Want China Times, Xinhua 2015-01-19
The new round of negotiations over Iran's long-standing controversial nuclear program broadened the consensus, said the head of Chinese delegation to the talks on Sunday.
| Wang Qun speaks to the press about the negotiations, Jan. 18. (Photo/Xinhua) |
The new round of negotiations over Iran's long-standing controversial nuclear program broadened the consensus, said the head of Chinese delegation to the talks on Sunday.
Wang Qun,
director-general of the Department of Arms Control of the Chinese Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, said that this round of talks was intensive, practical and
in-depth.
Wang said
that China hopes all sides can seize the valuable historic opportunity, and
show the political will and determination to facilitate a package solution and
a win-win comprehensive agreement.
Wang added
that parties involved agreed to hold the next round of talks in early February.
The P5+1
group, namely China, France, Russia, Britain, the United States, plus Germany,
and Iran held talks over Iran's nuclear issues, the second one after the failure
to meet a Nov. 24 deadline in 2014 for a comprehensive nuclear deal.
The Sunday
negotiations were premised on prior bilateral engagements between the United
States and Iran during the past four days which started with a one-day talks
between US Secretary of State John Kerry and his Iranian counterpart
Mohammad-Javad Zarif on Wednesday.
According
to Iranian state-run IRIB TV, Zarif on Saturday expressed optimism about a
solution to his country's nuclear issue despite the fact that wide gaps between
Tehran and the world powers remain.
He said
that "serious, accurate and clear discussions" over the disputed
nuclear topics were held over the past days, and "we are seriously doing
our job and believe that the solution is within reach."
Iran has
been a target of UN sanctions due to its alleged attempts to build nuclear
weapons. The West accuses Iran of developing nuclear weapons under the cover of
civilian nuclear programs, which Iran has denied, insisting that its nuclear
programs are for peaceful purposes only.
Sides
agreed in November 2014 to extend the deadline for another seven months and
aimed to reach a political agreement within the next four months.
How much
nuclear capability Iran can keep, and the steps to lift West-imposed sanctions
against Tehran are the main sticking points for the on-going negotiations.
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