Iran Releases Nobel Peace Laureate Mohammadi on Medical Leave

This undated portrait of Iranian Nobel Peace laureate Narges Mohammadi was released by her foundation in 2023. - AFP
This undated portrait of Iranian Nobel Peace laureate Narges Mohammadi was released by her foundation in 2023. - AFP
TT

Iran Releases Nobel Peace Laureate Mohammadi on Medical Leave

This undated portrait of Iranian Nobel Peace laureate Narges Mohammadi was released by her foundation in 2023. - AFP
This undated portrait of Iranian Nobel Peace laureate Narges Mohammadi was released by her foundation in 2023. - AFP

Iran has released Nobel Peace laureate Narges Mohammadi, jailed since November 2021, for three weeks on medical grounds, her lawyer posted on social media.

"Based on the advice of the examining doctor, the public prosecutor suspended the jail sentence against Narges Mohammadi for three weeks and she was released from prison," Mostafa Nili said on X.

Mohammadi's family and supporters swiftly put out a statement protesting that the three weeks' medical leave was not enough.

"A 21-day suspension of Narges Mohammadi's sentence is inadequate. We demand Narges Mohammadi's immediate and unconditional release or at least an extension of her leave to three months," they said in a statement.

Over the past quarter century, Mohammadi, 52, has been repeatedly tried and jailed for her vocal campaigning against Iran's widespread use of capital punishment and its mandatory dress code for women.

She has spent most of the past decade behind bars.

"The grounds for her release are her physical condition after the removal of a tumor and a bone graft three weeks ago," Nili said.

"The tumor was benign but she needs check-ups every three months."

In June, Mohammadi was sentenced to an additional year behind bars for "propaganda against the state".

She refused to appear in court for the trial after her request for it to be held in public was rejected.

In a letter from prison in September, she condemned the "devastating oppression" of women in Iran.

The letter was published by her foundation to mark the second anniversary of the nationwide protests that followed the death in custody of Mahsa Amini, an Iranian Kurdish woman detained for an alleged breach of the dress code.

Mohammadi won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2023, primarily for her campaigning against the death penalty in Iran.

Human rights groups, including Amnesty International say Iran carries out more executions each year than any other country apart from China, for which no reliable figures are available.



Israel Preparing for Two Weeks of Escalation with Iran

Israeli security forces inspect damage at an apartment building struck by an Iranian missile in Petah Tikva, Israel, Saturday, April 4, 2026. (AP)
Israeli security forces inspect damage at an apartment building struck by an Iranian missile in Petah Tikva, Israel, Saturday, April 4, 2026. (AP)
TT

Israel Preparing for Two Weeks of Escalation with Iran

Israeli security forces inspect damage at an apartment building struck by an Iranian missile in Petah Tikva, Israel, Saturday, April 4, 2026. (AP)
Israeli security forces inspect damage at an apartment building struck by an Iranian missile in Petah Tikva, Israel, Saturday, April 4, 2026. (AP)

Israel is prepared for another two weeks of war with Iran and has planned a list of targets for attacks, including infrastructure and economic facilities, while continuing to hit Iran's defense industries.

“The Iranian economy would be Israel’s next target,” the Kan public broadcaster reported.

Security officials told the channel that Israel has prepared a list of targets for attacks in the coming weeks, including infrastructure and bridges, as well as less frequently targeted sites such as energy and oil facilities.

Kan said Israeli officials believe the war could last longer than two weeks, and Israel is preparing accordingly.

The new timeframe extends past the four to six weeks initially set by the White House.

Meanwhile, Israel’s i24NEWS quoted senior Israeli officials as saying there is no expectation of a slowdown in operations in Iran, quite the opposite. The campaign to dismantle key infrastructure is intensifying, as this remains the primary arena shaping wider regional developments.

Sources said Israeli high-ranking military officials and US Central Command (CENTCOM) Commander Brad Cooper agreed in a meeting to continue strikes on Iran for another two to three weeks with a bank of targets including economic centers and banks.

Israel’s second phase represents a major strategic shift in the bank of targets against Iran, setting the military’s sights on the country’s economy, according to Kan.

In addition to the ongoing attacks on military facilities, Israel and the United States plan to hit Iran’s economic sectors, including financial institutions, banks, energy infrastructure, and petrochemical facilities that form the regime’s main “lifeline”.

According to the plan, the United States will operate in the designated areas under its responsibility, while the Israeli army will deepen its attacks on Iran’s basic infrastructure in various regions.

The new decisions were taken as US President Donald Trump told Tehran that his latest deadline for a deal to end the war was fast approaching.

“Remember when I gave Iran ten days to MAKE A DEAL or OPEN UP THE HORMUZ STRAIT. Time is running out — 48 hours before all Hell will reign (sic) down on them,” he wrote in a post on Truth Social.

