The Asian Age

‘ Iran nuclear deal holding, but more needs to be done’

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Tehran, July 13: Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers is holding a year after it was agreed but more needs to be done to ensure its full implementa­tion, a top Iranian negotiator said Wednesday.

“The total process has been relatively satisfacto­ry despite the difficulti­es that we see in the implementa­tion,” Hamid Baeidineja­d told a press conference in Tehran for the first anniversar­y of the agreement.

“We believe that the deal has not been violated so far and efforts continue to resolve the remaining issues,” Mr Baeidineja­d said. The deal between Iran and the P5+ 1 group of powers ( Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States) limited Tehran’s atomic programme in return for the lifting of some internatio­nal sanctions, which took effect in January.

There has been some disappoint­ment in Iran that the lifting of the sanctions has not yet led to significan­t investment­s, with many internatio­nal investors and banks still wary of doing business with the Islamic republic.

Despite the lifting of nuclear- related penalties, Washington and the European Union maintain some sanctions on Iran over its human rights record and ballistic missile testing.

Asked if Iran had oversold the deal to its people, Mr Baeidineja­d said: “We knew exactly what was agreed upon in the deal and what was not.”

He said Tehran “had more expectatio­ns on the removal of economic, banking and financial restrictio­ns, but despite all these deficienci­es there is a feeling of hope inside our country to remove these obstacles” through more talks.

“We will not agree to anything less than the full implementa­tion of the JCPOA,” he said, referring to the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action, the official name of the agreement.

The agreement caused “great optimism” in Iran on “unrelated issues”, Mr Baeidineja­d said, but those expectatio­ns are “fortunatel­y being balanced and adjusted to reality”.

President Hassan Rouhani on Wednesday also praised the “new atmosphere” created by the accord, saying it can lead to “better economic, defence, and technologi­cal activity” for Iran. “In some fields, including banking, we still haven’t reached the expected level, although good steps have been taken in this regard and some connection­s have been made with big internatio­nal banks,” Mr Rouhani was quoted as saying by official news agency IRNA.

 ?? — AFP ?? Amnesty Internatio­nal activists perform a flash mob in Rome's Pantheon square on Wedenesday to remember late Italian student Giulio Regeni and other victims. The badly mutilated body of Regeni, a 28- year- old Cambridge University Ph. D. student, was...
— AFP Amnesty Internatio­nal activists perform a flash mob in Rome's Pantheon square on Wedenesday to remember late Italian student Giulio Regeni and other victims. The badly mutilated body of Regeni, a 28- year- old Cambridge University Ph. D. student, was...

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