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Iran, Algeria working to promote trade ties

iran

Closer economic cooperation between Iran and Algeria was top on the agenda of a Tehran-Algiers trade gathering in Tehran, with the heads of the two countries’ chambers of commerce and the Algerian ambassador to Tehran in attendance.

“The new policy of the government is to give priority to Muslim countries as far as economic relations are concerned,” Gholamhossein Shafei, the head of Iran’s Chamber of Commerce, was quoted by Donyay-e Eghtesad as telling the session.

Shafei added economic relations between the two countries do not measure up to political ties.

He went on to say, “Iranian and Algerian chambers of commerce are duty-bound to encourage their private sectors to promote trade and embark on joint ventures. Iranian and Algerian private sectors do not have enough information about each other’s capabilities and potential for cooperation. That’s why the chambers of commerce and joint trade councils should do more to offer more information to those active on the economic front.”

Shafei further said, “The volume of trade between the two countries in 2014 stood at about $7 million; Algerian imports accounted for 97 percent of the total volume.”

Muhammad al-Eid Bin Omar, the head of the Algerian Chamber of Commerce, for his part, said that the joint council of Iranian and Algerian businessmen which was established in 2010 can promote the volume of trade and economic interaction and inject dynamism into the current trend through evaluation of present opportunities for further cooperation.

He put the volume of trade between the two nations at $3.2 million in the first quarter of 2015, and said those figures show that the heads of chambers of commerce as well as Iranian and Algerian businessmen should make more efforts to create a dynamic platform for economic activities.

Iran releases Marshall Islands-flagged cargo ship: Report

ship

Iran has reportedly released a Marshall Islands-flagged cargo ship recently impounded in the Persian Gulf by Iranian forces.

An informed source told IRNA on Thursday that the Iranian Ports and Shipping Organization will issue a statement in a matter of hours on the details of the ship’s release.

On April 28, Iranian forces boarded the Maersk Tigris ship carrying the Marshall Islands flag in the Strait of Hormuz.

Hamid Reza Jahanian, the managing director of the Pars Talayieh oil products company, which had filed a lawsuit against the Maersk Line container shipping company, told Fars News Agency on May 2 that the reason behind the seizure was the damage inflicted upon Pars Talayieh by Maersk Line, which is part of the Maersk Group headquartered in Copenhagen, Denmark.

Australian FM: Iran visit very productive

FM

Foreign Minister of Australia Julie Bishop described her recent visit to Iran as “very productive and useful”.

She made the remark in an interview on Wednesday with IRNA in Pakistan where she is paying her first official visit since she assumed office in September 2013.

Bishpo further said that during her visit to Tehran in April, she met President Hassan Rouhani and her counterpart Mohammad Javad Zarif and discussed a good number of bilateral, regional and international issues, including the Yemeni conflict.

“Presumably all such conflicts ultimately need to be resolved with a political solution and we hope that all stakeholders will achieve a political solution in Yemen,“ she stressed.

Berlin after energy deals with Tehran: Official

Martin Schaefer

Germany is poised to engage in energy deals with the Islamic Republic of Iran, says a diplomat.

German Foreign Ministry spokesman Martin Schaefer said Wednesday that his country was looking forward to a final nuclear deal between Iran and P5+1 – the US, Britain, France, Russia, China and Germany – which, he said, would help set the stage for energy cooperation between Tehran and Berlin.

Schaefer also welcomed the trade relations between Iranian and German companies.

His comments came as Iran’s Petroleum Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh was heading to Germany for the third annual Energy Security Summit in Berlin.

The two-day event, titled “Crises and Prices: Energy Security Amidst Multiple Uncertainties,” attracted decision-makers from the worlds of politics, business and science, according to its co-organizers, the German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.

The event aims to analyze the current political and strategic challenges, focusing on ways to diversify energy supplies with the help of green technologies, as well as the “new order of energy policies and markets.”

A second chance at life

A second chance at life

A convicted murderer who was supposed to be hanged early Wednesday was forgiven and thus spared by the family of the murder victim: Mohsen Dehgahn, who was a manning a Basij checkpoint when he was shot dead in 2010.

The following images have been released by Fars News Agency:

Mideast’s Highest Suspension Bridge in Northwestern Iran

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The highest suspension bridge in the Middle East is set for inauguration in Meshgin Shahr, a city in the northwestern province of Ardebil.

