Muscat Daily

Iran says EU nuclear coordinato­r to visit this week

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Tehran, Iran - The European Union’s coordinato­r for talks between Iran and world powers over restoring a frayed 2015 nuclear deal will visit Tehran this week, Iran’s foreign ministry said on Monday.

The coordinato­r, Enrique Mora, has played a key role as an intermedia­ry between the US and Iran during a year of on-off talks in Vienna that seek to revive the deal.

The date of Mora’s arrival in Iran’s capital has not been confirmed, but local press reported he is expected on Tuesday.

“The agenda for talks in Tehran is nearly finalised,” foreign ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzade­h said at a weekly press briefing.

Mora ‘will meet with Ali Bagheri, the Islamic Republic of Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator’.

The 2015 deal gave Iran sanctions relief in exchange for curbs on its nuclear programme to guarantee that it could not develop a nuclear weapon, something Tehran has always denied wanting to do.

It was agreed between Iran and the five permanent United Nations Security Council members China, Russia, the United States, United Kingdom and France, alongside Germany.

But Washington unilateral­ly withdrew in 2018 under thenpresid­ent Donald Trump and reimposed biting economic sanctions, prompting the Islamic republic to begin rolling back its own commitment­s.

The deliberati­ons in Vienna have focused on bringing Washington back into the deal and lifting its sanctions, while ensuring Tehran’s full adherence to its own commitment­s.

‘Right direction’

Adversarie­s for decades, Iran and the United States have been engaged in negotiatio­ns only indirectly, exchanging views through the EU’s Mora, even while Tehran has negotiated directly with the remaining parties to the deal.

“Mora’s trip moves the talks in the right direction,” Khatibzade­h said, noting that messages are ‘constantly exchanged between Iran and the United States via the European Union’.

The Vienna talks have been stalled since March, and Iran called on April 25 for a meeting to revive the dialogue ‘as soon as possible’. Among the key remaining sticking points is Iran’s demand that Washington delist its Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps from a US terror list.

But Khatibzade­h said that the media ‘must not reduce the issues between Iran and the United States to a single issue, such as the Guards’.

Khatibzade­h also said on Monday that the red ‘lines set by the high authoritie­s of the Islamic republic have been respected, and that is why we are here today’, without elaboratin­g.

“If the United States decides today to respect the rights of the Iranian people, we can go to Vienna after Mora’s visit and sign the agreement,” he said.

In an interview with the Financial Times published on Saturday, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said he was seeking a ‘middle way’ to bridge the remaining gap between Tehran and Washington.

He said that he wanted Mora to visit Tehran, but that Iran had appeared ‘very much reluctant’.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzade­h
(AFP) Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzade­h

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