Iran Daily

Speaker: Mali will never cooperate with Iran’s enemies

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President of the National Assembly of Mali said many African countries are willing to have expanded relations with Iran and that his country will never cooperate with the country’s enemies.

Issaka Sidibe made the remarks in Tehran late Saturday during a meeting with his Iranian counterpar­t Ali Larijani who praised “friendship” between the Islamic Republic and African states, Press TV reported.

“Iran has a good friendship and level of relations with African countries, and the region’s issues have always been a matter of attention for us and we have always supported the independen­ce of African countries,” Larijani said.

Senior officials at the administra­tion of President Hassan Rouhani have pledged to “update” Iran’s Africa strategy, pursuing a “new level” of strategic relations in the coming years.

The Islamic Revolution in 1979 resulted in a fundamenta­l overhaul of Iranian foreign policy, changing its focus from the West to the developing world.

Tehran abandoned its ties with the South African apartheid regime in favor of the African National Congress (ANC) that took over in 1994 and is currently the governing political party in the country.

The former Iranian administra­tion promoted the notion of an Iranian “Southsouth” strategy, aiming to expand relations with Africa and Latin America. In 2006, former president famously attended the African Union summit in Gambia as a guest of honor.

However, those efforts have faced enmity from the US and its allies, including Israel which has been trying to promote its footprints in Africa, where it has a chequered history because of its close ties with the apartheid regime.

In November 2010, Gambia broke diplomatic ties with Tehran and expelled all its diplomats in what the Islamic Republic believes was American pressure to cut Iran’s efforts loose in the continent.

Somalia, Sudan, Djibouti and Comoros in January 2016 cut diplomatic relations with Iran following Saudi Arabia’s decision to sever ties with the Islamic Republic over angry protests outside its embassy in Tehran.

On Saturday, the president of the National Assembly of Mali stressed that his country “will always remain a friend of Iran and will never cooperate with its enemies.”

Larijani hailed the quality of the two countries’ parliament­ary relations, and hoped that the two sides could also enhance their economic relations.

“Many African countries are willing to expand their relations with Iran, and seek to become familiar with the Iranian culture through travelling to your country,” Sidibe told his Iranian counterpar­t.

“There is real amity between the two countries, and we hope to establish a new framework for bilateral cooperatio­n as soon as possible,” he added.

Sidibe also said Bamako would exhaust all possible efforts in its power to upgrade the level of bilateral trade relations, and hoped that his country would soon receive Iranian goods.

Sidibe is the chairperso­n of the Executive Committee of the Inter-parliament­ary Union of the Organizati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n’s Member States which started its 38th plenary meeting at the Union’s Secretaria­t in Tehran Saturday.

 ??  ?? IRNA Iran’s Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani (R) talks with President of the National Assembly of Mali Issaka Sidibe (L) during a meeting in Tehran on October 7, 2017.
IRNA Iran’s Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani (R) talks with President of the National Assembly of Mali Issaka Sidibe (L) during a meeting in Tehran on October 7, 2017.

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