logo
UN says Iran aid budget will need to double post-war

UN says Iran aid budget will need to double post-war

Roya News2 days ago
The most senior UN official in Iran said Tuesday the organization's humanitarian and development aid budget to the country would need to be doubled following the war with 'Israel'.
Stefan Priesner, the UN resident coordinator in Iran, said he hoped the international community would step up with more funding.
"We are now doing the budgeting" for 2025, he told a press briefing in Geneva.
"It's a significant increase," he said.
"It's a bit early to say how much we exactly need. But we certainly would expect a doubling of the funding."
He said that last year's UN budget for development and humanitarian affairs in Iran was $75 million – roughly $50 million for refugees and $25 million for the development programme.
Iran hosts the largest number of refugees in the world – around 3.5 million – most of them from Afghanistan.
Speaking from Tehran, Priesner said he hoped aid and development would be seen as separate from other issues and the situation would trigger the international community to increase its support.
On June 13, 'Israel' launched a major bombing campaign against Iran, killing top military commanders and nuclear scientists.
The 'Israeli' strikes hit military bases, nuclear sites and residential areas across Iran.
Iran retaliated with waves of missiles and drone strikes, hitting cities in 'Israel'. A ceasefire took effect on June 24.
Priesner said that in 2022, the UN and the Iranian government agreed a five-year programme on public health, socio-economic resilience, environmental protection, disaster reduction and management, and drug control.
The UN is now in talks with Tehran on "how to adapt the programme to meet emerging needs" following the conflict with 'Israel'.
Priesner indicated that the UN normally has 50 international staff in Iran and about 500 local staff.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

VIDEO: Trump meets with freed captive Edan Alexander
VIDEO: Trump meets with freed captive Edan Alexander

Roya News

time40 minutes ago

  • Roya News

VIDEO: Trump meets with freed captive Edan Alexander

Recently released 'Israeli' soldier Edan Alexander, who was held captive by Hamas, met with US President Donald Trump at the White House on Thursday evening. Alexander traveled to Washington with his family to personally thank Trump for what he described as a "turning point" in his captivity. According to Alexander, Hamas allegedly changed its behavior after Trump secured victory in the 2024 US presidential election. Hamas reportedly moved him to a "better place,' Alexander told the president during their meeting. Trump laughed in response and remarked, 'They weren't too afraid of Biden.'

"I felt like a Nazi:" When descendants of Holocaust survivors become perpetrators
"I felt like a Nazi:" When descendants of Holocaust survivors become perpetrators

Roya News

time3 hours ago

  • Roya News

"I felt like a Nazi:" When descendants of Holocaust survivors become perpetrators

