Saudi Royal Court announces the death of Prince Abdullah bin Khalid bin Turki Al Saud

The Saudi Royal Court announced, on Sunday evening, the death of Prince Abdullah bin Khalid bin Turki bin Abdulaziz bin Turki Al Saud.

The Royal Court stated in a statement: “His Highness Prince Abdullah bin Khalid bin Turki bin Abdulaziz bin Turki Al Saud has passed away to the mercy of Almighty God, “May God have mercy on him, forgive him, and grant him a place in his spacious gardens. To God we belong and to Him we shall return.”

Source: National Iraqi News Agency

The Ministry of Oil announces the total exports for last June

The Ministry of Oil announced, today, Sunday, the total exports for last June.

The Ministry said in a statement: The quantity of crude oil exports “according to the final statistics issued by the Iraqi Oil Marketing Company (SOMO) amounted to (102) million and (314) thousand and (548) barrels last month.”

The statistics indicated that “the total quantities of crude oil exported from the oil fields in central and southern Iraq amounted to (102) million and (11) thousand and (928) barrels, while exports to Jordan amounted to (302) thousand and (620) barrels.”

Source: National Iraqi News Agency

“Islamic Resistance” announces targeting of an enemy soldiers’ post in the Manara settlement

The Islamic Resistance announced in a communique this afternoon that in support of the steadfast Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip and in response to the enemy’s attacks on the steadfast southern villages and safe homes, the Resistance fighters targeted today a position of Israeli enemy soldiers in the Manara settlement, hitting them directly with appropriate weapons which led to their injury.

Source: National News Agency – Lebanon

Extinguishing a fire in a paper and water bottling plant south of Hilla

Civil defense teams were able to extinguish a large fire that broke out in the Bakhra water factory and the paper recycling plant in the western Hamza district, Al-Alak area, without injuries.

Civil Defense Media Director Aqil Abdullah said, “Civil defense teams were able to extinguish a fire today, Sunday, in a water bottling plant, Al-Bakhra, and a paper recycling plant in the Al-Alak area, affiliated with the western Hamza district, south of Hilla.

He added that the police did not record any injuries and that they opened an investigation to determine the causes of the fire.

Source: National Iraqi News Agency

At his inauguration ceremony, Pezeshkian speaks about social justice, freedoms & deterrence capabilities

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian stressed the need to secure justice and freedom for the country’s citizens, as well as Iran’s possession of “deterrence capabilities” and strengthening its position in the Islamic world, in his first statements following his inauguration as President of Iran.

After Iranian Leader Ali Khamenei handed him the presidential decree to officially begin his duties as head of state, Pezeshkian said: ‘I pledge before the leader of the revolution that we will not follow a path other than the path of social justice and fairness and that we will continue the path of the martyrs who served this people.’

He added: “We want an Iran that enjoys social justice, grants freedoms to all citizens, and is capable and possesses deterrent and defensive capabilities,” as reported by “Russia Today.

Source: National News Agency – Lebanon

A security member was killed in an armed attack south of Maysan

A security member was killed in an armed attack carried out by unknown gunmen in Al-Majar Al-Kabir district, south of the governorate.

A security source told the correspondent of the National Iraqi News Agency / NINA /: “A security member working in the Civil Status Card Department in Al-Majar Al-Kabir district, south of Maysan Governorate, was killed in an armed attack, indicating that the police arrived at the scene of the incident and opened an investigation into it without mentioning further details.

Source: National Iraqi News Agency

A security member was killed in an armed attack south of Maysan

A security member was killed in an armed attack carried out by unknown gunmen in Al-Majar Al-Kabir district, south of the governorate.

A security source told the correspondent of the National Iraqi News Agency / NINA /: “A security member working in the Civil Status Card Department in Al-Majar Al-Kabir district, south of Maysan Governorate, was killed in an armed attack, indicating that the police arrived at the scene of the incident and opened an investigation into it without mentioning further details.

Source: National Iraqi News Agency

Agriculture Minister meets with Sudanese counterpart

Caretaker Minister of Agriculture, Abbas Haj Hassan, met in his office in Beirut with his Sudanese counterpart, Abu Bakr Al-Bashir.

Also attending was the Director General of the ACSAD organization affiliated with the Arab League, Nasser Al-Din Al-Obaid, a Sudanese delegation, which included senior officials and ministers plenipotentiary in the states, and Charge d’Affaires of the Sudanese embassy in Beirut, in addition to a number of Lebanese Agriculture Ministry officials.

Haj Hassan stressed to the delegation that ‘restoring stability in Sudan is an Arab need for our food security and a national interest.’

He added: ‘Sudan, with its agriculture, constitutes the food basket of the Arabs,’considering that ‘the role played by ACSAD has contributed and continues to contribute to overcoming obstacles facing the Arab agricultural cooperation.”

Finally, Haj Hassan stressed ‘Lebanon’s desire to strengthen agricultural cooperation with Khartoum.’

Source: National News Agency – Lebanon

Miri: The arrest of (3749) accused of terrorist and criminal cases during the first half of 2024

The Spokesman for the Ministry of Interior and the Security Media Cell, Brigadier General Muqdad Miri, announced that the tourism security in the Ministry of Interior, during the first half of this year, closed (997) violating tourist facilities and (159) violating companies as well.

Miri added in a statement: The tourism security arrested (3749) accused of terrorist and criminal cases during the first half of 2024.

Source: National Iraqi News Agency

Governments of many countries are taking measures to reduce the harms of smoking.


Bangladesh, India and Thailand are examples of increasing smoking rates. Sweden, Norway, the United Kingdom, New Zealand and Japan are achieving positive results using alternative tobacco products.