Trump's messaging about the war has veered between hinting at diplomatic progress and making threats to bomb Iran “back to the Stone Ages.”

Kan noted that the new target list awaits Trump’s approval as the US President has not yet given up on negotiations with Iran.


Russia Says Ukraine Attack Damages Oil Pipeline

 A satellite near-infrared image shows smoke rising from damaged oil storage tanks after a Ukrainian attack, in Primorsk, Russia March 29, 2026. (Vantor/Handout via Reuters)
A satellite near-infrared image shows smoke rising from damaged oil storage tanks after a Ukrainian attack, in Primorsk, Russia March 29, 2026. (Vantor/Handout via Reuters)
TT

Russia Says Ukraine Attack Damages Oil Pipeline

 A satellite near-infrared image shows smoke rising from damaged oil storage tanks after a Ukrainian attack, in Primorsk, Russia March 29, 2026. (Vantor/Handout via Reuters)
A satellite near-infrared image shows smoke rising from damaged oil storage tanks after a Ukrainian attack, in Primorsk, Russia March 29, 2026. (Vantor/Handout via Reuters)

Russian authorities said Sunday that a Ukrainian drone attack has damaged an oil pipeline near the Baltic port of Primorsk.

Russian air defenses shot down 19 drones in the Leningrad region and debris from one "damaged a section of the oil pipeline near the port of Primorsk, and the pipeline is being safely burned out," regional governor Alexander Drozdenko said on Telegram. He said there were no casualties.

Ukraine has stepped up attacks on Russian infrastructure targets in recent months.

Primorsk, which is between the Finnish border and the key city of St Petersburg, was also attacked in March when an oil depot was set ablaze.


Spanish PM Under Fire as Ex-Top Aide Goes on Graft Trial

Former Spanish Minister of Transport Jose Luis Abalos leaves the Supreme Court following his appearance for alleged corruption in Madrid on October 15, 2025. (AFP)
Former Spanish Minister of Transport Jose Luis Abalos leaves the Supreme Court following his appearance for alleged corruption in Madrid on October 15, 2025. (AFP)
TT

Spanish PM Under Fire as Ex-Top Aide Goes on Graft Trial

Former Spanish Minister of Transport Jose Luis Abalos leaves the Supreme Court following his appearance for alleged corruption in Madrid on October 15, 2025. (AFP)
Former Spanish Minister of Transport Jose Luis Abalos leaves the Supreme Court following his appearance for alleged corruption in Madrid on October 15, 2025. (AFP)

A corruption trial of a former right-hand man to Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez begins on Tuesday, a politically explosive case that has threatened to topple the Socialist-led minority government.

Jose Luis Abalos is a disgraced ex-Socialist heavyweight, a former transport minister who helped propel Sanchez to power in 2018. The case is one of several corruption affairs rattling the fragile coalition.

Abalos and his former adviser Koldo Garcia are suspected of having pocketed kickbacks for handing out public contracts worth millions of euros for sanitary equipment during the Covid-19 pandemic.

The Supreme Court in Madrid will judge them for alleged bribery, embezzlement, influence peddling, membership of a criminal organization and misuse of confidential information. The men deny the charges.

Prosecutors want Abalos to serve 24 years in jail. They portray him as the mastermind of a scheme of illicit enrichment. They have called for a 19-year term for Garcia, who they say was a key intermediary.

They argued in court that both men had abused their government positions and contacts to favor the interests of businessman Victor de Aldama, who has already admitted his role in the vast and complex affair.

Abalos has consistently protested that the investigation has been unfair.

"I feel like I am living in a fiction," he told the conservative daily El Mundo in November, shortly before his arrest. "I cannot believe the prosecutor's office is asking for 24 years in jail for me."

Garcia also protested in comments to an investigatory committee of the Navarre regional parliament.

"I am in jail without proof that I've committed any crime," he said, speaking by video link from his place of pre-trial detention.

More than 75 witnesses and about 20 experts are to testify during the proceedings, which are due to run through April.

- Succession of scandals -

The investigation also appears to have ensnared Abalos's successor in the powerful post of Socialist organization secretary, Santos Cerdan.

Caught up in another case of suspected corruption for public works contracts, he has been forced to step down from what is a key position in the party.

The fall from grace of Abalos and Cerdan -- two of Sanchez's closest allies -- has embarrassed a leader who took power promising to clean up Spanish politics.

He took over from the main conservative Popular Party (PP) after it had been engulfed in its own graft scandal.

Separate corruption investigations into Sanchez's wife Begona Gomez and his brother David, who faces trial later this year, have piled further pressure on the government, one of few leftist administrations in Europe.

Both the PP and far-right opposition party Vox have called for Sanchez's resignation and early elections. They argue that the scandals expose systemic Socialist corruption that reaches the premier himself.

Sanchez has always denied any illegal funding of the Socialists and rebuffed calls for polls before the next scheduled general election, due in 2027.