Archive for April, 2017

Afghanistan: Friend raises $181,000 for family of Green Beret killed … – Fox News

Online donations have poured in for the family of a Green Beret killed in action while fighting ISIS extremists in Afghanistan over the weekend, Fox & Friends reported Friday.

The GoFundMe page for Staff Sgt. Mark De Alencars wife and five children raised more than $181,000 by Friday morning, far surpassing the original goal of $15,000.

Fox & Friends reports that a family friend started the GofundMe campaign: https://www.gofundme.com/ssg-mark-de-alencar. Nikki Damron wrote on the GoFundMe page that De Alencars wife now has the task of raising their five kids on her own. The children range in age from 3 to 17.

AFGHANISTAN: MARYLAND GREEN BERET KILLED IN ISIS

Our community has been hit hard in the last passing months and I just felt the need to try and do my part and help out his family, Damron wrote. Joining SF was a huge dream of Mark's, one he worked very hard to achieve.

Damron wrote that she was a military wife.

De Alencar, 37, of Edgewood, Maryland, died Saturday of wounds sustained when his unit encountered enemy small arms fire in Afghanistan's Nangarhar Province.

He was assigned to 1st Battalion, 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne), Eglin Air Force Base, Florida.

The Pentagon dropped the mother of all bombs on an ISIS tunnel complex in Nangarhar Thursday, killing 39 ISIS militants.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Afghanistan: Friend raises $181,000 for family of Green Beret killed ... - Fox News

Iran says it will seek ‘no one’s permission’ to build up military – Fox News

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, in what appeared to be a defiant message to President Trump, said Saturday that Tehran will seek no ones permission to build missiles.

"The strengthening of the capability of the Iranian armed forces ... is only for defending the country and we will ask no one's permission to build up the armed forces, and to build missiles and aircraft, Rouhani said at an event showcasing some of Irans military hardware, according to Reuters.

He added that Iran never had "aggressive aims, but peace is not a one-way road and if we decide to be peaceful the other party ... may not. So there is a need for vigilance."

Rouhanis comments come more than a week after the U.S. fired nearly 60 tomahawk missiles at a Syrian air base which was where jets from Bashar al-Assads regime took off to initiate a gas attack in a Syrian town. Rouhani reportedly called the strike a blatant violation of Syrian sovereignty.

The Iranian president is also facing reelection in which he needs to ramp up his rhetoric against the West in the face of critics who accused him of being too eager to appear world powers after the landmark deal to curb Tehrans nuclear program in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions.

Trump had criticized the nuclear deal during his election and had vowed to put an end to Irans missile program. Trump said in January Iran was playing with fire after the country tested a new ballistic missile.

Click for more from Reuters.

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Iran says it will seek 'no one's permission' to build up military - Fox News

Most oil producers want extension of output cuts: Iran minister – Channel NewsAsia

DUBAI: Most oil producers support an extension of output cuts by OPEC and non-OPEC countries, and Iran would also back such a move, Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh was quoted as saying.

"(Zanganeh) stressed that most countries want OPEC's decision to be extended," the Iranian Students' News Agency (ISNA) reported.

"Iran also supports such a decision and if others comply, so would Iran," Zanganeh told reporters late on Saturday, according to ISNA.

The market has been oversupplied since mid-2014, prompting members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and some non-OPEC producers to agree to cut output in the first six months of 2017.

OPEC meets on May 25 to consider extending the cuts beyond June. Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and most other OPEC members are leaning towards this if agreement is reached with other producers, OPEC sources told Reuters last month.

(Reporting by Dubai newsroom; Editing by Sandra Maler)

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Most oil producers want extension of output cuts: Iran minister - Channel NewsAsia

Local school teacher shot and killed in Iran’s Sistan and Baluchestan – Press TV

A file photo of an Iranian police force in the southeastern province of Sistan and Baluchestan (Photo via Tasnim News Agency)

The public relations manager of Irans Sistan and Baluchestan provinces education department says a local school teacher has been gunned down by unknown assailants.

Akbar Balouchzehi was shot by unknown armed men while walking home from the village's mosque after the Maghrib prayer with his two children in the village of Jalayi Kalag, said Ali Moradi on Saturday.

He added that the teachers two children were also injured in the incident and have been taken to hospital.

Director General of Education in Sistan and Baluchestan Province Alireza Nakha'ee said Sunday that the incident was the result of a "local dispute", IRNA news agency reported.

"Theinformation obtained up to this moment shows the incident was not a terrorist act and was just the result of a local dispute," he said.

The province on the border with Pakistan has seen occasional terrorist attacks carried out by groups linked to Saudi, British and USintelligence services as well as Takfiri elements, according to Iranian authorities.

Last week, a commander with Irans Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) was assassinated by two terrorists in the province. Rouhollah Aali was gunned down by two Takfiri terrorists while traveling to the Kurin district in the city ofZahedan.

He was the commander of the Kurin Battalion of Brigade 110 of the IRGCs Salman Unit, which is assigned to the province.

