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UK tightens political funding rules over Russia, China and Iran influence

Jul 6, 2026, 00:10 GMT+1

Britain says Iran, Russia and China are among foreign states attempting to influence and undermine its democracy, as the government announced tighter rules on overseas political donations.

The measures follow a review into foreign financial interference in politics, launched after a former Reform UK politician was jailed last year for accepting bribes to make pro-Russia speeches and statements.

The review found the UK faced a persistent threat from foreign interference, prompting the government to introduce stricter rules on political donations.

Housing Minister Steve Reed said the changes were aimed at preventing “dodgy funding” from influencing British elections.

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Iran buries Khamenei as fight over his power continues

Jul 5, 2026, 23:35 GMT+1
Iran buries Khamenei as fight over his power continues
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As Iran holds week-long funeral ceremonies for Ali Khamenei, the political dynamics unfolding behind the scenes point to a striking reality: the succession question that dominated elite politics for more than a decade did not end with his death.

The rapid elevation of his son Mojtaba within ten days was intended to close that chapter. Instead, with the new Supreme Leader still absent from public view, it appears to have opened a new one.

Roughly twenty messages attributed to Mojtaba Khamenei since his succession have failed to convince many Iranians that he is truly exercising power.

Efforts by officials and supporters to prove his presence have often been contradictory, deepening rather than resolving the uncertainty.

Read the full article here.

OPEC+ to raise oil output again as prices retreat after Iran war spike

Jul 5, 2026, 22:48 GMT+1

OPEC+ countries have agreed to increase oil production for a fifth consecutive month as fuel prices continue to ease after the sharp rise triggered by the US-Israel war with Iran.

The group announced Sunday that seven members—Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iraq, Kuwait, Kazakhstan, Algeria and Oman—will raise production by a combined 188,000 barrels per day in August.

“The countries will continue to monitor and assess market conditions, and in their continuous efforts to support market stability, they reaffirmed the importance of adopting a cautious approach,” OPEC+ said in a statement.

Tehran airspace shut Monday as Khamenei funeral continues

Jul 5, 2026, 22:02 GMT+1

Iran will fully close Tehran’s airspace on Monday as funeral ceremonies for former Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei continue, the Iranian Students’ News Agency (ISNA) reports.

The Civil Aviation Organization said regular flights at Mehrabad International Airport and Imam Khomeini International Airport will be suspended during public ceremonies in the capital.

Mehrabad airport is expected to resume normal operations on Tuesday, while Imam Khomeini airport will remain closed.

Authorities said airspace over the northeastern city of Mashhad, where the final burial ceremony will take place, will also be shut on July 9, with flights at Shahid Hasheminejad International Airport suspended.

Flights elsewhere in Iran are expected to continue without restrictions on July 7–8.

Iran buries Khamenei as fight over his power continues

Jul 5, 2026, 21:55 GMT+1
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Behrouz Turani
Iran buries Khamenei as fight over his power continues
100%
Mourners gather at a state funeral ceremony for slain Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in Tehran, with large portraits of him displayed across the building facade, July 5, 2026

As Iran holds week-long funeral ceremonies for Ali Khamenei, the political dynamics unfolding behind the scenes point to a striking reality: the succession question that dominated elite politics for more than a decade did not end with his death.

The rapid elevation of his son Mojtaba within ten days was intended to close that chapter. Instead, with the new Supreme Leader still absent from public view, it appears to have opened a new one.

Roughly twenty messages attributed to Mojtaba Khamenei since his succession have failed to convince many Iranians that he is truly exercising power.

Efforts by officials and supporters to prove his presence have often been contradictory, deepening rather than resolving the uncertainty.

A growing number of Iran analysts argue that, regardless of Mojtaba’s invisibility, Ali Khamenei has effectively been replaced by a constellation of elite networks built around family ties, wartime relationships dating back to the Iran–Iraq War, and geographic power bases in provinces such as Tehran, Isfahan, Khuzestan and Khorasan.

These networks, spanning civilian officials, senior IRGC commanders, clerics and younger ideological politicians, existed for decades but were ultimately contained by Ali Khamenei’s authority.

One example was the IRGC high command, which repeatedly shifted between officers from Khuzestan and Isfahan during Khamenei’s 38 years in power, before he appointed Hossein Salami from the Golpayegan region in April 2019 in what many saw as an attempt to contain an increasingly damaging rivalry.

The old reformist–conservative divide has largely faded. Following former President Ebrahim Raisi’s “purification” project, Iran’s political landscape is increasingly shaped by competition between what parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf has described as “revolutionaries” and “super-revolutionaries.”

The shift has been so dramatic that even Hossein Shariatmadari, the outspoken editor of the hardline daily Kayhan and long seen as a symbol of uncompromising conservatism, is now warning against threats to national cohesion and criticizing hardliners opposing the agreement with the United States.

The struggle in Tehran is no longer over whether engagement with Washington is acceptable. Instead, competing factions are trying to claim ownership of the decision to negotiate.

Even some hardliners who until late June accused pragmatists such as Ghalibaf and Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi of seeking talks with “the killer of Khamenei” now argue that Iran must secure its financial interests through an understanding with Washington, even if that requires delaying decisions on parts of its nuclear program.

The most uncompromising factions inside and around the IRGC have argued that Iran’s priority should now be preserving its missile program as its remaining strategic asset.

Yet figures including MP Esmail Kowsary and Supreme National Security Council secretary Mohammad Bagher Zolghadr continue to insist Iran must also seek revenge for Khamenei’s killing.

In Mojtaba Khamenei’s continued absence, networks that once operated beneath Ali Khamenei’s centralized and uncompromising decision-making appear to be competing to define the future direction of the Islamic Republic — and to claim ownership of the very diplomatic opening many of them opposed only days earlier.

Iran judiciary chief suggests death penalty for those responsible for Khamenei killing

Jul 5, 2026, 20:44 GMT+1

Iran’s judiciary chief said the Islamic Republic would hold the United States and those responsible for the killing of former Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei to account, invoking charges under Iran’s legal system that can carry the death penalty.

“The ruling on corruption on earth, waging war against God, war criminals, and those who illegally start a war is clear,” Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei said.

“We will try you according to human and divine standards and international law. A criminal must be tried and punished, and must pay the price for their crimes,” he added.