Tehran city official confirms traffic-camera images were used by Israel
CCTV cameras are seen in a street in Tehran.
A member of Tehran’s city council has implicitly confirmed reports that images from the capital’s traffic-camera network were sent abroad and used by Israel, and called for tighter security controls on foreign-made surveillance equipment.
Mehdi Abbasi told the Didban-e Iran news site that “the issue is not who may have done this, but that all assumptions that could lead to harm must be identified.”
Without naming Israel, he said “Experience has shown that with the relevant civil-defence tests, it is possible to thoroughly examine such equipment. And since there is always a possibility that our information could be transmitted abroad, we must consider the most dangerous scenarios and prepare ourselves to confront them.”
He said foreign devices used in urban monitoring systems “must pass multiple security filters” and that Tehran should minimize reliance on imported technology.
Abbasi said authorities should prioritize domestic production of traffic-camera systems, adding, “In a world where countries are either competing or hostile, we must strengthen our internal capabilities first.”
He also said the municipality “should have exercised greater oversight” of the equipment and warned that any technology with internet connectivity must undergo cybersecurity testing by Iran’s civil-defense units.
Iranian officials have not released technical details of the alleged data breach, but the issue has resurfaced repeatedly among senior figures following the 12-day war with Israel.
In September, a senior lawmaker claimed that Israel learned the location of a June 16 meeting of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council through the country’s urban surveillance network.
“All the city cameras at our intersections are in the hands of Israel,” said Mahmoud Nabavian, a member of parliament’s national security committee. “Everything on the internet is in their hands – meaning that if we move, they find out.”
Iranian media reported that the meeting – attended by the heads of the country’s three branches of power – was struck by six bombs or missiles, and that President Masoud Pezeshkian and several other officials suffered minor leg injuries while trying to escape.
Heavy rainfall caused floods in parts of western Iran on Monday, swamping streets and homes in areas that have endured months of severe drought and the country’s worst water shortages in decades, local media reported.
Footage published from Abdanan, in Ilam province, showed torrents of water sweeping through residential districts and damaging roads and neighborhoods.
Local officials said downpours in Abdanan and Dehloran led to overflowing waterways, the swelling of several rivers and the emergency evacuation of a number of families.
Relief teams from the Iranian Red Crescent were deployed to pump water out of flooded homes and clear blocked streets, authorities said.
Damage assessments were continuing on Monday, with officials saying their immediate priority was helping families whose houses had been inundated.
The national meteorological organization issued flood warnings for six western provinces and forecast rainfall in 18 of the country’s 31 provinces.
It said precipitation across Iran this year is roughly 85% below average, a shortfall that has emptied reservoirs and left taps running dry in several regions, including parts of Tehran.
Experts and officials have attributed the worsening crisis to prolonged drought, climate change, poor water management, illegal well drilling and inefficient agricultural practices.
Extended dry spells reduce the soil’s ability to absorb water, increasing the likelihood of flash floods when rain does occur.
Over the weekend, Iran conducted its first cloud-seeding operation of the year above the watershed of Lake Urmia in the northwest.
Cloud seeding involves dispersing chemicals into clouds to stimulate rainfall, though meteorologists caution that it is expensive and provides only limited benefit.
“In addition to cloud seeding’s heavy cost, the amount of rainfall it produces is nowhere near what is needed to solve our water crisis,” Sahar Tajbakhsh, head of Iran’s Meteorological Organization, told state television on Sunday.
Iran and Hezbollah have reconstituted parts of their weapons-transfer and financing network using third-country routes, maritime channels and money-exchange systems after earlier air and land corridors were disrupted, Israel’s Ynet news outlet reported.
The report said the groups adapted after tighter airport controls in Lebanon, the collapse of long-standing routes through Syria and the killing of senior Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) operatives involved in logistics.
Ynet, citing the US Treasury Department, said Iran has transferred roughly $1 billion to Hezbollah since the start of the year, funding that Washington says is used to rebuild the group’s capabilities.
New smuggling channels have increasingly relied on Turkey and Iraq, as well as maritime shipments and cash-based businesses, according to Ynet.
Other methods described in the report include the use of gold transfers, cryptocurrency channels, and shipping components in parts for later assembly in Lebanon.
The report also said Hezbollah has sought to expand local production based on Iranian expertise, reducing dependence on vulnerable cross-border routes.
A US delegation visiting Beirut last week urged Lebanon's leadership to curb financing networks and strengthen oversight of money-exchange agencies.
Analysts quoted by Ynet said they expect Iran to continue supporting Hezbollah’s reconstruction to maintain its political influence within Lebanon’s Shi’ite community.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards spokesman said Israel is in no position to launch a new war, describing current rhetoric as psychological pressure rather than a real military threat, in remarks published on Monday.
