Latest news with #Shahran

RNZ News
18 hours ago
- Politics
- RNZ News
Live: Iran and Israel continue strikes as death toll mounts
Vehicles jam a highway as a fire blazes nearby in the oil depots of Shahran, northwest of Tehran, on 15 June, 2025. Photo: AFP / ATTA KENARE Follow the latest developments on RNZ's live blog. Iran and Israel have continued exchanging fire, in the perhaps most dramatic escalation in hostilities between the two Middle Eastern nations in decades. Dozens have been killed and hundreds are injured or missing, according to the latest reports from each side, many of them civilians or children. The fighting began with a strike from Israel it said was aimed at military leadership and nuclear scientists and facilities. US President Donald Trump has warned Iran not to strike any American targets or "the full strength and might of the US Armed Forces will come down on you at levels never seen before". Iran has pulled out of upcoming nuclear talks with the US, calling them "meaningless". Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.


New York Times
a day ago
- Business
- New York Times
Live Updates: Israel Launches New Strikes on Tehran
Israel's latest wave of attacks on Iran took out Tehran's main gas depot and its central oil refinery in separate parts of the capital, engulfing its sky in smoke and flame early Sunday. The Shahran fuel and gasoline depot, which has at least 11 storage tanks, was hit and set afire during the Israeli attack that began on Saturday night, Iran's oil ministry said in a statement. Shahran is in an affluent neighborhood of luxury high rises. 'The fire is terrifying, it's massive; there is a lot of commotion here,' said Mostafa Shams, a resident of the area. 'It's the gasoline depots that are exploding one after another, it's loud and scary.' Separately in the city's south, Shahr Rey, one of the country's largest oil refineries, was also struck, according to Iranian state news media. Emergency crews were trying to contain the fire, and a resident of Tehran, Reza Salehi, said he could see the flames from miles away. Israel's targeting of Iran's energy facilities, a crucial source of export cash for the country as well as of domestic energy, represented a significant escalation in its military campaign against Tehran. Earlier on Saturday, Israel had struck two key Iranian energy sites, including a section of the South Pars Gas Field, which is one of the world's largest and critical to Iran's energy production. Video Credit Credit... WANA, via Reuters 'We have entered the second phase of the war, which is extremely dangerous and destructive,' Abdollah Babakhani, an expert on Iran's energy sector based in Germany, said on Saturday. But the multiple massive explosions targeting energy and fuel targets in and around the capital spread fear among residents. Israeli warplanes also struck sites in Tehran related to Iran's nuclear program, including experimental laboratories, according to two Israeli defense officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share sensitive operational details. A woman named Shirin, who lives near the gasoline depot in northern Tehran and asked that only her first name be used out of fear for her safety, said neighbors were frantically calling each other asking what to do. She said the explosion was so loud that her mother fainted. Shirin's husband was worried about fuel and gasoline shortage following the attack. 'Israel is attacking left and right; it's not just military targets, this is our livelihood and our lives,' Shirin said in a phone interview from Tehran. She was also angry at the government in Iran, she said, for not providing any guidance or shelter for civilians caught in the crossfire. Hamid Hosseini, a member of the energy committee of Iran's Chamber of Commerce, said Iran's municipality had been discussing moving the Shahran fuel depot from the residential area in northern Tehran for years, fearing an attack or an accident could be catastrophic. The attack on the depot set off massive explosions, according to an official at the oil ministry, who said the depots were exploding one after another and threatened to significantly damage residential neighborhoods in the area. The depot has about 8 million liters per day of gasoline entering its storage tanks and has a capacity to hold about three full days of fuel needs for Tehran, according to the ministry official. Israel did not immediately respond to request for comment on the strike.

ABC News
a day ago
- Politics
- ABC News
Large fire breaks out at Tehran oil facility
Large plumes of smoke rise from an inferno at the Shahran oil depot in Tehran after an Israeli air strike.