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90 percent of Iranians want atomic bomb, expert on state TV says

Sep 22, 2025, 11:40 GMT+1

Nearly 90 percent of people after the 12-day war want the construction of an atomic bomb, said a state TV program on Monday.

The remarks were made during a conversation between a host and Mostafa Khoshcheshm, a government-affiliated strategic affairs analyst.

In recent days, following the start of the snapback mechanism, a number of parliament members have called for building nuclear weapons.

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Iran will bar inspections of its ships after snapback, MP says

Sep 22, 2025, 10:39 GMT+1

Iran will not allow Western states to inspect its ships after the return of UN Security Council sanctions, a lawmaker said Tuesday.

“We will not permit our ships to be inspected,” said Salar Velayatmadar, a member of the parliament’s National Security Committee.

Tehran has measures to prevent such restrictions and can continue exports and arms shipments in various ways because destination countries need its weapons, Velayatmadar said.

Only financial transfers from arms sales “might face some trouble,” and both partner states and Iran have arrangements to resolve that problem, Velayatmadar added.

Rising costs push poor Iranian children out of school, activist warns

Sep 22, 2025, 10:11 GMT+1
Rising costs push poor Iranian children out of school, activist warns
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Street vendors sell stationery in Ahvaz in September 2025. Families, squeezed by financial pressures, are cutting back and opting for cheaper, practical supplies at the peak of the back-to-school shopping season.

Mounting education costs in Iran are forcing growing numbers of children from low-income families out of school and into the workforce, a labor activist warned, as families say even public schools are demanding fees despite constitutional guarantees of free education.

“Turning education into a commodity has deprived many working-class children of their right to study,” labor activist Maziar Gilaninejad told labor news outlet ILNA.

He cited official figures and media reports showing steep increases in school-related expenses, including a 30% rise in stationery prices, costs of about 3.5 million rials (about $35) for basic supplies for one elementary student, and reports of 750,000 children leaving school due to poverty.

He added that the result is “a direct link” between rising dropouts and the growth in child labor, with many minors pushed into hazardous workshops to support their families.

“The reality is families need their children’s wages as much as they cannot afford school fees,” he said.

  • Parents clean schools as payment burden hits low-income families in Iran

    Parents clean schools as payment burden hits low-income families in Iran

  • Parents lament hidden school fees in Iran

    Parents lament hidden school fees in Iran

Parents have echoed the concerns. Earlier this month, Iran International reported that families are often asked to pay “voluntary” enrollment fees or provide unpaid labor, such as cleaning classrooms, to secure places for their children. In some cases, schools have withheld report cards until payments were made.

University tuition has also surged, with students reporting fees doubling at some institutions in recent semesters.

“Education is becoming an exclusive path for the wealthy,” Gilaninejad said, citing data that the top 3,000 scorers in this year’s university entrance exam came almost entirely from affluent families.

Article 30 of Iran’s constitution guarantees free education, but Iran spends just 2.93% of GDP on education, well below the global average of 4.4%, according to the Global Economy data service.

Gilaninejad said neglecting this obligation risks producing “a generation systematically sidelined from opportunity” and perpetuating cycles of poverty.

Iran nuclear chief visits Moscow for talks

Sep 22, 2025, 09:42 GMT+1

Mohammad Eslami, head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization, arrived in Moscow on Monday for negotiations, Russian media reported, without specifying whom he would meet.

The visit comes after the UN Security Council decided not to permanently lift sanctions against Tehran. The decision followed a move last month by France, Germany and Britain to launch a 30-day process to reimpose measures, accusing Iran of failing to uphold the 2015 nuclear deal.

Tehran denies the charge, while Moscow has declared support for Iran’s right to pursue “peaceful nuclear energy.”

Head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization Mohammad Eslami speaks during a press conference in Tehran, Iran, November 14, 2024.
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Head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization Mohammad Eslami speaks during a press conference in Tehran, Iran, November 14, 2024.

NPT withdrawal plan prepared, Iranian lawmaker says

Sep 22, 2025, 09:28 GMT+1

Tehran’s possible withdrawal from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty is not a mere threat but a prepared plan under review at different levels of government, an Iranian parliamentarian said on Monday.

The proposal is ready to be presented in the open session, Hosseinali Haji-Deligani, a member of the parliament’s Article 90 committee, said.

“Fortunately there is consensus among the country’s officials, and all decision-making bodies consider withdrawal from the NPT the best option to counter the European countries’ move,” he added.

Foreign ministry official warns Europe of consequences over snapback move

Sep 22, 2025, 08:49 GMT+1

The decision by France, Germany and Britain to trigger the snapback mechanism is unlawful and will have consequences, an Iranian foreign ministry official said on Monday.

“The activation of the snapback mechanism by France, Germany and Britain is “illegal and provocative and will carry consequences,” Hossein Noushabadi, director-general for parliamentary affairs at Iran’s foreign ministry, said.

“The international community must reject this illegal act by the three countries and avoid granting it any legitimacy.”