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UAE adviser welcomes Lebanon-Israel framework agreement

Jun 27, 2026, 08:57 GMT+1

Anwar Gargash, diplomatic adviser to the president of the United Arab Emirates, welcomed the US-brokered framework agreement between Lebanon and Israel, saying it was an important step toward restoring Lebanon's full sovereignty.

In a post on X, Gargash said Lebanese people had "suffered for decades from the consequences of others' conflicts on their soil" and had "paid a heavy price."

"The consolidation of state authority and sovereignty remains the true guarantee of Lebanon's stability and future," he wrote.

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Iran’s banks keep failing, but no one explains why – Iranian daily

Jun 27, 2026, 08:38 GMT+1
Iran’s banks keep failing, but no one explains why – Iranian daily
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Iranian daily Shargh says Iran’s banking system is trapped in a familiar cycle: cyberattack, service collapse, public confusion, brief official statements and a gradual return to normal without any clear report on what failed or who was responsible.

The newspaper wrote that banking outages have become almost routine for many Iranians over the past two years. Cards stop working, ATMs and mobile banking services fail, customers line up outside branches, and officials ask people to be patient and follow news from official sources.

Then, after hours, days or sometimes weeks, services return without a full explanation of the cause, the damage, the vulnerable points in the system or the responsibility of the banks and regulators involved.

The latest wave of disruption hit several major banks in June, including Melli, Saderat, Tejarat and the Export Development Bank of Iran. Mobile banking, internet banking, ATMs, point-of-sale terminals and card-based services were disrupted. The Coordination Council of Banks and the Informatics Services Corporation confirmed cyberattacks but said customer data remained safe.

  • Banking disruption hits services at eight Iranian banks

    Banking disruption hits services at eight Iranian banks

Days later, another wider disruption affected card-based services across the banking network, with Melli, Saderat and Tejarat again among the banks most affected. The Informatics Services Corporation said some services had been deliberately restricted to prevent unauthorized access and protect customers’ data and assets.

But Shargh said many users were still reporting problems even after officials said services had been restored. The paper said ordinary transactions had become difficult for some people, including buying bread, paying taxi fares and transferring or receiving money.

The pattern is not new. During the 12-day Iran-Israel war last year, Bank Sepah suffered a major cyberattack that disrupted non-branch services.

The hacker group Predatory Sparrow claimed responsibility and said it had destroyed part of the bank’s infrastructure. Bank Pasargad was also hit shortly afterward. The government confirmed attacks on both banks and said public data had not been harmed, but full restoration of some services took days or weeks.

Shargh said the repeated failures have left one central question unanswered: why does Iran’s banking network collapse every few months, while no transparent report is published on the cause of the attacks, the scale of the damage or the responsibility of the institutions in charge?

  • CoinEx became key channel for Iranian crypto flows – WSJ

    CoinEx became key channel for Iranian crypto flows – WSJ

Nima Amirshakari, an electronic banking specialist, told Shargh that the root of the problem is Iran’s weak connection to the outside world. He said parts of the country’s banking infrastructure are nearly three decades old and were built around systems bought long ago from foreign companies.

According to Amirshakari, many of those systems have been expanded through hardware upgrades, with more processors, storage and equipment, but their core software has not been properly modernized. A system that is not updated, patched or redesigned, he said, becomes easier for attackers to predict.

He argued that banks connected to the global financial system are forced to keep pace with changing standards in security, credit, lending and technology. Iranian banks, by contrast, operate in a closed environment where modernization is often treated as a choice rather than a necessity.

Shargh also quoted cybersecurity expert Saeed Souzangar as saying that the problem is not just technology. Sanctions, internet restrictions, weak administrative structures and limited investment in skilled personnel have left many institutions with expensive equipment but not enough expertise to use it securely.

Souzangar said banks and regulators in Iran do not appear to face a serious obligation to inform the public during cyber incidents. In many countries, organizations hit by cyberattacks must explain the scope of the incident, the number of users affected and the corrective steps taken. In Iran, he said, such reporting is often replaced by short and general statements.

