They added that footpaths "approaching the bridges" will be closed during this time to "facilitate the removal and installation of the structures".
Boeing has come under increasing scrutiny over its safety practices. Earlier this weekAmid the shattered glass and trampled flags, posters of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei lie ripped on the floor of the Iranian embassy in Damascus. There are torn pictures too of the former leader of Lebanon's Hezbollah movement, Hassan Nasrallah, who was killed in an Israeli air strike in Beirut in September.
Outside, the ornate turquoise tiles on the embassy's façade are intact, but the defaced giant image of Iran's vastly influential former military Revolutionary Guards commander Qasem Soleimani - killed on the orders of Donald Trump during his first presidency - is a further reminder of the series of blows Iran has faced, culminating on Sunday in the fall of a key ally, Syrian president Bashar al-Assad.So, as the Islamic Republic licks its wounds, and prepares for a new Donald Trump presidency, will it decide on a more hardline approach - or will it renew negotiations with the West? And just how stable is the regime?In his first speech after the toppling of Assad, Khamenei was putting a brave face on a strategic defeat. Now 85 years old, he faces the looming challenge of succession, having been in power and the ultimate authority in Iran since 1989.
"Iran is strong and powerful – and will become even stronger," he claimed.He insisted that the Iran-led alliance in the Middle East, which includes Hamas, Hezbollah, Yemen's Houthis and Iraqi Shia militias – the "scope of resistance" against Israel - would only strengthen too.
"The more pressure you exert, the stronger the resistance becomes. The more crimes you commit, the more determined it becomes. The more you fight against it, the more it expands," he said.
But the regional aftershocks of the Hamas massacres in Israel on 7 October 2023 – which were applauded, if not supported, by Iran – have left the regime reeling.She said there had been difficulties, but felt the culture in the school was starting to change and that pupils seemed "happier".
Pupil Lilly-Belle, 12, was told off in her first week at the school because she was wearing her sister's old skirts which were not the right length.She said the approach could be "a bit strict sometimes" but added: "It's better to be strict than not strict at all."
Caden, 12, said he had been pulled up for an untucked shirt but said he was comfortable with the rules: "I'm quite happy with them and they're good."Parent Katherine, who has two sons at the school, said the change in approach was initially a shock.