Images of the suspension bridge released online by Mehr News Agency:

National Festival of Iranian Ethnic Groups (PHOTOS)

Iranian Ethnic Groups0

A national festival of the culture and arts of Iranian ethnic groups opened in Sanandaj, the capital of Kurdistan Province, on Tuesday.

An EU cultural advisor, cultural and arts figures from eight counties, 19 leading Iranian folklore bands as well as 15 distinguished ethnic teams were in attendance at the inaugural ceremony.

The following is a photo gallery of the opening ceremony posted online by the Islamic Republic News Agency:

Iran dismisses nuclear talks under threats: Leader

Supreme leader-Iran

Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei says Iran does not approve of negotiations over its nuclear program “under the specter of threats”.

Addressing a number of teachers in Tehran on Wednesday, Ayatollah Khamenei dismissed recent US military threats against Iran and said the Islamic Republic will not leave any acts of aggression unanswered.

Ayatollah Khamenei added the US need for nuclear talks is not any less than Iran’s, if not more.

The Leader urged the Iranian negotiating delegation to observe the country’s red lines and not to cave in to the opposite side’s imposition of ideas, humiliation or threats in the course of the talks.

Tap into the virtual world and expand it: Senior cleric

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Islamic teachings advise us against being deviated from the right path and blindly blocking someone’s way; rather, we should tap the virtual world to serve the purpose of faith, Ayatollah Javadi Amoli, a senior cleric, was quoted by Mehr News Agency as telling Minister of Communications and Information Technology Mahmoud Vaezi.

At the meeting Ayatollah Amoli underlined the true mission of the Internet and said, “What is today known as the virtual world is in fact the reality.”

The cleric added, “Those who can impart a fact to society in the virtual world need to be kitted out with communication infrastructure and facilities.”

On measures taken by the ministry to have the Internet bandwidth expanded, Ayatollah Amoli said, “You should think of the virtual world as real and tap into it. Also, you need to keep the largest number of messages moving on the web, so you need to increase the Internet speed. You should advance this system of communication with your religious tact and turn the virtual world into reality and tap into it.”

[His comments come after Mahmoud Vaezi appeared before MPs in parliament on April 14 to answer their questions about the National Information Network and expansion of the Internet bandwidth. Afterwards, a vote was held to show how many parliamentarians found his response convincing. Out of 195 MPs present, 70 voted for, 99 voted against and 11 abstained.

At the session in the national assembly, Vaezi told MPs, “The expansion of the bandwidth is the infrastructure of the country’s Internet development and we are trying to make electronic government and trade possible.”

It seems that the Qom visit and the green-light from religious scholars, was a response by the communications minister to the MPs who are opposed to his ministry’s development plans.]

Kerry is sensationalizing inspections: Iranian diplomat

araghchi

A senior Iranian nuclear negotiator has said Mr. Kerry has sensationalized the issue of inspections of Iran’s nuclear sites by saying that they will run “forever”.

Seyyed Abbas Araghchi made the comment Tuesday night in reaction to Secretary Kerry who had said, “There will be inspections every day forever”. The following is a brief translation of what else Araghchi said as reported by Alef, a news website:

“What Mr. Kerry has raised [permanent inspection] is an evident issue which has been recognized and implemented by more than ten countries in line with the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and the Additional Protocol (AP).

“What comes as a surprise is that he [the US secretary of state] is sensationalizing the issue,” said Araghchi.

Iran has accepted to implement the Additional Protocol providing that the Islamic Consultative Assembly approves its implementation, he said, adding it is up to parliament – not the government – to finalize the [implementation of the] Protocol.

The government can voluntarily implement the Protocol for a certain period of time, he said, adding its [temporary and voluntary] implementation too needs the blessing of the MPs.

As for inspections of Iran’s military facilities, the nuclear negotiator said “If the [UN nuclear] agency asks to be allowed to inspect non-nuclear facilities, it will not be given immediate and easy access to those sites. The agency should submit its documentation and evidence which explains why it doubts something illegal is being done at one site – and exactly where in that site the alleged illegal activity has taken place. Then that country can enter talks with the agency over the latter’s request for inspection.”

If they [that country and the agency] agree on the UN agency’s access to the site, managed inspection by IAEA experts is what comes next, Araghchi added.

The Iranian official went on to say that the IAEA inspectors cannot inspect any place at will, adding their inspection should be under strict control.

The agency’s inspectors can only visit the point they have asked for under certain circumstances so that they cannot get their hands on other information, he said.

In conclusion, he said Iran and P5+1 can possibly strike a nuclear deal before the July 1 deadline.