Hossein Shariatmadari, editor of the hardline daily Kayhan and representative of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, criticized continued negotiations with the US as a disregard for the Islamic Republic’s authority.
“Trump has made a mockery of the talks,” Shariatmadari said. “The least we expect from officials is to declare that negotiations will not continue unless Trump apologizes to the Iranian state and its people.”
An outspoken Iranian politician described the latest round of nuclear negotiations between Tehran and Washington as a success, saying the American side retreated from its earlier position.
“They backed down from their stance,” Ali Motahari said. “What they express at the negotiating table is different from what they say in interviews and the media. If enrichment in Iran is dismantled, they will be able to block our access to nuclear fuel whenever they want.”

Republican Congressman Chuck Fleischmann endorsed a return to Donald Trump’s foreign policy approach, calling for a firm stance to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.
“America will never allow Iran to get a nuclear weapon or threaten the Free World with a nuclear attack,” Fleischmann said in a post on X. He added, “We can and will create peace by being strong and firmly leading the world.”
Iran has proposed forming a uranium enrichment consortium with Saudi Arabia and the UAE, the Guardian reported, in a move Tehran hopes will counter US objections and bind regional powers into its nuclear program.
“The proposal is seen as a way of locking Gulf states into supporting Iran’s position that it should be allowed to retain enrichment capabilities,” the Guardian wrote.
Tehran has not confirmed if the idea was formally raised in three-hour talks with US officials in Oman on Sunday.
Representatives from Iran, Britain, France and Germany will meet in Istanbul on Friday, Reuters reported citing two European and an Iranian diplomatic source.
Iran and the three European parties to the 2015 nuclear deal were supposed to meet earlier this month but postponed the meeting after the fourth round of Iran-US talks was delayed.

Iran’s judiciary has agreed to review a death sentence against controversial underground singer Amir Hossein Maghsoudloo, known as Tataloo, following a legal petition and calls for clemency by Iranian celebrities.
While the sentence remains in place, the case has entered a new phase. Judiciary chief Gholamhossein Mohseni-Ejei has approved preliminary steps to examine the ruling.
“According to legal procedure, the case will be examined by relevant experts to assess whether the verdict contradicts Sharia,” Tataloo’s lawyer Majid Naghshi told the Revolutionary Guards-linked Fars News Agency.
“If confirmed, the file will be sent to a parallel court branch for a final ruling.” He added that the process occurs only once and emphasized, “No final decision has been made yet, but this is a step forward in the legal path.”
Tataloo’s sister, Naghmeh Maghsoudloo, also announced the decision, noting that the case is now under Supreme Court review.
The singer remains imprisoned in Tehran’s Fashafuyeh facility, serving a 10-year sentence for “encouraging corruption.” Other charges include disrupting Islamic law, operating a gambling platform and publishing obscene content.
A separate blasphemy case led to a three-year sentence for insulting sanctities and initially, a death sentence for insulting the Prophet—a charge from which he had first been acquitted before a later court reversed the ruling.

The 37-year-old artist had lived in Istanbul since 2018, where he remained active on social media and announced plans to establish a so-called “Sultan’s Palace,” inviting girls between 15 and 20 to join. Instagram removed his account in 2019 over misogynistic content and promotion of child marriage.
On December 4, 2023, Turkish police arrested Tataloo following a complaint from the Iranian consulate in Istanbul, which accused him of harassing consular staff. He was later extradited to Iran and taken into custody at the Bazargan border.
Public figures across Iranian cultural life have rallied in opposition to the sentence. Rapper Toomaj Salehi, footballer Mehdi Taremi, actress Sahar Ghoreishi and bodybuilding champion Hadi Choopan all denounced the ruling in separate statements.
“You insulted all my sisters. But my heart cannot bear your voice being silenced,” Salehi wrote online, referring to Tataloo's controversial remarks against Mahsa Amini, the girl whose death in police custody sparked Iran's 2022 Woman Life Freedom protests.
Tataloo’s uncle, Mohammadali Maghsoudloo, revealed in an interview that the singer married inside prison just one week ago. He added that officials have provided accommodations for Tataloo’s vegetarian diet while in custody.

Once promoted by state-linked figures—he famously released a pro-nuclear anthem in 2015 and appeared with Ebrahim Raisi during the 2017 campaign—Tataloo later became a pariah, accused of corrupting youth and drawing numerous complaints from many families, according to the judiciary-affiliated Mizan News Agency.
In court, he expressed remorse, saying, “I didn’t get proper training, and I made a mistake.” Court documents also referenced a personal letter in which he asked to “marry, have children and pursue music in the right way.”
Once the death sentence is lifted, the case will move into the hands of Iran’s Supreme Court—an uncommon reversal in a legal system rarely swayed by public figures or online campaigns.





