Khaleej Times

Kerry, Zarif win key award for Iran N-accord

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washington — US Secretary of State John Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif have won an internatio­nal diplomatic prize for their part in a historic agreement on Iran’s nuclear programme, organisers announced on Monday.

The two officials, who negotiated the deal face-to-face and together with counterpar­ts from the P5+1 powers (the United States, China, Russia, France, Britain and Germany) between 2013 and 2015, won the Chatham House Prize “in recognitio­n of their crucial roles” to resolve “one of the most intractabl­e diplomatic stand-offs in internatio­nal affairs in the 21st century,” Britain’s Chatham House think-tank said in a statement.

The agreement — aimed at stopping Iran from using its civilian nuclear industry to develop a nuclear weapon in exchange for the lifting of sanctions against Tehran — was signed in July 2015 and implemente­d in January.

The deal that “many thought impossible” sealed “a victory for diplomacy as well as against nuclear proliferat­ion,” the prestigiou­s London research centre said.

In Washington, the State Department — which does not maintain full diplomatic relations with Tehran’s Foreign Ministry — said Kerry was “grateful for being selected for this prize,” stressing that the deal was “a team effort internatio­nally, with the other members of the P5+1, as well as the European Union.” After the deal’s signing, rumours circulated about a possible Nobel Peace Prize for the P5+1 group or Kerry and Zarif last year.

The major diplomatic breakthrou­gh helped initiate a tentative thaw in relations between the United States and Iran.

Recent Chatham House Prize recipients include former United States secretary of state and current presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton, Burmese leader Aung San Suu Kyi and the aid organisati­on Doctors Without Borders.—

 ?? AFP file ?? Mohammad Javad Zarif with John Kerry prior to a meeting at the United Nations in New York. —
AFP file Mohammad Javad Zarif with John Kerry prior to a meeting at the United Nations in New York. —

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