The
French foreign minister says no special timetable has been agreed with
Iran on lifting the sanctions imposed on the country as part of an
understanding reached between Tehran and world powers on Iran’s
nuclear program.
Laurent
Fabius said Friday that the mutual understanding reached in the Swiss city of
Lausanne a day earlier contained no agreement on the precise schedule for
lifting the sanctions on Iran.
Iran
and P5+1 group of countries - Russia, China, France, Britain, the US and
Germany - along with officials from the European Union reached a mutual
understanding on Tehran’s nuclear
program after eight days of marathon talks in Lausanne.
"The
Iranians want sanctions to be lifted immediately…We
say to them: we will ease the sanctions as you respect what you have agreed to,”
Fabius told Europe 1 radio station, emphasizing, however, “On
this point, there is not yet a deal.”
According
to the joint statement, which is the basis for a final deal, the two
sides have envisaged a mechanism for lifting sanctions after the agreement,
known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), is reached by the end
of June.
The
joint statement read by Iranian foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif in
Persian late Thursday stipulated that the parties to the JCPOA will, after the
adoption of the Security Council resolution, need a period of preparation time
to implement the JCPOA. Once the preparation period is over, and simultaneous
with the start of the implementation of nuclear measures by Iran on a
designated date, the lifting of “all sanctions”
will automatically go into action.
Fabius,
whose government has adopted a harsh stance toward Iran's nuclear
program, also cautioned Tehran that sanctions could be re-imposed if
Iran violates its obligations.
No comments:
Post a Comment