Iran Nuclear NewsIran's FM questions UN resolution

Iran’s FM questions UN resolution

-

BBC: Manouchehr Mottaki has urged major world powers to exercise restraint over a new UN resolution aimed at tightening sanctions against Iran. BBC News

By Bridget Kendall
BBC Diplomatic correspondent

Manouchehr Mottaki has urged major world powers to exercise restraint over a new UN resolution aimed at tightening sanctions against Iran.

The Iranian foreign minister said the timing of the request that the UN Security Council consider a new draft resolution was “strange”.

Mr Mottaki was speaking to the BBC at the World Economic Forum in Davos.

He said the push for the new resolution looked like an exercise in influencing public opinion.

It would have been more logical, he said, to wait for the new report on Iran’s nuclear activities due soon from the International Atomic Energy Agency – the UN’s nuclear watchdog – before taking action.

‘Show patience’

Mr Mottaki refused to be drawn on what Iran would do if tighter UN sanctions were imposed.

But in the meantime, he said, he was urging Security Council members to show patience.

“Our recommendation is to keep their patience, to continue support for Iran and IAEA, to wait for completion of this process and then we can sit together about that,” he told the BBC.

Mr Mottaki rejected an invitation, made at Davos by US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, to meet “any place and any time” as long as Iran first agreed to suspend its nuclear activities.

He countered that Iran would was prepared to talk to any party about its controversial nuclear programme but not if there were preconditions.

Lobbying for support

Mr Mottaki was no more encouraging on the prospects of improved relations with the United states.

“Definitely, if we see correction of their position, the reaction and the answer from the Iranian side also will be positive,” he said.

“But we do not see yet such positive and constructive approach from American side.”

The Davos Economic Forum is often used by global leaders to lobby for international support.

The Iranian foreign minister said he had held several fruitful private meetings during the forum.

He described as laughable the call by Israel’s foreign minister, made during the Davos meeting, for all companies represented at the summit to pull their investments out of Iran.

Mr Mottaki said Iran enjoyed billions of dollars in trade turnover with many countries.

Latest news

Parliamentary Election Rejected by 92% of Eligible Voters in Tehran

The second round of the twelfth parliamentary elections of the Iranian regime in Tehran was held with an "8...

Alarming Threat of Land Subsidence in Iran’s Urban Areas and Infrastructure Facilities

Ali Javidaneh, the head of the Iranian regime’s Mapping Organization, has raised concerns about the situation of land subsidence...

Strikes Continue in Gold Markets Across Iran

Despite the efforts of Iranian regime security entities, the Ministry of Industry, Mine and Trade, and the Gold and...

Iran: Three Nurses Dead from Burnout in One Month

Three nurses in Iran have lost their lives due to "excessive work" in the span of one month, the...

Iranian Chamber of Commerce Reports Worsening Economic Conditions

In its latest report on the state of the Purchasing Managers Index (PMI), the Research Center of the Iranian...

Canadian Intel: Tehran’s Operations in Canada Have Become More Aggressive and Widespread

The Canadian Security Intelligence Service announced in its annual report on foreign interventions in Canada in 2023 that during...

Must read

Iran’s Entekhab threatens legal action over sale of Daewoo Electronics

Reuters: Iran's Entekhab Industrial Group threatened on Thursday to...

Kuwait protests at Iran step to develop gas field

Reuters: Kuwait protested on Tuesday against Iran's intention to...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you

Exit mobile version