Kuwait Times

Iran and India agree to speed up major port project

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TEHRAN: Tehran and Delhi have agreed to accelerate the developmen­t of an important Iranian port, India’s foreign minister said during a visit to the sanctions-hit Islamic republic yesterday.

Chabahar port-being jointly developed by India, Iran and Afghanista­n-is on the Indian Ocean about 100 kilometers (62 miles) west of the Pakistan border. But developmen­t has stalled, despite waivers to sanctions that the United States began reimposing last year after withdrawin­g from a landmark 2015 nuclear deal with Iran. “Just concluded a very productive #IndiaIran Joint Commission Meeting,” Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmany­am Jaishankar tweeted.

“Reviewed the entire gamut of our cooperatio­n. Agreed on accelerati­ng our Chabahar project,” he added as he wound up a two-day visit to the Iranian capital.

Washington withdrew from the nuclear accord and reimposed sanctions on Tehran as part of a campaign of “maximum pressure” aimed at reducing its arch-enemy’s regional role and missile program. The rare exemptions from the sanctions are due mainly to the pivotal role of the port, and a planned railway line, in breaking landlocked Afghanista­n’s dependence on Pakistan for trade.

Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani said yesterday in a joint news conference with Jaishankar that the project would boost trade in the region. “Completing the Chabahar-Zahedan railway and connecting it to Iran’s national railway can elevate the position of Chabahar port, revolution­ise regional commerce and help transport goods on a cheaper and shorter route,” he said.

Rouhani said maintainin­g regional security was an important topic for Iran and India.

“In the current situation where America stands against nations with unilateral sanctions, we have to try to continue bilateral cooperatio­n. “This situation certainly will not last, and America will be forced to stop its maximum pressure against Iran sooner or later,” he said, without elaboratin­g.

India stopped buying Iranian oil after the US abolished waivers for some countries in May, in a move meant to wipe out the Islamic republic’s main source of revenue.

Despite tensions in their relationsh­ip, Iran and India have sought to move forward and develop partnershi­ps. —AFP

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