Dar says that Israeli aggression threatens regional stability


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ISTANBUL:

The Deputy Prime Minister/Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ishaq Dar, has emphasized the urgent need for unity among Muslim nations to face increasing challenges faced by the UMMAH.

When heading to the 51st session of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) of the Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs in Istanbul, the Deputy Prime Minister strongly condemned the recent attacks of Israel against Iran, calling them a shameless violation of the United Nations Charter.

He warned that the growing tensions in the Middle East, fed by Israeli aggression, represent a serious threat to regional peace and stability.

Asking immediate and unconditional fire in Gaza, Foreign Minister denounced the ongoing genocide of the Palestinians, highlighting the tragic loss of thousands of innocent lives, including women and children.

“The time has come for the Muslim Umma to join,” said Dar. “IIC is expected to play a decisive and main role in approaching these critical problems.”

He also raised serious concerns about the actions of India in the region, accusing New Delhi of assembling water resources against Pakistan. “Blocking Pakistan’s water is equivalent to declare war,” he said.

Give reiterated Pakistan’s call for the resolution of the Jammu and Kashmir dispute in accordance with the resolutions of the United Nations Security Council. He condemned Indian aggression and said that India had attacked innocent Pakistani civilians. In response, Pakistan exercised his right to self -defense, he added.

Highlighting the growing theme of Islamophobia, the viceprimer minister requested a collective action of the Muslim world to counteract the growing feeling against Islam worldwide.

He also extended his gratitude to the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Turkish leadership for his warm hospitality during the conference.

The Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, accused Western leaders of providing “unconditional support” to Israel.

Erdogan, a critic braid of Israel’s actions in Gaza as in Iran, Erdogan asked “high -level peace conversations” between Tehran and the United States, according to his office, and added that Turkey was ready to play a role of “facilitator” to help put an end to war.

Erdogan, who met Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, apart from Saturday’s meeting, said Turkey would not allow borders in the Middle East to be reduced “in blood.”

“It is vital for us to show more solidarity to end Israel’s bandider, not only in Palestine but also in Syria, in Lebanon and Iran,” said the 57 OIC member countries.

According to the Qatar Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Araghchi also met with the main diplomat of the Gulf State in Istanbul, who said he was working to bring the sides “back to the path of dialogue.”

The president of Iran, Masoud fishshkian, warned about a “more devastating” retaliation if the nine -day bombing campaign of Israel continues, saying that the Islamic Republic would not stop its nuclear program “under any circumstance.”

Israel said on Saturday that he had killed three most Iranian commanders in his unprecedented offensive, while Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said that the campaign had delayed Tehran’s alleged progress towards a nuclear weapon for two years.

“We will do everything we can do there to eliminate this threat,” Saar told the German newspaper Bild, stating that Israel would continue with his attack.

Israel and Iran have changed wave after wave of devastating strikes since Israel launched its air campaign on June 13, saying that Tehran was about to develop a nuclear weapon.

Iran denies having looked for an atomic bomb, and on Saturday Pezeshkian said that his right to pursue a civil nuclear program “cannot be removed … by threats or war.”

In a phone call with French president Emmanuel Macron, Pezeshkian said Iran was “ready to discuss and cooperate to generate confidence in the field of peaceful nuclear activities.”

“However, we do not accept to reduce nuclear activities to zero under any circumstance,” he added, according to the official Iran news agency of Iran.

Referring to Israeli attacks, he said: “Our response to the continuous aggression of the Zionist regime will be more devastating.”

Israel’s army said that a strike in Qom, south of Tehran, killed Saeed Izadi, a senior official of the revolutionary guards in charge of coordination with Hamas. Two other commanders were killed during the night, he added.

Israel said he had also attacked Iran Isfahan’s nuclear site for the second time, with the UN Nuclear Control Agency later informing that a centrifugal manufacturing workshop had been hit.

The best diplomats in Great Britain, France and Germany met Friday in Geneva in Geneva and urged him to resume nuclear conversations with the United States that had been derailed by war.

But Araghchi told NBC News that “we are no longer prepared to negotiate with them (the Americans), as long as the aggression continues.”

Trump, derogatory for European diplomatic efforts, said it was unlikely to ask Israel to stop his attacks so that they will return to the table.

“If someone is winning, it’s a bit more difficult to do,” he said about Israel’s campaign.

Any participation of the United States would probably have powerful bombs that destroy bunker that no other country has to destroy an enrichment of underground uranium enrichment in Fordo.

(With additional news desktop information)

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