Khamenei authorized Pezeshkian’s letter to Trump, former lawmaker says
Supreme leader Ali Khamenei speaks to president Masoud Pezeshkian after a meeting with the cabinet, Tehran, Iran, September 7, 2025
President Masoud Pezeshkian sent a letter via Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to President Donald Trump with the permission of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei offering to revive nuclear talks, a former Iranian lawmaker said after Tehran denied seeking Riyadh’s mediation.
Mostafa Kavakebian, a former member of the Iranian parliament, told the Tehran-based Asr Iran news website on Sunday that bin Salman carried Pezeshkian’s message during his recent trip to Washington and meeting with Trump on November 18.
He said Pezeshkian wrote in the letter that Iran was ready to negotiate with the United States without preconditions or diktats.
"The content of the message was that we are willing to sit down and talk together—not a conversation that comes from a position of surrender, nor one where you dictate what should or should not be. Instead, we will sit down, open the door to dialogue, discuss the issues together, and this was conveyed," Kavakebian said.
"This was conveyed during this recent trip by bin Salman. It was also done with the Leader’s permission," he added.
Kavakebian said he believed the message aligned with Trump’s comments earlier this week, when the US president said Tehran was eager to reach an agreement.
“I think sending this message had an effect, and Trump immediately said that we will at last plan for negotiations,” Kavakebian said, referring to Trump’s remarks at a joint appearance with bin Salman in the White House on Tuesday.
Trump said the United States was talking to Tehran, which he said "very badly” wanted a deal with Washington.
"Iran does want to make a deal. I think they very badly want to make a deal. I am totally open to it, and we're talking to them, and we start a process," Trump had said.
Kavakebian's remarks come hours after after Iran's ministry spokesman denied that Pezeshkian’s letter to bin Salman was aimed at securing Saudi mediation with Washington, calling it a standard bilateral note tied to Hajj coordination.
“The issue of a mediator is not on the table,” Esmail Baghaei said.
Reuters reported on Thursday, citing two sources familiar with the exchange, that Pezeshkian had urged the crown prince to help persuade US President Donald Trump to revive nuclear talks.
Earlier on Monday, Saudi state news agency SPA reported that bin Salman received a letter from Pezeshkian, a day before the crown prince traveled to the United States for talks with Trump.
SPA did not provide any further details about the letter.
US talks with Tehran over its disputed nuclear program began earlier this year with a 60-day ultimatum. On the 61st day, June 13, Israel launched a surprise military campaign which was capped with US strikes on June 22 targeting key nuclear sites in Esfahan, Natanz and Fordow.
Iran denies seeking nuclear weapons and has called the attacks illegal.
The United States has demanded Iran renounce domestic uranium enrichment while Tehran maintains its nuclear program is an international right.
A fire that has been burning for almost three weeks in northern Iran’s UNESCO-listed forests has triggered growing criticism of officials for what many describe as indifference, incompetence and a failure to prioritize an escalating environmental disaster.
The blaze has affected Elit forest, part of Iran's Hyrcanian forest belt along the southern Caspian Sea coast, a 50-million-year-old ecosystem UNESCO added to the World Heritage list in 2019 for its exceptional biodiversity, including more than 3,200 plant species.
In a report on Sunday, Iran’s semi-official ISNA wrote that the fire in Elit forest has been burning for about 20 days, adding that the head of natural resources in Mazandaran province rejects this and says two separate fires occurred in the area 10 to 15 days apart.
ISNA's said local residents insist the blaze has continued without interruption since November 1, with smoke showing it never fully went out.
The report said pockets of fire remained even after a firefighting aircraft was deployed, and quoted Mazandaran governor Mehdi Younesi as saying 400 to 450 personnel had been sent from neighboring provinces while residents had been on the scene from the first moments.
ISNA added that Iran has asked other countries for help, and cited lawmaker Kamran Pouladi saying Turkey, Russia and Belarus offered assistance and that a Turkish aircraft is already operating at the site.
Public anger over government response
Users on social media expressed anger over the slow and limited response, accusing authorities of neglect and leaving residents to fight the fire with little support.
“The fire climbs up the forest slopes, swallowing the trees, and people with bare hands run after it to stop it,” user Azam Bahrami wrote, criticizing officials for abandoning local residents.
Environmental activist Hamed Tizroyan said in an Instagram Story that “if it were not for public protests, these officials would not even get up from their chairs to see what is happening,” a comment widely shared as users blamed poor oversight, inadequate resources and late managerial presence for the fire’s spread.
Another user, Zahra, linked the blaze to broader environmental pressures, including heavy pollution in Tehran and dam levels at their lowest in decades, saying authorities were focused on unrelated domestic debates “while a UNESCO-listed forest is burning.”
Several users also praised volunteers and local rescue teams, saying the disaster would have been far worse without them, and questioned why Iran still lacks a functional aerial firefighting fleet despite years of recurring wildfires.
Volunteers say pleas for help went unanswered for days
The Tehran-based Ham Mihan newspaper published a field report quoting local volunteers who said the operation “was not possible with only one water drop per day,” adding that they were losing “one hectare of forest every moment.”
