Jakarta Globe – AFP, February 2, 2014
Tehran. Iran has received the first instalment of $4.2 billion in frozen assets as part of a nuclear deal with world powers, Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi told ISNA news agency on Saturday.
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| Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi speaks in Tehran, on Oct. 22, 2013. (AFP Photo/Atta Kenare) |
Tehran. Iran has received the first instalment of $4.2 billion in frozen assets as part of a nuclear deal with world powers, Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi told ISNA news agency on Saturday.
Unblocking
the funds under the landmark deal in which Iran agreed to roll back parts of
its nuclear program and halt further advances is expected to breathe new life
into its crippled economy.
“The first
tranche of $500 million was deposited in a Swiss bank account, and everything
was done in accordance with the agreement,” Araqchi said.
Iran
clinched the interim deal in November with the P5+1 group — Britain, China,
France, Russia, the United States and Germany — and began implementing the
agreement on Jan. 20.
Under the
agreement, which is to last six months, Iran is committed to limiting its
uranium enrichment to five percent, halting production of 20 percent-enriched
uranium.
In return,
the European Union and the United States have eased crippling economic
sanctions on Iran.
A senior US
administration official told AFP last month that the first $550-million
installment of $4.2 billion in frozen assets would be released from February.
“The
installment schedule starts on February 1 and the payments are evenly
distributed” across 180 days, the US official said.
Iran and
the P5+1 will also hold a new round of talks in Vienna on Feb. 18 in a bid to
discuss a comprehensive solution to Tehran’s contested nuclear program.
Major world
powers and Israel fear that Iran is trying to develop an atomic bomb, but
Tehran insists its nuclear program is peaceful.
Also on
Saturday, the official IRNA news agency quoted the head of the civil aviation
authority, Alireza Jahanguirian, as saying that Iran will soon receive spare
parts for its ailing civilian fleet.
Jahanguirian
said the parts would arrive within two weeks as part of the sanctions relief
agreed in Geneva in November.
But the
November deal foresees an easing on sanctions imposed on several sectors,
including Iran’s car industry and petrochemical exports, as well as allowing
civil aviation access to long-denied spares.

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