That absence of accountability may be the most damaging part of the crisis. If banks face no clear legal, financial or reputational cost for service failures or security weaknesses, there is little pressure to invest seriously in prevention, training and public reporting.

The latest attacks have also triggered a political dispute over whether access to the international internet made the banking system more vulnerable.

Some officials blamed the reopening of internet access, but Behdad Akbari, deputy communications minister and head of Iran’s Infrastructure Communications Company, rejected the claim, saying the affected core banking systems were not connected to the public internet.

Shargh’s experts said blaming internet access alone is not a serious explanation. Internet restrictions can weaken security by limiting updates and access to global tools, but the causes of repeated banking failures cannot be reduced to a single technical claim without a proper investigation.

Iran says US breached MoU, warns neighbours over use of territory

Jun 27, 2026, 08:13 GMT+1

Iran's foreign ministry said US airstrikes on coastal surveillance facilities in southern Iran violated the US-Iran memorandum of understanding and warned neighbouring countries against allowing their territory or facilities to be used for future attacks on the Islamic Republic.

The ministry said the strikes late on Friday were a "clear violation" of Article 2(4) of the UN Charter and a "direct breach" of the first clause of the June memorandum of understanding ending the war.

It also said Israel had attacked Lebanon "in coordination with the United States," calling it another breach of the same clause of the agreement.

The ministry urged countries along the southern coast of the Persian Gulf to observe the principle of good neighbourliness and prevent "aggressor parties" from using their territory or facilities to commit acts of aggression against Iran.

It said responsibility for the consequences lay with the United States and any parties that "in any way" assisted US actions against Iran.

The foreign ministry said Iran had an "inherent right" to self-defence under Article 51 of the UN Charter and would defend its sovereignty, security and national interests "with all its power."

It said Iranian strikes against targets linked to US forces were carried out on that basis.

Controlled blasts begin near Jahrom in southern Iran - state media

Jun 27, 2026, 07:50 GMT+1

The IRGC's Fajr Corps said controlled blasts began on Saturday near Jahrom in the southern province of Fars to destroy unexploded munitions.

The operation started near Mohammadabad, outside Jahrom, and will continue until the end of the week, the force said.

Bomb disposal teams are carrying out the work.

Iranian lawmaker says US violated talks, ceasefire

Jun 27, 2026, 07:31 GMT+1

Ebrahim Azizi, chairman of the Iranian parliament's National Security and Foreign Policy Committee, accused the United States of violating both negotiations and a ceasefire, saying Washington had once again attacked Iran during talks.

"The defeated US president does not abide by the principles of negotiation or a ceasefire," Azizi said.

"The United States once again attacked Iran in the middle of negotiations," he said, adding that the "blatant violation of the ceasefire, as always, will end in their retreat and regret."

His comments came after the IRGC Navy said it had targeted US military deployment sites in the region in response to what it called a US "violation of commitments." The US military said it had struck Iranian missile, drone and radar sites after what it described as an Iranian drone attack on the Singapore-flagged Ever Lovely in the Strait of Hormuz.

Iran MP says IAEA inspectors barred until final deal restores Tehran’s demands

Jun 27, 2026, 07:30 GMT+1

Iran will not change its current level of cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency until negotiations reach a final stage and Tehran’s demands are met, a member of parliament’s National Security Committee said.

Mohseni Sani accused the IAEA director general of “hostile” conduct, saying his actions had helped advance anti-Iran resolutions at the UN Security Council and the IAEA Board of Governors.

He said that under Iran’s law requiring the government to suspend cooperation with the IAEA, the agency would not be allowed to enter the country to inspect the sites it wants to visit.

“Until negotiations reach the final stage and the violated rights of the Iranian people are fully restored, there will be no change in the current approach,” he said, adding that statements by IAEA officials would not affect decisions by senior officials in Tehran.