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Iranian Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi discharged from hospital and sent home, family say

Iranian Nobel Peace Prize winner Narges Mohammadi has been discharged from a cardiac care unit and sent home, weeks after being transferred from prison to hospital following a suspected heart attack, a foundation run by her family said on Monday. Mohammadi, 54, won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2023 while in prison for her campaign to advance women's rights and abolish the death penalty in Iran. She was sentenced to a new prison term, the foundation said in February this year, in the build-up to the US and Israeli war against Iran. She suffered a suspected heart attack in late March and was transferred to a hospital a month later, first in the northwest city of Zanjan, then, after a temporary suspension of her sentence on heavy bail, to Tehran's Pars Hospital, the foundation has said. "Her recovery demands strict medical supervision outside prison walls. Returning her to detention is a death sentence," the foundation quoted Mohammadi's daughter, Kiana Rahmani,...

China has agreed to address US concerns over rare earth shortages, says White House

China will address US concerns about shortages of certain speciality rare earths caused by Beijing's export controls, the White House said on Sunday in a factsheet outlining the major deals agreed during a summit last week. China's rare earth export controls - introduced in April 2025 in retaliation for US President Donald Trump's Liberation Day tariffs - continue to tightly restrict exports of some rare earths despite a deal last October in which the White House says China agreed to allow shipments to freely flow. Beijing's grip has been tightest over speciality rare earths such as yttrium and scandium, used in defence, aerospace and chipmaking, both of which were highlighted in the factsheet. Also Read: Trump says US and China are aligned on Iran, Tehran must make a deal soon "China will address US concerns regarding supply chain shortages related to rare earths and other critical minerals, including yttrium, scandium, neodymium, and indium," it read. China's Ministry of Commerce did not mention rare earths in its own summary released on Saturday. Beijing would also address US concerns over China's export restrictions on rare earth processing equipment and technology, the factsheet said. China refines over 90% of the world's rare earths and has dominated the industry for decades. Its expertise and technology are, however, tightly guarded and generally unavailable to foreign companies.

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