Iran hopes ‘forward movement’ continues in N-talks

Iran hopes ‘forward movement’ continues in N-talks
Updated 30 March 2013
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Iran hopes ‘forward movement’ continues in N-talks

Iran hopes ‘forward movement’ continues in N-talks

TEHRAN: Iran said yesterday it is hopeful “forward movement” continues during talks with major world powers over its controversial nuclear drive, the state broadcaster reported.
“Almaty I meeting bore positive results, and we also hope that in Almaty II this forward movement continues,” IRIB’s website reported Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi as saying in Dushanbe, where he is attending a ministerial meeting of the Asia Cooperation Dialogue.
He was referring to a meeting in the Kazakh capital with the P5+1 group (UK, China, France, Russia, the US and Germany), which offered to ease non-oil or financial sector-related sanctions in exchange for concessions over Tehran’s sensitive uranium enrichment operations.
The offer also demanded a tougher nuclear inspection regime and the interruption of enrichment operations at the Fordo bunker facility where 20-percent enrichment goes on. The two sides are to meet again in Almaty on April 5 and 6.
However, Salehi said: “This issue will not be solved overnight, and understanding this issue is very important and opens the way” to a solution. “The process of solving this issue has begun,” he was quoted by ISNA as saying, without elaborating.
After the first Almaty meeting in February, a meeting of experts was held in Istanbul.
Chief Russian negotiator Sergei Ryabkov said those talks were positive in tone but produced no breakthrough. Salehi’s comments come a week after supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final say over Tehran’s nuclear program, for the first time signalled openness to US offers to hold direct talks on the matter, but voiced pessimism over the chances of a breakthrough.