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Iran summons French envoy over 'insulting' Cannes remarks

Iran summons French envoy over 'insulting' Cannes remarks

Yahoo25-05-2025

Iran summoned France's envoy in Tehran to protest against "insulting" remarks made by the French foreign minister after an Iranian filmmaker won the top prize at the Cannes Film Festival.
Iranian director Jafar Panahi won the prestigious Palme d'Or for his film It Was Just an Accident on Saturday, a political drama inspired by his time in prison.
Following the win, French foreign minister Jean-Noël Barrot said Panahi's win was "a gesture of resistance against the Iranian regime's oppression".
This sparked a diplomatic row, with Iran's foreign ministry spokesperson Mohammad Tanhaei calling the comments "insulting remarks and unfounded allegations", state media reported.
During the meeting with the French envoy, Tanhaei called Barrot's comments "blatant interference" in the country's internal affairs, according to the same report from Iran's PressTV
He described the congratulatory message as "irresponsible and provocative", adding that France had "no moral authority at all" to comment on Iran, citing what he called France's failure to support Palestinians in Gaza.
He demanded an official explanation from the French government, and the envoy said he would relay the message to Paris.
Panahi has been in and out of prison in recent years for his outspoken criticism of the Iranian establishment.
He spent seven months of a six-year sentence in jail before being released in February 2023.
He had previously been sentenced to six years in 2010 for supporting anti-government protests and creating "propaganda against the system", serving two months on that occasion.
As well as his jail terms, he was given a 20-year ban on making movies and travelling outside his own country.
Despite this, he filmed It Was Just An Accident, in secret in Iran.
The film follows five ordinary Iranians as they confront a man they believe tortured them in jail — characters drawn from conversations Panahi had with fellow inmates about "the violence and brutality of the Iranian government".
During his acceptance speech, he urged fellow Iranians to "join forces".
"No-one should dare tell us what kind of clothes we should wear, what we should do, or what we should not do."
Soon after the ceremony, his first appearance at an international film festival in 15 years, he told reporters he would be returning to Tehran.
"As soon as I finish my work here I will go back to Iran," he told reporters in Cannes. "And I will ask myself what's my next film going to be."

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Oil prices surge and stocks slump after Israel attack on Iran

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Shock, fear in Tehran after Israel bombs residential, military areas
Shock, fear in Tehran after Israel bombs residential, military areas

Yahoo

time27 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Shock, fear in Tehran after Israel bombs residential, military areas

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Aging caverns imperil Trump push to refill petroleum reserve
Aging caverns imperil Trump push to refill petroleum reserve

E&E News

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Aging caverns imperil Trump push to refill petroleum reserve

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'But when you look at what they actually were able to take in when they did the procurement, it never got above even half that.' The Biden administration sought to replenish the SPR through several solicitations after the 2022 drawdowns, although it canceled some purchases when crude prices rose above $79 a barrel. U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude had settled at about $68 per barrel in futures trading Thursday, but it later rose above $70 per barrel in the wake of Israel's attack on Iran. Former Deputy Energy Secretary David Turk said in late 2023 that the Energy Department was limited to purchasing about 3 million barrels a month due to SPR constraints. 'That is the physical limit of how much we can buy back,' Turk said in a Bloomberg TV interview reported on by the news service. 'We hope we can bring more capacity online at these price levels to buy as much as we can to refill. We will buy back as much as we possibly can, but there are some physical constraints.' At that rate, it would take more than five years and three months for the SPR to reach the same level of storage it had on tap at the end of 2021, and nearly 10 years to reach roughly 700 million barrels in reserves — the goal mentioned by Wright in March. Wright on Tuesday said refilling the SPR is a matter of national security and global perceptions. 'It's a reduction in our security right now because we have meaningfully less oil stored in our Strategic Petroleum Reserve, and I think it's a reduction in confidence in the seriousness of the United States,' Wright testified. 'Strategic petroleum reserves are for strategic challenges that may arise in our future that we need to be prepared for.' Reporter Andy Picon contributed.

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