EU foreign
policy chief Federica Mogherini has arrived at the head of an EU delegation to
Iran. The short trip, designed to boost trade and regional peace after last
year’s nuclear deal, is not to everyone's liking.
Deutsche Welle, 16 April 2016
Mogherini
talks Saturday with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and other
ministers about EU-Iran economic ties, the security situation in Syria, the opening
of an EU mission in Tehran and issues including Iran's use of capital
punishment and refugee flows.
"This
visit is an important step towards building cooperative relations between the
EE and Iran on the areas where there is mutual interest and to have frank
discussions on the issues where differences remain," Mogherini said.
The 24-hour
trip comes days after Italy’s Prime Minister Matteo Renzi became the
highest-ranking European leader to visit Tehran since July’s nuclear accord.
The US, UK,
China, France, Russia and Germany agreed in 2015 to lift sanctions in return
for Tehran accepting curbs to prevent it acquiring nuclear weapons.
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| U.S. Secretary of State Kerry meets with EU High Representative Mogherini at the Nuclear Summit in Washington |
Energy,
banking and the WTO
According
to the European Commission, the EU's executive, the EU is also interested in
discussing future energy imports from Iran.
Tehran is
also thought to be interested in closer cooperation with the EU on energy and
also trade issues, notably possible membership in the World Trade Organization
(WTO).
An EU
official told reporters Saturday that Brussels is “willing to play a supportive
role” in Iran’s bid to join the WTO. But the EU wants Iran to do more to fight
money laundering and terrorism financing, which are impediments to foreign
investment, the official said.
The trip
comes after Iran raised concerns about banking sanctions, with officials saying
the West - particularly the US - is creating obstacles to its access to the
global financial system.
The
governor of Iran's Central Bank said Friday in the US that the international
community was not sticking to its promises. "The impact that we were
expecting to get is not what we see, at least on a tangible basis,"
Valiollah Seif told a forum at the Council of Foreign Relations in Washington.
Seif, in
the US capital for the IMF-World Bank spring meetings, pointed to a reluctance
by European banks to engage with Iran for fear of falling foul of US sanctions.
"They
have been asked not to work with Iranian banks, and they're afraid," he
said.
Industry
commissioner Elzbieta Bienkowska, transport commissioner Violeta Bulc and energy
commissioner Miguel Arias Canete will be among those travelling with Mogherini.
They will meet Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, parliament speaker Ali
Larijani and the secretary of the Supreme National Security Council, Ali
Shamkhani, an EU statement said.
![]() |
| An Iranian woman casts her ballot to vote in February's elections |
Migrants
Europe is
struggling to cope with an influx of migrants and asylum seekers, including
Afghan migrants from Iran.
Iran hosts
around 3 million refugees from neighboring Afghanistan.
“Migration
is a very important theme for discussion,” a senior EU official said.
Mogherini
is expected to brief the bloc's 28 foreign ministers about the visit on Monday
at talks in Brussels.
Not all on
board
Critics
attacked the visit for appearing to legitimze Tehran's poor track record on
huma rights, among other things.
The British
Parliamentary Committee for Iran Freedom (BPCIF), for example, said in a
statement that: "[the trip] is highly inappropriate considering the
regime's domestic repression and destructive policies abroad."
It said
that "during the 'moderate' administration of Hassan Rouhani, nearly 1000
people were executed in Iran last year alone, including juveniles in violation
of international law. At least 47 journalists and social media activists were
reportedly detained in the country as of January 2016, according to reports by
the UN Special rapporteur for Iran and Amnesty international."
The EU did
not request a meeting with Iranian civil society representatives because of the
shortness of the visit, a senior EU official said on condition of anonymity.
Iranian President Hassan Rowhani went at short notice to Ankara and was also
unable to meet the EU delegation, the Iranian press reported.
"Our
objective remains to reassure everyone - particularly in the financial sector -
that re-engaging with Iran is possible now," an EU official said.
Regional
conflicts
An EU
official said that Mogherini - who personally helped negotiate the nuclear deal
- will also seek to advance diplomatic efforts on Syria and Yemen, two regional
conflicts where Iran plays a role.
jbh/ (dpa,
AFP)



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