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A statement by the National Security Council issued after a meeting at the Presidential Complex in Ankara, said the fight will continue in northern Iraq until terrorists are wiped off in the region.
The council also vowed to create a peace corridor in Syria with all its strength, adding some terrorist groups are taking advantage from the power vacuum in certain areas. Earlier, 12 military convoys, including armored vehicles carrying commando units arrived at Sanliurfa province bordering Syria. Ankara says it is planning to launch a third cross border operation into Syria after two successful ones.
Turkey and United states have been at loggerhead due to Washington’s support to YPG and PYD militant groups, which Turkey says are the Syrian arm of PKK.
Back on Monday, Turkish Defence Minister Hulusi Akar held a phone call with his US counterpart Mark Esper. Reports say he has told his American counterpart that Ankara would not allow for the formation of a “terror corridor” to its south.
Observers maintain that the statement by the National Security Council reveals that talks between Turkey and the US don’t go smoothly and this has sounded the alarm in the regional circles.
Issuing a statement on Thursday, the IRGC condemned imposition of US sanctions on Zarif, saying, “By imposing sanctions on the respectable foreign minister [of Iran], Americans once again demonstrated their anger at the spread of the Islamic Revolution’s inspiring and anti-arrogance discourse, and unveiled their mischief and animosity toward the dignified Iranian establishment and nation.”
The administration of US President Donald Trump imposed sanctions on Zarif on Wednesday because he “acted or purported to act for or on behalf of, directly or indirectly, the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran.”
The US Treasury Department alsao said in its statement that Zarif is Iran's "primary spokesperson around the world," and that the ban "is sending a clear message that Iran's "recent behavior is completely unacceptable.”
The sanctions imposed on Zarif, the IRGC’s statement added, show how the Americans are “expressing their rage and anger at [Zarif’s] way of expressing the truth [about them] and exposing their sinister nature.”
The measure was also meant to counter “a diplomacy that is based on resistance and aims to give voice to the position of a nation that has chosen to tread down the path of dignity and independence and stand up to bullies while refusing to give in to modern colonialist rule,” it added.
The IRGC suggested that maybe Washington itself once used to consider issuing such sanctions to be beneath a country like it, which lays claim to being a superpower, but has now resorted to sanctions in a bid to make up to some degree for its desperation, distress, and weakness.
Such actions targeting the Islamic Republic, however, do not change the fact that the country has brought about “an end to the era of Americans’ stance as a superpower and their adventurism in the region, and has led them and their regional and extra-regional lackeys to ignominious frustration.”
The General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Islamic Republic also issued a statement likewise underlining the illegal nature of “the arrogant US administration’s” measure and calling it an action rooted in desperation.
It said the “undiplomatic and forlorn” attempt followed in the footsteps of the other instances of the US violations of international law concerning the Islamic Republic.
The General Staff of the Iranian Armed Forces added that by imposing sanctions on Iran's top diplomat, Washington thinks it can ramp up pressure on Iran and compensate for its back-to-back losses in the regional and international arenas.
The US is resorting to some adventurist measures now that it has found itself more humiliated and isolated across the region and the world than ever and feeling the pinch from the loss of credibility, which has afflicted it and its allies, the statement read.
It concluded that such measures as employed against Zarif "would ultimately not yield the US anything other than defeat and would further belie the apparently pro-negotiation claims of American rulers."
Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi, meanwhile, called Zarif the stalwart communicator of Iran’s diplomacy and the Islamic Republic’s powerful representative on all international arenas.
Sanctioning Zarif, he added in a post on his Instagram page, showed that the US is “incapable of engaging with the brave and ardent sons of this hearth and home” in political and diplomatic arenas.
The European Union also vowed to continue working with the Iranian foreign minister despite the US decision.
"We regret this decision," said Carlos Martin Ruiz De Gordejuela, a spokesman for EU diplomatic chief Federica Mogherini.
"From our side, we will continue to work with Mr. Zarif as Iran's most senior diplomat and in view of the importance of maintaining diplomatic channels," Martin said.
Sanjrani, as well as Deputy Chairperson Saleem Mandviwalla, survived no-confidence resolutions tabled against them. The resolution against Senate chair failed to receive the 53 votes required for his removal, with 50 in favour and five rejected.
Speaking informally to media personnel outside the Parliament House here in the federal capital, Shehbaz — also the president of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) — said he believed that there had been influence and horse-trading.
The Opposition members had reduced by 14 but 64 of them had stood up in support of the motion to table the no-confidence resolution, he said, adding that what happened today was a dent to the democracy.
On the other hand, PML-N member and leader of the opposition in the Senate, Raja Zafarul Haq, said what happened today was sad. "We know who did not vote [in favour of the no-confidence motion]," he noted.
Haq added that the Opposition was aware by early Thursday morning as to how many votes the no-confidence motion would receive later in the day.
"Mostly, people from a certain party ruined it. The forces that wished to save the Senate chairperson emerged the victors," he added.
The International Court of Justice’s (ICJ) verdict, in the case, asked Pakistan to immediately inform Jadhav of his rights under Article 36, and grant India consular access, according to the Foreign Office’s (FO) spokesperson.
In this regard, Pakistan is awaiting Indian response and formally informed Indian High Commission.
The ICJ, in its ruling, asked Pakistan to ensure “effective review and reconsideration of his conviction and sentences”.
The ICJ said that even though it had found Pakistan in violation of Article 36 the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations (VCCR), "it is not the conviction and sentence of Mr. Jadhav which are to be regarded as a violation of Article 36 of the Vienna Convention."
The most the ICJ said it could do was to order Pakistan to cease violation of Article 36 and review the case in light of how that violation may have affected the case’s outcome.
To this end, Pakistan was directed to immediately inform Jadhav of his rights under Article 36, grant India consular access, and then review the case while considering, under the laws of Pakistan, how not doing so earlier may have impacted the case’s outcome.
Article 36 of the Vienna Convention simply states that when a national of a foreign country is arrested, they must be informed of the right to have their country’s consulate notified and should also have the right to regular consultation with their consulate’s officials during their detention and trial.
Senator Barrister Saif who was appointed as presiding officer is chairing the session today.
The secret voting on the no-confidence motion is underway in the Upper House.
At the onset of the session, 64 senators favoured the no-trust motion, following which, the polling kicked off in the Senate.
There are 100 senators attending the session today and a total of 53 votes are required to oust the chairman and deputy chairman of the Senate.
It is declared mandatory to insert a vote into the ballot box after casting vote in favour or opposition.
The instructions were issued in a letter released by Senate Secretariat for voting on the no-confidence motion. The secretariat has also imposed a ban on carrying mobile phones in the polling booth. The letter also stated that grabbing photos of the ballot paper is also prohibited in order to ensure secrecy of the vote.
On July 9, opposition senators had submitted a resolution against Senate Chairman Sadiq Sanjrani to the secretariat of the upper house with signatures of 38 opposition members. The government and coalition legislators hit back with a similar motion against the deputy chairman on July 12.
The opposition’s Rehbar Committee had nominated Mir Hasil Bizenjo as its candidate to replace the incumbent Chairman Senate.