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First batch of Indians evacuated from Iran arrives safely in Delhi

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India’s evacuation mission from conflict-hit Iran took a major step forward early Thursday as the first batch of 110 Indian nationals — mostly students — arrived safely at Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi under Operation Sindhu.

The operation comes amid intensifying hostilities between Iran and Israel, which have severely impacted civilian life and disrupted air travel across the region.

The evacuees, including over 90 students from Jammu & Kashmir studying at Urmia University of Medical Sciences in northwestern Iran, undertook a long and complex journey that included a road trip into Armenia, followed by connecting flights through Yerevan and Doha.

Upon arrival, the returnees were received by Minister of State for External Affairs Kirti Vardhan Singh, who welcomed them and commended the Indian Embassy in Tehran and the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) for their rapid coordination.

Many of the returnees described tense and frightening scenes as missile sirens blared near their dormitories and internet access was cut off amid Iranian air defense activity.

“We were extremely scared. There were blackouts, and we could hear bombs in the distance. But the Indian Embassy assured us they were working on a way out, and they did,” said Arooj Jan, a final-year medical student from Srinagar.

Others shared how food supplies were dwindling in student residences, and banking services were inaccessible. “We had no idea what was happening outside; calls weren’t going through, and everything was shut down,” said Tanveer Ahmad from Baramulla.

The Indian government launched Operation Sindhu on June 18 in response to the escalating regional conflict. According to the Indian ministry of external affairs, over 4,000 Indian nationals remain in Iran, with approximately 2,000 of them being students. The ministry has

established 24/7 emergency helplines and control rooms to assist those stranded.

Evacuation routes have been established through Armenia, Turkmenistan, and the UAE, and further batches are expected to be airlifted in the coming days. India is working closely with regional governments to ensure safe passage through land and air corridors.

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Armed men kidnap, kill nine bus passengers in Pakistan, say officials

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Armed men killed nine bus passengers after kidnapping them in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province, officials said on Friday.

The passengers had been kidnapped from multiple buses on Thursday evening, said the provincial government spokesman Shahid Rind, Reuters reported.

Their bodies with bullet wounds were found in mountains overnight, another government official Naveed Alam said.

No one has claimed responsibility.

Separatist Baloch militants have in the past been involved in such incidents, killing passengers after identifying them as coming from the eastern Punjab province.

The Baloch Liberation Army is the strongest of a number of insurgent groups long operating in the area bordering Afghanistan and Iran, a mineral-rich region.

The ethnic Baloch militants blame authorities in Pakistan for stealing their regional resources to fund spending in Punjab province.

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Russia’s Lavrov meets Iran’s Araqchi, renews offer to help solve conflict

Russia has said it is ready to act as a mediator in the crisis pitting Iran against Israel and the United States and has offered to store Iranian uranium.

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Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov met on Sunday with his Iranian counterpart at the BRICS summit, and restated Moscow’s offer to help resolve disputes around Tehran’s nuclear programme, the Russian Foreign Ministry said.

A ministry statement said Lavrov, in his talks in Rio de Janeiro with Abbas Araqchi, issued a new denunciation of Israeli and U.S. strikes on Iran last month, “including the bombing of nuclear energy infrastructure under safeguards of the International Atomic Energy Agency.”

Lavrov, the statement said, stressed that all issues surrounding Iran’s nuclear programme had to be resolved through diplomacy, Reuters reported.

“Moscow expressed its readiness to offer its assistance in finding mutually acceptable solutions, including the corresponding initiatives put forward earlier by the Russian president,” it said.

Araqchi held talks in Moscow in the middle of the 12 days of conflict last month.

Iran denies it has any intention of developing nuclear weapons. Russia, which has a strategic partnership with Iran, though without a mutual defence provision, says Tehran has the right to a peaceful nuclear energy programme.

Russia has said it is ready to act as a mediator in the crisis pitting Iran against Israel and the United States and has offered to store Iranian uranium, read the report.

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Iran’s Khamenei attends public event after weeks of war with Israel

For apparent security reasons, Khamenei had issued pre-taped messages during the war which started on June 13, and avoided public appearances.

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Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei attended a religious event on Saturday, according to a video carried by state television, after reports that he was in a “secure location” since the start of a 12-day air war with Israel in which top Iranian commanders and nuclear scientists were killed, Reuters reported.

The video carried by state media showed dozens attending a ceremony to mark Ashura, the holiest day of the Shi’ite Muslim calendar, standing chanting as Khamenei entered a hall where many government functions are held.

For apparent security reasons, Khamenei had issued pre-taped messages during the war which started on June 13, and avoided public appearances.

On June 26, in pre-recorded remarks aired on state television, Khamenei promised that Iran would not surrender despite U.S. President Donald Trump’s calls, read the report.

 

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