Iranian rial resumes slide after post-deal rebound


The Iranian rial weakened again on Saturday after a brief rebound following Tehran’s agreement with Washington, with the US dollar trading at 1.68 million rials on the open market.
The euro traded above 1.9 million rials, while the British pound rose above 2.2 million rials.
The dollar had fallen to 1.53 million rials on June 16 after the United States and Iran announced an agreement to end the war, which was signed on June 18. It hit a record 1.9 million rials on May 4.








Judicial officers must enforce the law against women appearing "without hijab or partially nude" in public, Mazandaran Province Prosecutor Ali Akbar Alishah said on Saturday, describing the issue as the province's most important public demand.
"All judicial officers are required to take legal action against cases of public nudity and any act that insults religious values or undermines the system," Alishah said during a Judiciary Week ceremony.
Alishah called on all judicial officers to seriously enforce the directive and said further orders would be issued if necessary.
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz described a newly signed agreement with Lebanon as "a strategic blow to the Iranian axis" on Saturday, saying Israeli troops would remain in a security zone inside southern Lebanon until Hezbollah is disarmed across the country.
"The important principle established in the agreement is that there will be no withdrawal whatsoever as long as the Hezbollah terror organization has not been disarmed throughout Lebanon," Katz said.
The Israeli military, Katz noted, would maintain its positions, including the Beaufort Castle ridge area, and had been instructed to prepare for a prolonged deployment to protect northern communities.
"Iran attempted to force Israel to withdraw from Lebanon through threats and pressure on the United States, and failed," Katz said.
"If Iran attempts to attack Israel to prevent the implementation of the agreement, we will act against it with great force," he added.
All branches of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps are ready to carry out any order issued by Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei in any field, his representative in the force, Abdollah Hajisadeghi, said Saturday.
“All forces of the Revolutionary Guards, including the Aerospace Force, Navy, Ground Force, Quds Force and Basij, are ready, with fingers on the trigger, to execute any order Mojtaba Khamenei issues in any field,” Hajisadeghi said.
Resistance and steadfastness remain the Islamic Republic’s main option, while negotiations are not its primary path, he said.
Even if the Islamic Republic enters talks, “it is the enemy that is desperate,” he added.
Hezbollah must continue fighting Israel in Lebanon to prevent the conflict from reaching Iran, Alireza Salimi, a member of the Iranian parliament's presiding board, said on Saturday.
"Iran has not been alone in this war, and Lebanon is part of the war. Lebanon is our strategic depth," Salimi said in remarks broadcast by state television.
If Hezbollah did not fight in Beirut, he added, Iran would have to confront Israeli soldiers "on the borders of Tehran and Kermanshah and elsewhere."
Salimi described the issue as "vital and serious" for Iran.
Authorities are considering holding slain Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's funeral procession airborne to reduce crowding and improve security, the governor of Razavi Khorasan province said on Saturday.
Gholamhossein Mozaffari said the proposal, put forward by the provincial security council, was likely to be implemented because it would ease crowd management and provide safer conditions.
Officials have announced that Khamenei is due to be buried in the northeastern city of Mashhad on July 9.