature of Ahmadinejad's U.N. appearances.
Ahmadinejad struck out at Zionism, but did not comment on the issue that has dominated this year's General Assembly -- the Palestinian plan to ask the Security Council to admit their nascent state as a full U.N. member.
He accused Washington of using the "mysterious" September 11 attacks as a pretext for wars on Iraq and Afghanistan and said Western powers "view Zionism as a sacred notion and ideology."
The White House dismissed Ahmadinejad's attack and accused Iran's government of "vile mistreatment" of its own citizens.
British Prime Minister David Cameron also assailed the Iranian leader in his own speech to the United Nations.
"He didn't remind us that he runs a country where they may have elections, of a sort, but they also repress freedom of speech," Cameron said, accusing Iran of violently suppressing protests and "torturing those who argue for a better future."
Mark Kornblau, spokesman for the U.S. mission at the United Nations, said Ahmadinejad had "again turned to abhorrent anti-Semitic slurs and despicable conspiracy theories."
PROTESTS OUTSIDE UNITED NATIONS
Thousands of people protested against Ahmadinejad outside the United Nations complex in New York.
The demonstrators, mostly Iranian-Americans, chanted "Down with dictators, down with Ahmadinejad" and called for the overthrow of the Iranian leader, whose bitterly disputed 2009 re-election touched off months of street protests in Iran.
"We are hoping to see that the people of Iran are represented in the U.N. by a democratically elected official," said Hamid Azimi, a computer systems engineer from California.
Ahmadinejad, wearing a jacket with no tie, has often used the U.N. podium to lecture the West on its responsibility for the evils of slavery, colonialism, poverty and militarism.
This year was no exception, but the Iranian president was taking to the world stage as a figure somewhat diminished by sharp political challenges to his authority at home.
Iranian politicians, clerics and the Revolutionary Guards, who quelled the 2009 protests, have taken the president to task for his differences with Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Ahmadinejad has suffered a series of setbacks in his contest with Khamenei, his former mentor. In the past few months, at least 25 associates of Ahmadinejad have been arrested and several websites affiliated with them have been blocked.
His closest ally, Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei, has been accused of graft, of leading a "deviant current" that seeks to challenge the theocratic establishment, and of links to a $2.6 billion bank fraud described as Iran's biggest ever.
Although Ahmadinejad did not mention Tehran's disputed nuclear program in his U.N. speech, he said later that Iran would stop producing 20 percent enriched uranium if it is guaranteed fuel for a medical research reactor, seeking to revive a fuel swap deal that fell apart in 2009.
"Any time they can guarantee us this sale ... we will stop 20 percent enrichment," he told reporters. "Whenever these assurances are given, we will do our part."
Tehran's refusal to halt enrichment has provoked four rounds of U.N. sanctions on the world's No. 5 oil exporting state and tighter U.S. and European Union restrictions.
Ahmadinejad acknowledged sanctions had hit the Iranian economy but said "they do not have a decisive effect."
The West believes Iran is covertly seeking nuclear weapons, a charge Tehran denies.
French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe met his Iranian counterpart in New York and told him France and five other big powers were worried about the U.N. nuclear watchdog's latest report, which suggests Iran is violating U.N. resolutions.