Yahoo – AFP, Ali Noorani, January 23, 2016
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani on Saturday hailed a "new chapter" in relations with China after talks with President Xi Jinping, who is touring the region to boost Beijing's economic influence.
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| Iranian President Hassan Rouhani (R) meets Chinese President Xi Jinping in Tehran (AFP Photo) |
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani on Saturday hailed a "new chapter" in relations with China after talks with President Xi Jinping, who is touring the region to boost Beijing's economic influence.
The Asian
giant and the Middle East's foremost Shiite power aim to build economic ties
worth up to $600 billion within the next 10 years, Rouhani announced.
The two
leaders oversaw the signing of 17 agreements in areas including politics, the
economy, security and cooperation on peaceful nuclear energy.
"With
the Chinese president's visit to Tehran and our agreements, a new chapter has
begun in Tehran-Beijing relations," Rouhani said in a televised speech,
flanked by Xi.
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A picture
provided by the office of
Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei shows
him (R) meeting with
Chinese President Xi Jinping in Tehran
on January 23, 2016
(AFP Photo)
|
"Iran
is China's major partner in the Middle East and the two countries have chosen
to boost bilateral relations," IRNA quoted Xi as saying.
"China
and Iran are two important developing countries that must continue regional and
international cooperation," Xi added.
Beijing has
long taken a back seat to other diplomatic players in the Middle East, but
analysts say the region is crucial to Xi's signature foreign policy initiative
known as "One Belt One Road", touted as a revival of ancient Silk
Road trade routes.
China, the
world's second-largest economy, also relies heavily on energy imports from the
Middle East.
Beijing is
Tehran's top customer for oil exports, which in recent years were hit by US and
EU sanctions over Tehran's nuclear programme.
Trade
between the two countries was worth $52 billion in 2014. They did not elaborate
on their goal of developing relations worth $600 billion over the next decade.
According
to Iranian media, more than a third of Iran's foreign trade is with China.
The two
presidents issued a joint statement outlining a long-term "comprehensive
strategic partnership".
The two
countries agreed to enhance cooperation including in fossil and renewable
energy, transportation, railways, ports, industry, commerce and services, said
the statement published by Mehr news agency.
'Constructive role'
In the
statement Iran welcomed China's commercial "belt" and the "21st
century Silk Seaway" projects, pledging to help the initiative.
China has
committed to "invest and finance upstream and downstream energy projects
in Iran", it said.
China
"acknowledges Iran's constructive role in the fight against terrorism and
maintaining peace and stability in the region", it added, while supporting
Tehran's increased regional and international role.
China, along with the United States, Britain, France, Germany and Russia, was among the countries that agreed with Iran in July to curtail its nuclear activities in exchange for ending international sanctions.
![]() |
China and
the Middle East's foremost Shiite power aim to build economic ties
worth up to
$600 billion within the next 10 years (AFP Photo)
|
China, along with the United States, Britain, France, Germany and Russia, was among the countries that agreed with Iran in July to curtail its nuclear activities in exchange for ending international sanctions.
Xi was
accompanied by three deputy premiers, six ministers and a large business
delegation.
Late
Saturday he met supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who said Tehran
"would never forget" Beijing's cooperation during the years of
international sanctions against Iran.
"The
Islamic Republic of Iran has always sought relations with reliable and
independent states like China," Khamenei's website quoted him as saying.
That is why
the agreement on long-term strategic relations is "very wise and prompt",
and must be "seriously followed up" until it becomes operational, he
said.
"Westerners
have never been able to gain the trust of the Iranian nation," he added.
Xi was
quoted as saying that "the economies of Iran and China complete one
another".
Countries
on the Silk Road route can "protect their interests against the American
pattern of disrupting the regional economic balance by boosting
cooperation," Xi added.
"Some
superpowers seek the rule of monopoly... but the development of emerging
economies has taken the power of monopoly from them."
Xi's tour,
his first of the Middle East as China's president, has also taken him to Saudi
Arabia and Egypt.
Riyadh and
a number of its Sunni Arab allies broke diplomatic ties with Tehran this month
after protesters angered by the execution of a prominent Shiite cleric
ransacked Saudi diplomatic missions in Iran.
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