A mountaineer involved in the effort said the first helicopter arrived on November 17, even though volunteers had requested one on November 10 and had been fighting the fire without equipment for days.
Another local resident told the newspaper early warnings were ignored, saying: “We said if the autumn winds start, it will be a disaster — and that is exactly what happened.”
Iran has started burning mazut, a heavy fuel oil, at several power plants despite worsening air pollution, Fars News reported on Sunday, signalling a renewed reliance on high-sulphur feedstock as winter demand rises and smog intensifies.
Power plants burned more than 21 million liters of mazut on November 14, the outlet said – a volume that would require oil tankers stretching roughly 14 kilometers end to end.
Stations in Hamedan in the west, Neka in the north and Arak in Markazi province were among the biggest consumers, it added.
“We do not want to burn mazut because it damages plants and is an expensive commodity,” Energy Minister Abbas Aliabadi said last week. “But when gas is scarce, we are forced to use it.”
Government assurances under pressure
Officials in President Masoud Pezeshkian’s administration have repeatedly vowed to phase out mazut in favor of cleaner fuels.
Scheduled outages could temporarily replace “producing poison” for the public, Government spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani wrote on X in November last year. Her remarks came shortly after summer blackouts and the onset of household gas cuts.
State media later said Pezeshkian ordered mazut use halted at power stations in Arak, Karaj and Isfahan. Yet in several cities, especially Arak, hazardous smog persisted through mid-March, prompting repeated street protests.
Three months after the announced halt, in February, parliamentary agriculture committee spokesperson Somayeh Rafiei said all thermal plants had shifted to mazut.
In a separate August report, business outlet Tejarat News assessed mazut as an “official and relied-upon” tool in managing the energy crisis, adding that it had remained in use the previous year despite official assurances.
Tehran’s emergency air-quality task force met on Sunday at the health ministry’s request and approved online schooling for primary classes across the province on Tuesday and Wednesday.
The decision followed forecasts indicating that pollution would intensify through the week, task force secretary Hassan Abbasnejad said.
“After reviewing reports from the environment department, the medical university and the meteorological organization, it was decided that primary classes will be held virtually,” Abbasnejad said.
A thermal power plant following the increase in air pollution in Tehran, Iran, November 22, 2025.
Daycare centers and preschools in districts classified as unhealthy for all groups would shut, and female employees with young children could work remotely, he added.
Calls to phase out ageing vehicles, invest in cleaner energy and bolster a central environmental authority have so far gone unanswered. Critics say that without systemic change, major cities, including Tehran, will keep paying the price in hazardous air and lost lives.
As winter inversion deepens, the combination of stagnant air and growing mazut consumption is heightening concerns that Iran’s most polluted weeks may still lie ahead.
An investigation by the reformist daily Shargh found that a licensed Iranian matchmaking platform lets parents sign up children as young as 13 for marriage, with no age filters or meaningful safeguards in place.
“Children aged 13 and 14 can be registered directly or by parents as marriage candidates,” Shargh wrote on Saturday.
The website Adam and Hava (Adam and Eve), which brands itself as a formal marriage intermediary, allows users to open profiles either for themselves or for a child or relative.
Shargh reporters were able to create a full profile for a girl born in 2012 without any age restriction or identity barrier, indicating that minors can be listed seamlessly as marriage candidates.
Profiles reviewed in the investigation show under-18 users concentrated in deprived regions where early marriage is common. Girls appear most frequently between 13 and 16, while boys cluster between 16 and 18.
The site’s 80-question registration form emphasizes religious observance, gender-role expectations, political attitudes and views on hijab, make-up and social interaction, but includes no questions about consent, emotional readiness or psychological maturity for minors.
Executive manager Mohammad-Hossein Asghari defended the platform, saying the law obliges it to accept users who fall within statutory marriage ages. “Article 1041 of the Civil Code sets the marriage age at 13 for women and 15 for men,” Asghari said.
“From a legal standpoint we are obliged to accept membership and cannot block someone who falls within the age range set by law.”
About 300,000 people, he said, have attempted to register, with 70,000 profiles currently active following identity checks and psychological screening. Minors under 15, he added, must have a parent complete the form, and staff speak directly with the child before approval.
Experts warn of deepening risks
Child-rights advocates told Shargh that formalizing under-18 marriage through a widely promoted digital platform deepens an already harmful pattern.
Children who marry between 10 and 16 lack the emotional and social development required for partnership and parenting, facing elevated risks of violence and long-term trauma, Psychologist Mansoureh Shahnazari told the outlet.
Iran’s Statistical Center recorded around 25,900 marriages of girls under 15 in 2022, down from roughly 32,000 in 2021 – figures that researchers say illustrate inconsistencies in government reporting.
Legal specialist Sahar Khajehvand described the platform’s model as “marketing child marriage” and said it contradicts constitutional commitments to stable family formation based on maturity rather than poverty or coercion.
