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New EU sanctions will hurt nuclear talks: Iran
by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) June 26, 2012

Iran offers help in Turkey-Syria jet downing row
Tehran (AFP) June 26, 2012 - Iran on Tuesday offered to use its good ties with Damascus and Ankara to help resolve the row between the two countries over Syria's downing of a Turkish warplane.

Syria's shooting down of the jet last Friday was "a very sensitive issue" that also concerns Tehran, Iran's foreign ministry spokesman said, just ahead of an emergency NATO meeting on the incident.

"We will use our good relationship with the two countries to resolve the issue," Ramin Mehmanparast said in his weekly news briefing.

He hoped "key players in the region" would be able to contain the incident and prevent other countries from being dragged in.

"It should be resolved through restraint and negotiations and (the two sides) should avoid measures that disturb the security of the region," he said. "We hope this issue will be resolved rapidly."

Syrian air defences brought down a Turkish F-4 Phantom fighter over the eastern Mediterranean. Damascus insists the jet was fired on inside its territory and called the flight "a gross violation of Syrian sovereignty."

But Turkey, while admitting the plane had "briefly" flown through Syrian territory, has called the downing a "hostile act of the highest order" and called an emergency NATO meeting on Tuesday to discuss it.


New EU sanctions to come into effect against Iran on Sunday will hurt negotiations over the country's nuclear programme, foreign ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said.

"Actions that are against the agreements between Iran and the P5+1 will have a negative impact on reaching an acceptable resolution," he told reporters on Tuesday in his regular weekly briefing.

Iran and the P5+1 -- permanent UN Security Council members the United States, Britain, France, China and Russia, plus Germany -- this year revived talks over Tehran's disputed atomic activities, but they are making little progress.

After three inconclusive rounds, the talks have been downgraded to experts level, with the next meeting scheduled for July 3 in Istanbul.

That is two days after the European Union fully implements an embargo on Iranian oil.

The phasing in of the embargo over the past five months has cut Iran's crude sales by 40 percent, according to the International Energy Agency.

Iranian officials dispute that and say the embargo will have little effect and hurt only faltering EU economies.

"Taking measures against our national interests (by the EU) will depict a negative image of hostility towards our nation," Mehmanparast said. "It is better that European officials think about their internal issues."

He added that the sanctions would only be "damaging" for EU-Iran relations.

"As well as possible impacts on the negotiations (with the P5+1), sanctions will intensify the economic and social problems in European countries," he said.

Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi, on a visit to Cyprus, was quoted by the ISNA news agency saying: "We are accustomed to sanctions."

He said that "no-one will benefit" from the new measures and hoped Europe will turn "more rational."

He urged greater cooperation.

"We have the nuclear case in front of us and the negotiations are on the right path, and I see the the end of this path to be bright," he was quoted as saying.

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S. Korea to suspend Iranian oil imports from July
Seoul (AFP) June 26, 2012 - South Korea said Tuesday it would be forced to halt imports of Iranian oil from July because of European Union sanctions aimed at pressuring Tehran to abandon its suspected nuclear weapons programme.

Imports would be suspended because the EU would stop offering any type of insurance on such shipments from July 1, the Ministry of Knowledge Economy said in a statement.

A meeting of EU ministers ended Monday with no indication that South Korea would be exempted from the sanctions as it requested, the ministry said.

From the start of next month European firms will be banned from insuring or reinsuring tankers transporting Iranian oil anywhere in the world. South Korea relies entirely on European companies for such insurance.

South Korea bought 9.4 percent, or about 87.2 million barrels, of all its crude needs from Iran last year, but has already reduced purchases in return for a waiver from separate US sanctions.

The ministry said it would work hard to secure alternative sources of crude to minimise the effect on the country's economy. It said shipments from Iraq and elsewhere had already increased.

The government will also try to ease the impact of sanctions on exports to Iran, the ministry said. Iran is South Korea's third largest market in the Middle East.

Exports to Iran were up 32 percent from a year earlier to $6.07 billion in 2011. They were worth $2.9 billion in the first five months of this year, a 40 percent rise on the same period last year.



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NUKEWARS
EU says Iran oil embargo will be enforced July 1
Luxembourg (AFP) June 25, 2012
The European Union confirmed Monday that a ban on oil imports from Iran will go ahead as planned on July 1 due to the lack of progress in talks on Tehran's contested nuclear drive. "The latest package of EU sanctions against Iran will apply as earlier decided," EU foreign ministers said in a statement. Confirmation the embargo will be enforced comes days after talks flopped in Moscow bet ... read more


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