IRAN – Mystery explosion rocks Iran city
A large explosion has been reported in the Iranian city of Isfahan as the regime issued conflicting reports apparently designed to deny any suggestions of a sabotage attack on its nuclear facilities.
Officials gave varying accounts of a “huge explosion” in the ancient city, which hosts one of Iran’s main facilities for refining uranium in its nuclear program.
While some sources told news agencies there had been a blast on military facilities, others said there had been a fireball at a petrol station.
Residents of the city were independently telling relatives and friends overseas that the city had been shaken by a massive blast in the early afternoon [of Nov. 28].
The reports immediately prompted speculation that Iran had suffered another sabotage attack, just two weeks after a blast at a missile base gave rise to similar suspicions.
Isfahan is home to Iran’s largest facility for research and development of ballistic missiles. Multiple reports said the blast did not emanate from the nuclear facility.
Alireza Zakeri, the provincial governor of Isfahan, was quoted as saying that the blast took place during military exercises at a military airbase.
“An explosion has happened in Isfahan relates to a military exercise in one part of the city and is not particularly any problem,” he said.
“The exercise has been in the 8th Airbase and around the airport in north east of Isfahan but the authorities had not informed us about it in advance so that we could have let the public know about it happening”
Gholamreza Ansari, the head of the judiciary in the province, also confirmed there was a blast.
[Iran’s] Mehr news agency however reported that the blast was at a fuel facility. There were no reports of casualties.Confusion was compounded by the withdrawal of the original report on Fars [Iranian government radio], a news outfit linked to [Iran’s] Revolutionary Guards, which first reported the blast.
The incident comes just two weeks after the head of Iran’s ballistic missile development program, was killed in a massive blast 25 miles south of Tehran.
In contrast to previously unexplained attacks on key scientists, Iran said that incident was an accident that occurred in routine maneuvers.
Military analysts however said the intensity of the explosion suggested a targeted attempt at sabotaging Iran’s nuclear-related missile development program, most probably carried out by Mossad.
SOMALIA – Al-Shabab militants ban aid groups, U.N. agencies
MOGADISHU — The Somali militant group al-Shabab on Monday banned 16 aid groups – including a half dozen U.N. agencies – from central and southern Somalia, a decision likely to harm Somalis already suffering from drought and famine.
The banning of the aid groups falls in line with the group’s skeptical view of the outside world, but it will worsen the suffering of the hundreds of thousands of Somalis who have come to depend on aid in the Horn of Africa country’s worst famine since 1991-92.
A year without rain wiped out crops and animal herds in southern Somalia, killing tens of thousands of people in the past six months and forcing tens of thousands more to flee as refugees.
The al Qaeda-linked militant group’s decision seemed to be rooted in the belief that aid groups are serving as spies for outside countries or as vehicles to undermine support for al-Shabab’s harsh and strict interpretation of Islam.
SLOVAK REPUBLIC (SLOVAKIA) – Doctors at 15 hospitals resign because of low pay
BRATISLAVA, Slovakia (AP) — [On Monday], Slovakia declared a state of emergency in more than a dozen hospitals to ensure that health care is not compromised after thousands of doctors resigned from public hospitals over low pay.
Prime Minister Iveta Radicova, speaking after an emergency government meeting on the crisis, said the measures involve 15 hospitals across the country, including two clinics in the capital, Bratislava.
Around 2,000 doctors in state-run hospitals have handed in their resignations, effective Dec. 1, if their demands for higher pay are not met. More than 7,000 doctors work in Slovak hospitals.
The state of emergency means the doctors must stay at their jobs or face fines or even prison terms.
The government has proposed pay increases of $400 a month, but the doctors’ union wants a $934 increase.
The doctors plan to rally Tuesday in the central city of Banska Bystrica.
Radicova said she agreed the salaries were “inadequate” but said the government could not afford to increase its offer because of the debt crisis in Europe. Slovakia is one of 17 nations that uses the common euro currency.
“The situation is very serious,” Radicova said.
Health Minister Ivan Uhliarik said Monday it was not clear how many doctors would change their minds and accept the government’s offer. He has asked neighboring countries to send doctors to help.
(The news briefs above are from wire reports and staff reports posted at Telegraph.co.uk on Nov. 28, WashingtonTimes.com on Nov. 28 and yahoonews.com on Nov. 28)
IRAN: IRAN'S NUCLEAR PROGRAM:
On Israel's MOSSAD, from the website:
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SOMALIA -- Al Shabaab:
Al-Shabaab has used intimidation and violence to undermine the Somali government, forcibly recruit new fighters, and kill activists working to bring about peace through political dialogue and reconciliation. The group has claimed responsibility for several high profile bombings and shootings throughout Somalia targeting African Union troops and TFG officials. It has been responsible for the assassination of numerous civil society figures, government officials, and journalists. Al-Shabaab fighters or those who have claimed allegiance to the group have conducted violent attacks and targeted assassinations against international aid workers and nongovernmental organizations. During 2010, al-Shabaab carried out multiple attacks, including a number in Mogadishu against the TFG and African Union Mission in Somalia. Among the most deadly were a series of attacks in March, which killed at least 60 people and wounded 160 more; and a string of attacks in late August, which killed at least 87 people and wounded 148. Also in August, al-Shabaab suicide bombers entered the Muna Hotel in Mogadishu and killed 31 people, including six members of parliament and four other government officials, when they detonated their explosives on the roof of the hotel. In the organization’s first attack outside of Somalia, al-Shabaab was responsible for the July 11 suicide bombings in Kampala, Uganda during the World Cup, which killed nearly 80 people, including one American citizen. In total, al-Shabaab is estimated to be responsible the death of over 900 people in 2010. (from the U.S. State Department's "2010 Country Reports on Terrorism)
state.gov/s/ct/rls/crt/2010/170264.htm)