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has repeatedly promoted policies encouraging higher birth rates and earlier marriages, with a target population of 150 million by 2050.
In line with these priorities, parliament passed the Rejuvenation of the Population and Protection of the Family law in 2021, imposing penalties for actions deemed to oppose childbearing or delay marriage, effectively placing demographic goals above safeguards for children.
With tens of thousands of child marriages recorded annually and a platform openly enrolling minors under an official banner, campaigners say only a clear ban on under-18 marriage will prevent online tools from further normalizing the practice.
Iran on Sunday denied that President Masoud Pezeshkian’s letter to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman was aimed at securing Saudi mediation with Washington, calling it a standard bilateral note tied to Hajj coordination.
“The issue of a mediator is not on the table,” foreign ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei said at a weekly briefing.
“This letter was simply a routine correspondence exchanged within the framework of Iran-Saudi discussions on organizing the Hajj. It contains the Islamic Republic of Iran’s message of appreciation to Saudi Arabia for the services it provided during last year's Hajj.”
Reuters reported on Thursday, citing two sources familiar with the exchange, that Pezeshkian had urged the crown prince to help persuade US President Donald Trump to revive nuclear talks.
Pezeshkian, the outlet reported, wrote that Iran “does not seek confrontation,” wants deeper regional cooperation, and remains ready for nuclear diplomacy if its rights are guaranteed.
Saudi state news agency SPA said that Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman received a letter from Pezeshkian, a day before the crown prince traveled to the United States for talks with Trump.
Iran's foreign ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei
The Reuters report came after Trump said last week that he seeks a deal with Iran and believes Tehran does too, speaking alongside Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman who said he would try to help Tehran and Washington reach a deal.
Talks between Iran and the United States stalled after the 12-day war and the US and Israeli strikes on Iranian nuclear sites, a period during which the UN snapback mechanism of the 2015 nuclear deal was also triggered reimposing sanctions on Tehran.
Tehran challenges IAEA stance
Baghaei also addressed Iran’s cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), saying Iran’s membership eliminates any need for mediation efforts.
“We are a member of the IAEA and we do not need a mediator,” he said.
The United States and Israel, Baghaei added, must answer for actions he said disrupted cooperation, adding the agency “should not constantly complain” about Iran’s posture.
He urged the IAEA leadership to uphold its professional obligations, saying impediments to cooperation were created by Israel, the United States and the three European parties to the now-defunct nuclear deal.
“Regarding the problems in our cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency, it is Israel and the United States – who attacked us – that must be held accountable, and the agency should stop constantly complaining about our lack of cooperation.”
'Cairo accord is dead'
Baghaei said the Cairo agreement reached in September between Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi “has no practical applicability and lacks validity” following last week’s Board of Governors vote adopting a resolution advanced by the United States, France, Britain, and Germany.
On Iran’s next steps, Baghaei said decisions on the nuclear file are made “at the macro level” and details will be shared once decisions are reached.
The IAEA said last week that it needs more Iranian cooperation to restore full inspections at sites hit in June’s strikes, warning that verification of enriched uranium stocks is “long overdue.”
Iran began implementing a long-delayed plan to drop four zeros from its battered currency after President Masoud Pezeshkian instructed the Central Bank on Saturday to begin two years of preparations.
Under the order, the Central Bank of Iran must prepare the shift within two years before managing a three-year phase in which old and new banknotes circulate together.
Once that cycle ends, all transactions will be settled in the new unit and existing notes will be withdrawn, according to Iranian state media.
Parliament earlier approved a law defining the “new rial” as equal to 10,000 current rials, with “gheran” designated as the subunit.
Economists remain divided over the effect of the redenomination. The policy is expected to require printing new notes, destroying old ones and modifying banking and accounting systems.
Critics argue that without wider reforms the move is mainly cosmetic, citing Argentina, Zimbabwe, Romania and the former Yugoslavia, where redenominations did little to restrain prices.
“This policy is largely cosmetic,” economist Ahmad Alavi told Iran International in August. “Without tackling the roots of inflation – from liquidity growth to systemic inefficiencies – removing zeros will not restore the rial’s value.”
Debate over deleting zeros began in the late 1990s and circulated through multiple administrations. Parliament first passed the plan in 2020, but the Guardian Council sent it back for revisions. The current version – retaining the name “rial” and introducing “gheran” – won final approval in October and has now entered execution with Pezeshkian’s signature.
Long path to implementation
Officials say the overhaul aims to simplify calculations, improve the legibility of Iran’s currency and prepare the ground for broader fiscal measures.
The abundance of zeros in the national currency had caused accounting and operational difficulties, Shamseddin Hosseini, head of parliament’s Economic Committee, said last month, adding that similar redenominations had been undertaken by countries such as Turkey in 2003 and 2005.
The reform comes amid persistent inflation of about 40%, a more than 90% loss in the rial’s value since US sanctions were reimposed in 2018, and widespread economic hardship.
With the formal order issued, the central bank begins one of the Islamic Republic’s most extensive monetary reforms, whose outcome still hinges on the government’s broader effort to control inflation.