Last year, an employee of the governors office of the city of Sarbaz in Sistan and Baluchestan was killed by unknown assailants. A few years before that another teacher was killed in the city of Rasak by Takfiri-Wahabi terrorists.

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Local school teacher shot and killed in Iran's Sistan and Baluchestan - Press TV

An education in Alaska draws a student from Iran – Fairbanks Daily News-Miner

FAIRBANKS Samaneh Yourdkhani came to America for a familiar reason. The same as other immigrants, my target was very simple, she explained. It was for a financial future. And to get an education because the U.S. has a huge variety of universities and degrees.

Samaneh grew up in Iran and is pursuing a Ph.D. in biomathematics at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. Having earned her bachelors and masters degrees in mathematics at Irans Semnan University, she had few job prospects in her country other than teaching. America, she said, offers better opportunities for her skills.

I wanted to find an application of mathematics in the real world. In Iran, most courses are very theoretical. But here, for example, in biomathematics you can find many interesting subjects. The relation between genes. Its quite amazing.

Samaneh said that areas of research like biomathematics, which uses mathematics to better understand biological organisms, dont exist in Iran. Most opportunities for graduates in mathematics are found in the academic field. This is why, After my masters degree I taught in universities for six years. And after that I was an educational and research assistant for three years.

Samaneh was born and raised in a small town outside of Tehran, a city she says she loves despite of its crowds and hectic pace. The north of Tehran has mountains, and its very green and beautiful, she said. When she was living in the city proper, every weekend we went out to the mountains.

She said the universities in Iran are quite rigorous compared to American colleges and provide students with a well-rounded education. We have to pass 20credits every semester. About eight or nine courses. But here, I see that students just have two or three courses.

On the other hand, she said in America students are better at studying together, and professors are much more approachable. Private tutoring, which many American students take advantage of, is rare in Iran.

It was in 2009 while working on Qeshm Island near Dubai in conjunction with Canadas Carleton University that she first contemplated going abroad for her Ph.D. My boss tried to get me to go to Canada at Carleton, she said. At that time I couldnt. But after that I was thinking Id go somewhere.

First, however she needed to earn money and learn English. It took me eight or nine years to prepare, she said.

Finally, after clearing all the paperwork, I applied to five universities. Florida, Michigan and Wyoming. And one of them was Alaska. I was admitted by four of them, and one of them was UAF.

Since UAF offered full funding, she chose to come here. However, she said, I didnt have any information on Alaska. I just Googled it and found some pictures of ice and snowy weather. I think we dont have enough information about Alaska on the internet.

Samaneh did have one contact, however. One of my friends was studying at UAF, and he was from Iran. He said that here is a good place to start. Its very quiet, and UAF gives a lot of assistance to students.

Samaneh arrived on Sept. 3, 2015. I came to Alaska without any picture of it. When I was coming from the airport to campus, I was thinking about how beautiful it is here. Everywhere was green. The sky was pure blue. It was fantastic.

In one way, Alaska has been a good fit for her. It always was my dream to live someplace that has 24 hours of daylight, she said. So summer here is amazing for me. I love it. Also, nature is very beautiful here.

On the other hand, she admitted shes not fond of winter. I can tolerate it for two or three months, but not seven months. She said the darkness doesnt bother her and she actually tolerates subzero temperatures well, but the sheer length of winter in Fairbanks exhausts her.

Samaneh has found the people in Fairbanks welcoming and has made many friends, but because she doesnt have a car, getting around town is difficult, especially for someone coming from a country with a modern public transportation system.

I think that Fairbanks is good to live in because its not too big and not very crowded, she said. But I have some problems here. For example, transportation here is not good at all. In Tehran, we have a lot of public buses and taxis and a subway.

Shes also connected with the small but close knit community of Iranians on campus that gets together for dinners and on Iranian holidays. New Years in Iran is the 23rd of March. And so we got together and had a lot of Iranian food and some nuts. When we get together most foods are Iranian, but sometimes we have pizza.

She also has many friends in California, where most of the Iranians living in America are found. I love California, she said. Especially Los Angeles because most immigrant Iranians live in Los Angeles and San Francisco. There are many Iranian shops. In Los Angeles, there is a street nicknamed Tehrangeles. All of the street is Iranian shops and Iranian ice cream and bread.

Samaneh said she would ultimately like to live in L.A. after she finishes her studies, but in the meantime shes enjoying Alaska and hoping to bring her mother here for a visit. Coming from a country where little is known about Alaska, she said the state should do more to reach out to potential visitors.

I think we should advertise this beauty of Alaska to other people. People do not have much information about Alaska. They just think about snowy weather and always the weather is icy. Some people even think that there is no internet here. They think that here it is like a village.

Fairbanks is more than a village for Samaneh. Though it wont be her final destination, its a good stop along her pathway there.

David James is a freelance writer who lives in Fairbanks.Becoming Alaskan is an ongoing series documenting the lives of immigrants in Fairbanks. Feedback and suggestions for future interviews can be emailed to nobugsinak@gmail.com.

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An education in Alaska draws a student from Iran - Fairbanks Daily News-Miner