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‘Cyberspace governance’ remains Iran government’s key issue

Jun 9, 2026, 09:02 GMT+1

Iranian government spokesperson on Tuesday that internet access was gradually returning but described “cyberspace governance” as the government’s main issue.

“The internet is returning, and there are technical problems that, God willing, will be resolved gradually,” Fatemeh Mohajerani said. “Our main issue is cyberspace governance.”

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Mossad recruited Ahmadinejad for Iran regime-change plot - report
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Mossad recruited Ahmadinejad for Iran regime-change plot - report

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INSIGHT

Can Tehran seek revenge and negotiate with Washington?

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UK says support for Iran's IRGC outlawed under new state threats law

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Plastic waste becomes major environmental challenge in Iran

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Diplomacy fades as US and Iran escalate over Hormuz

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Israel warns residents of Lebanon’s Tyre to evacuate

Jun 9, 2026, 07:40 GMT+1

The Israeli military on Tuesday called on the residents of the southern Lebanese city of Tyre to evacuate immediately and move north of the Zahrani River.

“Your presence near Hezbollah members, facilities or combat equipment puts your lives at risk,” Avichay Adraee, the Israeli military’s Arabic-language spokesperson, said.

Iran judge says asset seizures will weaken diaspora’s anti-regime protests

Jun 9, 2026, 07:05 GMT+1

Confiscations of assets belonging to exiled Iranians will weaken their protests in front of the Islamic Republic’s embassies overseas, a judge said on Tuesday.

“When an expatriate sees that a home, shop or any other asset they owned in Tehran, Isfahan or any other Iranian city has been seized, anti-Iran gatherings outside embassies of European and American countries clearly become emptier, weaker and more hopeless,” said the head of Isfahan province’s judiciary, according to judiciary-linked Mizan News.

Asadollah Jafari described the seizures as a judicial tool to counter what he called “the enemy’s economic and media war.”

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Iran judge says asset seizures will weaken diaspora’s anti-regime protests

Jun 9, 2026, 06:47 GMT+1
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Iranian expatriates rally against the Islamic Republic and in support of exiled Prince Reza Pahlavi on the National Mall, in Washington, DC, on March 29, 2026.

Confiscations of assets belonging to exiled Iranians will weaken their protests in front of the Islamic Republic’s embassies overseas, a judge said on Tuesday.

“When an expatriate sees that a home, shop or any other asset they owned in Tehran, Isfahan or any other Iranian city has been seized, anti-Iran gatherings outside embassies of European and American countries clearly become emptier, weaker and more hopeless,” said the head of Isfahan province’s judiciary, according to judiciary-linked Mizan News.

Asadollah Jafari described the seizures as a judicial tool to counter what he called “the enemy’s economic and media war.”

Iranian judicial authorities have been ordering the seizure of assets belonging to dozens of people, many living abroad, over allegations of cooperation with Israel and actions against national security.

Since the January protests, Iranians abroad have held regular demonstrations outside Iran’s embassies and consulates in Europe, North America and elsewhere, in support of protesters inside Iran and against the Islamic Republic’s crackdown.

Jafari said the confiscation of assets belonging to expatriates are aimed at having a “deterrent effect.”

Trump says pilots in Hormuz helicopter incident are safe

Jun 9, 2026, 05:39 GMT+1
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US President Donald Trump looks on, as he returns after attending Game 3 of the NBA Finals, at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York on June 8, 2026.

US President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that the pilots involved in an incident in the Strait of Hormuz were fine and that the United States would issue a report on the incident.

"The pilots are fine... We are going to issue a report tomorrow, but the pilots are fine," he said en route to White House.

Trump said he had a “very good conversation” with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and did not blame him for hitting back after Israel was attacked by Iran.

“We had a very good conversation and he was hit and he hit back. And I can't blame him for that,” Trump said. “They were going back and forth and now they both agreed, through me, to stop.”

He added that the United States was close to reaching a deal with Iran, arguing that an agreement would be more effective than further bombing.

“If we go and bomb, which we can do very easily if we want, and we spend another two or three weeks bombing, they’ll have nothing left whatsoever,” Trump said.

“But you won’t have the strait open for months,” he said. “If we do the bombing, a lot of people are going to be killed. Who wants to do that? I don’t.”

US did not join Israel strikes on Iran, Lebanon - FT

Jun 9, 2026, 05:27 GMT+1

US forces did not join Israel’s latest attacks on Iran and Lebanon, the Financial Times reported, citing a US defense official.

The official said the United States did launch interceptors to defend its troops in Israel.

The report described the move as a sign of "Washington’s displeasure at the last strikes on Lebanon and Iran."