Together – In the context of combating diseases resulting from smoking, governments of countries take many measures that aim to reduce these health damages and protect societies and citizens. Despite this, smoking rates are increasing in many countries of the world, as a result of adopting unscientific policies.

Bangladesh, India and Thailand are examples of increasing smoking rates. Sweden, Norway, the United Kingdom, New Zealand and Japan are achieving positive results using alternative tobacco products.

Bangladesh, one of the most densely populated countries, is a model for what many countries in the world are witnessing, as it witnesses a continuous increase in the number of smokers, which results in an increase in the rates of diseases associated with smoking, most notably cancer, in addition to the high ra
tes of death resulting from smoking.

Statistics and reports indicate that about 126,000 people die annually due to diseases related to traditional smoking in Bangladesh, which represents about 13.5% of the total deaths in the country. In addition to the huge economic burden resulting from health care costs related to tobacco-related diseases, which represent about 1.4% of the country’s gross domestic product. More than 7 million adults in Bangladesh suffer from smoking-related diseases, in addition to 61,000 children being exposed to diseases resulting from passive smoking, according to the results of research conducted by the Bangladesh Cancer Society in 2019.

Dr Fazliye Kibera Chowdhury, Consultant Pulmonologist and Respiratory Medicine at Evercare Hospital, Chittagong, said that combating smoking requires a comprehensive, science-based approach to control the health damage and deaths caused by it. He stressed the need for a precise strategy that goes beyond the traditional strategy to address the complex
ities of addiction that tobacco consumption can cause.

In the same context, a recent report published by the world-leading medical journal The Lancet, prepared by Robert Beaglehole and Ruth Bonita, both former officials at the World Health Organization, on the effectiveness of alternative products in achieving positive results in combating smoking, called for the need to adopt a ‘harm reduction’ strategy as a central focus within the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, alongside measures to reduce supply and demand, stressing that these modern ‘low-risk’ products have brought about a major shift in the current battle to reduce smoking-related death rates, and have helped to quit consuming traditional tobacco products.

The strategy of ‘reducing risks’ using alternative tobacco products has achieved positive results in many countries around the world, including Sweden, Norway, the United Kingdom, New Zealand, and Japan, where each of them witnessed a record decline in the number of smokers, thanks to
the ability of adult smokers to access alternatives that may be lower in risk to traditional cigarettes.

In a related context, tobacco products are not similar in their characteristics, features or consequences of consumption, which emphasizes the need to distinguish between the various types of alternative smoking products at the level of legislators and consumers alike, in order to be able to enact appropriate legislative, regulatory and supervisory policies, in line with the risk rates associated with each of them, noting that the confusion between these products is one of the reasons for the slowness in introducing appropriate and effective monitoring mechanisms, as traditional cigarettes are classified as the ‘most toxic’ due to their reliance on combustion, which produces many harmful chemical compounds that cause many diseases, while products that heat tobacco instead of burning it, and electronic cigarettes, belong to the group of smoke-free alternative products with lower levels of harmful substance
s compared to traditional products.

The biggest difference between these two categories lies in the components of each; e-cigarettes rely on a liquid containing nicotine, while heated tobacco products rely on heating the tobacco instead of burning it, which makes them less harmful because the burning process is eliminated.

According to the World Health Organization, e-cigarettes and heated tobacco products contain nicotine, which has not been proven to cause smoking-related diseases, although it can lead to addiction. However, they differ from each other in composition; heated tobacco products consist of short-length tobacco sticks and produce an aerosol containing less nicotine than traditional cigarettes, while e-cigarettes consist of solutions of aromatic oils with about 15,500 flavors used, many of which are toxic and cause health effects, and can cause fires and explosions, in addition to the possibility of mixing with other substances within the solutions. Although they are not completely risk-free, e
xtensive scientific research indicates that they are 90% less risky than traditional tobacco products.

Experts stressed that quitting is always the best option, and despite the differences between alternative products and traditional cigarettes, it is still necessary to combat tobacco among young people. They called for adherence to regulations regarding alternative products, which is of utmost importance, which also requires ensuring that no products are marketed to non-smokers, especially young people, and that strict safety measures and tobacco control policies remain comprehensive. They stressed that by relying on the scientific approach, adopting innovative harm reduction policies, along with adhering to traditional tobacco control measures, Bangladesh can join the global fight against smoking-related non-communicable diseases and cancer.

In their report, the experts noted that statistics for the year 2019 revealed that 4.7 million deaths in the Asia-Pacific region were due to smoking, calling for the
need to take immediate measures to reduce these risks, in addition to the need to continuously update strategies to fill current knowledge gaps.

It is also worth noting that while some countries have made significant progress in combating smoking, many others are still suffering from a worsening crisis despite joining the World Health Organization, such as Thailand and India, where the core of the problem lies in recognizing and understanding the real challenge of traditional cigarette consumption, which requires focusing on changing this behavior, rather than adopting a comprehensive approach to all forms of tobacco consumption. It also requires policymakers to be careful in this regard, so as not to inadvertently contribute to the increase and escalation of the smoking scourge.

‘We must advocate for a science-based approach, not conventional policies,’ concludes Dr Fazliye Kibera Chowdhury. ‘Eliminating combustible cigarette consumption by 2035 is an achievable goal, provided policymakers show the courage
to adopt innovative solutions, while immediate cessation for smokers and never engaging in smoking for non-smokers remains the best option.’

If they do not want to quit smoking, low-risk alternative products can give them the opportunity to live a healthier life.

Source: Maan News Agency