By any moral standard, the role of a soldier should be to protect, not to dehumanize; to defend, not to destroy indiscriminately. Yet, as more and more accounts from inside the Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) reveal themselves, a dangerous transformation is underway, one that not only endangers the people of Gaza, but also corrodes the souls of those in uniform. The IOF has long prided itself on being a "moral army," but beneath that national myth lies a growing number of testimonies that speak to something else entirely: a descent into callousness, sadism, and, in some cases, outright psychopathy. From soldiers describing a thrill in setting homes on fire to others relishing the power to kill without consequence, the psychological toll of the Israeli Occupation's war on Gaza is no longer just a matter of national trauma, it is a mirror reflecting atrocities hauntingly reminiscent of the crimes that Jews once suffered under the Nazi regime. The 'Israeli' government claims this war is about defense, but when the soldiers carrying it out have to blur their faces and hide their identities in every video and photo, that tells another story. They know what they are doing is wrong. They know that someday, somewhere, someone will hold them accountable. And they should be worried because the world has seen this before. After World War II, Nazi officers and collaborators stood trial for crimes they claimed were just 'following orders.' Today, 'Israeli' soldiers, many of whom describe a thrill in shooting civilians, setting homes on fire, and abusing prisoners, are following a similarly chilling trajectory. Let us not forget the Nazi soldiers who stormed Jewish homes in Europe also told themselves they were doing their duty. They too believed in their exceptionalism. Take the words of a soldier who said, 'I felt like, like, like a Nazi ... it looked exactly like we were actually the Nazis and they were the Jews.' That is not the language of critics. That is the voice of someone who pulled the trigger, who stood in the ruins of Gaza and recognized the echoes of history, only this time from the wrong side of the barrel. Let that sink in. The line between following orders and becoming an instrument of evil has become frighteningly thin. As psychological research has long confirmed, ordinary people, when placed under authoritarian command and social pressure, can commit horrific acts. But what is more disturbing are the soldiers who do not just follow, they enjoy it. These are the "callous" and "ideologically violent" types identified in psychological studies of IOF infantry units: those who treat killing as sport, who see brutality as strength, and who view Palestinians not as human beings, but as targets. One soldier confessed that a woman who threw a slipper at him was kicked so hard 'she can't have children today.' Another described a fellow soldier shooting a man in the back four times 'in cold blood' and walking away with no consequences. These are not outliers; they are part of a growing culture. "It's like a drug," one soldier said. "You feel like you are the law, you make the rules. As if from the moment you leave the place called Israel and enter the Gaza Strip, you are God." If this does not frighten you, it should. What makes this situation even more appalling is the government's role in stoking it. Instead of leading with discipline and restraint, 'Israeli' officials have fanned the flames of hatred and vengeance. Rhetoric that demonizes Palestinians and undermines legal oversight has empowered the most dangerous personalities in the military. In this environment, the IOF's own so-called code of ethics, which allegedly prohibits harming uninvolved civilians and insists on refusing illegal orders, is being treated as optional. Meanwhile, the evidence of war crimes continues to mount: civilians shot while waving white flags, homes torched without authorization, detainees tortured and killed, and entire neighborhoods razed in revenge. The haunting familiarity to World War II-era atrocities is not a stretch, it is a warning. The lessons of the Holocaust were never meant to be tribal; they were supposed to be universal. 'Never again' loses its power when it only applies to one side. Some will dismiss this comparison as offensive, but it is precisely because of this history that we must speak out. Jews know better than anyone the consequences of silence, the cost of moral indifference, and the danger of dehumanization. We cannot avert our gaze simply because they themselves underwent a genocide. Atrocities are atrocities, and one genocide cannot excuse another. Your past does not absolve you of your current crimes. It is time for the 'Israeli' public, and frankly, the world, to reckon with what this war has become: Not just a military campaign, but a moral collapse, one that mirrors the very horrors from which Jews once fled.

UN expert: What's happening in Gaza is not war, it's genocide
UN expert: What's happening in Gaza is not war, it's genocide

Roya News

time6 hours ago

  • Roya News

UN expert: What's happening in Gaza is not war, it's genocide

UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories, Francesca Albanese, said the 'Israeli' military campaign in Gaza goes beyond the definition of war, describing it instead as a 'campaign of genocide.' She accused institutions and corporations of profiting from the destruction and targeting of civilians in Gaza, and called for urgent international action to halt support for what she described as an "economy of annihilation." 'Over the past 20 months, the Israeli army and settlers have destroyed vast areas of Palestinian land, while the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange continued to post profits,' Albanese said. She added that genocide is being committed 'under the pretext of distributing humanitarian aid in Gaza,' and reiterated her calls for a global arms embargo on 'Israel' and the suspension of all trade agreements with it. Albanese urged over 1,000 companies to cut ties with 'Israel' or face accountability, stating that 'the time has come for corporations involved in the economy of genocide to stop profiting at the expense of human rights.' The UN official stressed that the only path forward is for states to abide by the standards set by the International Court of Justice (ICJ). She said entities participating in the economic support of the 'Israeli' campaign should have boycotted 'Israel' instead of continuing commercial relations.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store