Straw To Make Historic Visit To Iran Next Week
Published:
22 September 2001 y., Saturday
Jack Straw announced Friday that next week he will travel to Tehran and became the first British Foreign Secretary to visit Iran since the victory of the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
He told a press conference that he had decided to bring forward
his planned trip later this year after Prime Minister Tony Blair
spoke on the phone with Iranian President Mohammad Khatami and his
own conversations with Iranian counterpart Kamal Kharrazi.
"The president and the government of Iran have been powerful
in their opposition to the Taliban," Straw said.
"Iran has suffered very badly as a result of the instability
and extremism of the Taliban and has had to face a very, very
severe refugee problem on its border."
President Khatami was very strong in his condemnation of last
week's terrorist attacks in the US and that Iran was a country that
had also suffered severely from terrorism, Straw said.
His visit to Tehran has been included in a trip to the Middle
East between September 25 to 27, which was planned as part of a
hectic series of global British diplomatic efforts in response to
the attacks in New York and Washington.
The Foreign Secretary told reporters that there was a great deal
to discuss in Tehran and that there was obviously a desire to
improve relations with what he said was an extremely important
country in the Middle East.
Kharrazi subsequently visited London in January 2000 and exchange
of ambassadors also took place, but a return British visit was
repeatedly delayed.
Šaltinis:
IRNA
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