Brigadier General Ali-Mohammad Naeini, spokesman and deputy for public affairs of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), told Mehr News in an extensive interview that the 12-day June conflict had reshaped regional deterrence and left Israel unable to escalate.
“The enemy does not have the conditions for a new war,” he said, adding that statements suggesting renewed confrontation were “psychological operations and cognitive warfare.”
Naeini said Iran had fully restored its command cycle within hours of the June strikes and delivered what he called a decisive response.
He said the outcome of the fighting – which Tehran describes as one of the shortest but most consequential confrontations in its recent history – showed “years of planning, drills and preparedness.”
He portrayed the conflict as a technologically complex hybrid war involving missiles, cyber operations and information battles, rather than a conventional territorial fight. Naeini said Iran’s leadership played a central role in shaping public confidence and maintaining domestic cohesion throughout the confrontation.
Naeini emphasized that Iran’s armed forces remain on high alert and continue to expand missile, drone and air-defense capabilities, but argued that Israel is constrained by its “limitations, vulnerabilities and the strategic balance created after the June war.”
While dismissing talk of renewed conflict, he warned that Iran would deliver a stronger response if attacked again.
“The armed forces are ready for a more complex war,” he said. “If the enemy commits another mistake, the response will be more forceful and more regret-inducing.”
Iran’s deputy foreign minister said the country’s nuclear program remains “intact” despite admitting that US and Israeli strikes in June severely damaged several facilities, in an interview with CNN on Sunday.
Iran’s “peaceful nuclear program is intact, as we are speaking,” CNN quoted Saeed Khatibzadeh as saying in a interview.
He acknowledged that the strikes had “ruined many of our infrastructure, machineries” and “buildings,” but said the program was “very much based on our indigenous knowledge” and dispersed across a “huge country – 90 million people.”
“And this country is not a country that you can bomb and then think that you are going to ruin everything,” Khatibzadeh added.
The 12-day war between Israel and Iran in June and subsequent US airstrikes targeted the Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan nuclear sites.
US President Donald Trump had initially said Fordow had been "obliterated," but an early US intelligence assessment indicated the attacks badly damaged the three facilities but may have set Iran’s program back by only up to two years.
The International Atomic Energy Agency said in a confidential report Wednesday that checking Iran’s stock of highly enriched uranium was “long overdue,” with inspectors still barred from entering the bombed sites.
CNN's report said Khatibzadeh did not comment on whether enrichment was taking place at Iran’s facilities, but said any future dialogue with the United States would require recognition of Iran’s right to enrich uranium.
“Delusions of zero enrichment inside Iran or trying to deprive Iran from its basic rights is not going to be an option for Iran,” CNN quoted Khatibzadeh as saying.
Khatibzadeh’s remarks come as Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araghchi said Tehran is no longer enriching uranium after Israeli and US strikes in June, but added the country will not give up its right to enrichment or nuclear technology.
Private clinics in Iran have been demanding that nurses commit to remaining unmarried and childless as a hiring condition amid growing staffing shortages, the country’s nursing chief said on Sunday, describing the practice as unlawful.
In an interview with the Iranian parliament-affiliated Khaneh Mellat news agency, Ahmad Nejatian, the head of Iran's Nursing Organization, said the requirement to restrict marriage or childbearing was “illegal and unethical” and added that “it must be addressed.”
“Around 70 percent of the country’s nurses are women, and most of them are of childbearing age, and these individuals have the right to marry, become mothers, and benefit from their legal entitlements,” he said.
Nejatian said staffing shortages during maternity leave were the main driver behind the clinics’ demands. “In some hospitals, up to 30 percent of staff are on maternity leave at the same time, and this shortage makes the situation more difficult,” he said.
He said pregnant nurses are typically moved away from high-risk units such as intensive care, operating rooms, and departments with radiation or infectious exposure. Nejatian said the reassignment is “a natural and necessary action,” but without replacement staff, “additional pressure is placed on the healthcare system.”
Nejatian urged the government to allow temporary hiring during maternity leave, saying: “The absence of even one nurse in medical settings can place significant pressure on other staff.”
In October, Ghasem Aboutalebi, head of the Nursing Organization’s Supreme Council, said Iran faces a shortage of 165,000 nurses, with a nurse-to-bed ratio of 0.9, compared with a target of 1.8 under the country’s six-year development plan.
The shortage is worsened by excessive workloads, delayed or insufficient pay, insecure employment, short-term contracts, and the growing exodus of skilled nurses seeking better opportunities abroad.
Nurses across Iran have repeatedly protested over pay, heavy workloads, insecure contracts and chronic understaffing.